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Chapter 0 Quiz — An East Asian Renaissance
Chapter 0 · An East Asian Renaissance
GILL & KHARAS (2007)
Interactive Study Quiz

An East Asian Renaissance
Ideas for Economic Growth

10 Questions · Sub-questions a–d · Model answers included
Middle Income TrapAgglomerationTrade & GVCsUrbanizationTechnologyMigration
Part I — Concepts & Definitions
Q 01
The Middle Income Trap
Gill and Kharas (2007) introduced the concept of the ‘Middle Income Trap’ to describe a pattern observed across many developing economies. Drawing on their framework, answer the following:
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aDefine the Middle Income Trap in your own words. What distinguishes middle-income economies from both low-income and high-income economies in terms of their competitive position?
Your answer
Model Answer

The Middle Income Trap describes the tendency of countries that have moved from low-income to middle-income status to subsequently stagnate — unable to complete the transition to high-income status.

A middle-income economy’s competitive position is structurally precarious. It is too expensive for the bottom (low-income rivals with lower wages outcompete it in labor-intensive manufacturing) and not innovative enough for the top (high-income economies dominate knowledge-intensive industries). It is caught between two sets of competitors, unable to win against either.

Strong answers address both dimensions: the labor-cost disadvantage vs. low-income rivals AND the technology gap vs. high-income rivals.
bExplain the core economic mechanism that causes countries to get stuck. Why does the growth strategy that works at low income fail at middle income?
Your answer
Model Answer

The growth strategy for low-to-middle income relies on: (1) cheap labor enabling export manufacturing; (2) technology adoption from abroad via GVCs; (3) factor accumulation — building capital and infrastructure.

These strategies face diminishing returns as income rises. Rising wages erode the labor cost advantage. Imported technologies become harder to access near the frontier. Capital accumulation faces diminishing marginal returns (as the Solow model will formalize).

What is required instead — domestic innovation, world-class universities, deep financial markets, strong IP systems — cannot be built overnight. This gap between what worked before and what is now needed is the trap.

A strong answer distinguishes ‘factor accumulation’ from ‘TFP growth’ and connects diminishing returns to the Solow model.
cUsing Figure 1.2 (per capita income, 1900–2000), describe the empirical trajectory of Latin America and East Asia’s high-income five. At what point did they diverge?
Your answer
Model Answer

Latin America started the 20th century richer than East Asia. The critical divergence occurred from the 1960s onward: East Asia’s high-income five accelerated dramatically while Latin America stagnated. By the 1970s–80s East Asia had overtaken Latin America entirely; by 2000 the gap was enormous.

This reversal suggests the trap is not inevitable — countries can escape it. But doing so requires specific structural conditions and deliberate policy choices. Identifying what distinguishes the two groups is the central analytical task of Chapter 0.

Key insight: Latin America started richer but stagnated. The reversal of relative positions is the key empirical observation.
dIs the Middle Income Trap an inevitable feature of economic development, or is it a policy failure? Justify your answer with at least one concrete example.
Your answer
Model Answer

The trap is contingent, not inevitable. East Asia’s high-income five all escaped it; Latin America did not. This divergence is evidence that outcomes depend on choices, not fate.

Korea and Taiwan actively built the institutions needed to sustain growth beyond middle income: sustained R&D investment, industrial policy for technological upgrading, and educational expansion. Latin America’s stagnation reflects insufficient technology investment, macroeconomic instability, and weak institutions.

China’s current situation illustrates the contingency: simultaneous shocks (real estate crisis, regulatory overreach, geopolitical technology restrictions) may make its escape harder — showing that even countries on the right trajectory can be derailed by poor policy.

Both framings earn credit if well-argued. The strongest answers acknowledge both structural factors and policy choices play a role.
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Q 02
Agglomeration Externalities
The ‘new economic geography’ literature identifies mechanisms that cause economic activity to concentrate geographically. Gill and Kharas apply these to explain East Asia’s development.
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aList and define the four MAR externalities (Marshall-Arrow-Romer). For each, provide one East Asian example.
Your answer
Model Answer
Sharing: Dense clusters sustain specialized suppliers and services no single firm could support alone. Example: Taiwan’s Hsinchu cluster sustains specialized semiconductor equipment suppliers.
Matching: Thick labor markets enable employers to find exactly the skills needed; workers face lower displacement risk. Example: Seoul Capital Area enables high-quality matching between electronics firms and specialist engineers.
Learning: Proximity enables knowledge spillovers — engineers carry expertise when changing jobs, suppliers upgrade to meet demanding buyers. Example: Shenzhen’s electronics cluster enables rapid diffusion between hardware startups and contract manufacturers.
Expansion: Growing firms scale faster in dense markets with large existing labor pools. Example: Chinese coastal export zones attract rapidly expanding manufacturers who need to scale quickly.
1 mark per correctly defined externality + 1 mark per relevant East Asian example = 8 marks maximum.
bExplain ‘matching’ in thick labor markets. Why is this particularly important for high-skill industries?
Your answer
Model Answer

Matching refers to efficiency gains in labor market transactions from density. With many co-located firms, employers find suitable candidates faster and at lower search cost; workers face reduced displacement risk with multiple potential employers nearby.

This is especially important for high-skill industries because: (1) high-skill workers are more heterogeneous — finding a specialist requires a much thicker market; (2) high-skill workers are internationally mobile — they choose where to live based on career opportunities, so cities without a critical mass of employers in a field lose talent in a self-reinforcing cycle.

Both employer and worker perspectives matter, plus explaining why skill specificity amplifies the externality.
cExplain cumulative causation using China’s Special Economic Zones as a case study. Why did Shenzhen develop into a major hub while many other locations did not?
Your answer
Model Answer

Cumulative causation (path dependence): once a location gains an initial advantage, that advantage compounds, making it increasingly difficult for other locations to compete.

China’s SEZs from the early 1980s gave coastal provinces — especially Guangdong — liberal investment rules, lower taxes, and greater autonomy. This triggered a self-reinforcing spiral: initial FDI brought employment and technology → built a labor pool → attracted suppliers → attracted more FDI → generated knowledge spillovers → attracted more firms.

By the early 2000s, Shenzhen’s agglomeration economies were so deep that new entrants chose it even at higher costs than competing locations. The first-mover advantage was locked in.

Key elements: initial institutional trigger → FDI → labor pool → suppliers → more FDI → knowledge spillovers. The feedback loop mechanism must be explicit.
dAt what point do agglomeration benefits become costs? Identify the four negative externalities and explain how they interact to undermine cities’ ability to attract skilled workers.
Your answer
Model Answer

Benefits become costs when marginal cost imposed by an additional resident exceeds the marginal productivity gain they contribute.

Pollution: Dense manufacturing and traffic generate pollution exceeding absorptive capacity. Beijing’s PM2.5 crises imposed enormous health costs.
Congestion: Commutes in some megacities exceed 2–3 hours each way — a massive loss of productive time and quality of life.
Crime: Rapid urbanization outpacing service provision is associated with rising property crime and social disorder.
Housing cost: Rising demand pushes prices beyond affordability, pricing out workers who would otherwise accept city jobs — directly undermining the matching benefit.

These create a vicious cycle: high housing costs push workers to distant suburbs → more congestion → reduced quality of life → fewer high-skill workers willing to come → lower tax revenues → less infrastructure investment → further livability decline.

All four externalities must be identified. The vicious cycle interaction earns additional credit.
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Part II — Trade & Production Networks
Q 03
Regional Trade Integration in East Asia
Between 1980 and 2004, East Asia’s intraregional trade share rose from ~35% to 55% of total East Asian trade. This growth is at the heart of Gill & Kharas’s explanation for East Asia’s success.
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aDistinguish inter-industry from intra-industry trade. Which grew more rapidly in East Asia 1990–2004, and what does this imply about production structure?
Your answer
Model Answer
Inter-industry trade: Countries exchange goods from different industries, reflecting comparative advantage (Japan exports cars; Thailand exports rice).
Intra-industry trade: Countries simultaneously import and export within the same industry — e.g. Korea exports chips to China while importing different chips from Japan. Reflects specialization at the level of production stages, not whole products.

Intra-industry trade grew far more rapidly: its share rose from ~55% to 78% of East Asian regional trade (1990–2004). This implies production had become vertically fragmented — the same product passes through multiple countries at different stages. This is the empirical fingerprint of offshoring and global value chains.

The 55%→78% data point is key and must be cited. Connecting the pattern to vertical fragmentation earns full marks.
bExplain external economies of scale and how they drive regional trade integration. Why does trade amplify them?
Your answer
Model Answer

External economies of scale occur when productivity rises across the industry as a whole — not just within the growing firm — as a result of the industry’s overall size or geographic concentration. Unlike internal economies, they generate spillovers benefiting all co-located firms: specialized suppliers, deeper labor markets, stronger knowledge spillovers.

In East Asia, as manufacturing clusters grew, all firms in those clusters became more productive through these channels. Trade amplifies this: a larger export market allows greater specialization, which deepens the division of labor within clusters, which further raises productivity. Export orientation was therefore central to East Asia’s growth — it allowed clusters to operate at scales impossible serving only domestic demand.

Key distinction: external vs. internal economies. All three channels (suppliers, labor, knowledge) should be addressed.
cCompare East Asia’s trade architecture with the EU and NAFTA. What is remarkable about East Asia’s trade share given the absence of formal institutional integration?
Your answer
Model Answer

By 2003: EU ~33% of world trade, NAFTA ~20%, East Asia ~25%. East Asia achieved a comparable trade share without any of the formal integration mechanisms that underpin these blocs — no single market, no customs union, no supranational authority, no comprehensive regional trade agreement.

This demonstrates market-driven integration: the logic of production efficiency — not diplomatic treaty — created East Asia’s trade architecture. Firms built supply chains and investment relationships organically, driven by cost efficiency and proximity. This makes East Asian integration more flexible (responds to market signals) but also more fragile (no institutional backstop when geopolitics disrupts supply chains).

The market-driven vs. institution-driven integration distinction is the key insight. Correct trade share figures earn credit.
dHow does intraregional trade contribute to technology diffusion? Illustrate with a specific supply chain example between two East Asian countries.
Your answer
Model Answer

Intraregional trade drives technology diffusion through tacit knowledge transfer — knowledge that flows through sustained buyer-supplier interactions but cannot be easily codified. Demanding buyers set quality standards suppliers must meet, driving improvement even far from the frontier. Sustained relationships involve factory visits, joint problem-solving, and training programs.

Example — Korea/Vietnam: When Samsung established supply chains in Vietnam (Samsung is Vietnam’s largest single exporter), it transferred manufacturing know-how, quality management systems, and logistics practices to Vietnamese suppliers — contributing to Vietnam’s rapid electronics manufacturing upgrade in a way that would have taken far longer without the supply chain relationship.
Award marks for explaining tacit knowledge mechanisms AND for a specific, named country-pair example with a plausible knowledge transfer mechanism.
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Q 04
Global Value Chains & the iPad 3
The iPad 3 case study (Fally 2018) illustrates global value chains — the fragmentation of production across multiple countries, with each contributing a specific type of value.
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aDescribe the geographic distribution of value-added in iPad 3 production. Which country or region captures the largest share, and why?
Your answer
Model Answer
Display (highest-value component): Samsung/LG — South Korea
Application processor (designed by Apple, manufactured by Samsung/TSMC): US design + Taiwan/South Korea fabrication
Flash memory: Japan and South Korea
Battery: China; Gyroscope/accelerometer: STMicroelectronics, Europe
Final assembly: China (Foxconn)

China’s actual value-added — primarily assembly labor — is approximately 5–10% of the retail price. The largest value shares go to the US (Apple’s design, brand, and software), South Korea (display and memory), and Taiwan (chip fabrication).

The critical point — China captures ~5–10% of value despite being the ‘exporter’ — must be made clearly for full marks.
bWhy is recording China as the ‘exporter’ of the iPad misleading? What is the correct concept to use instead?
Your answer
Model Answer

Under conventional (gross) trade statistics, when Foxconn ships an assembled iPad from Shenzhen, the full wholesale value is recorded as a Chinese export — attributing to China the value of the Korean display, Taiwanese chip, and Apple’s US-designed software. This dramatically overstates China’s productive contribution.

The appropriate concept is value-added trade: measuring only the share of a traded good’s value actually created in the exporting country. In value-added terms, the US-China bilateral deficit in electronics shrinks substantially — much of what appears as ‘Chinese exports’ is Korean, Taiwanese, Japanese, and American value-added that merely passed through China for final assembly.

The gross trade vs. value-added trade distinction is central. Both why gross trade overstates AND how value-added differs must be explained.
cHow does the GVC perspective change our interpretation of the US-China trade deficit in electronics?
Your answer
Model Answer

In gross trade terms, the US-China electronics deficit appears large, driving political narratives about unfair trade. In value-added terms, much of what counts as Chinese exports to the US represents US value (Apple’s IP), Korean and Taiwanese value (semiconductors, displays), and Japanese value (precision materials).

The deficit is partly an artefact of China’s role as final assembly point in a regional production network, not evidence that China is ‘winning’ in a zero-sum sense. Restricting Chinese imports to reduce the apparent deficit would also restrict value created by allied countries and by American firms — undermining the policy rationale.

The artefact-of-assembly-location insight earns additional credit. Connect value-added analysis to policy implications.
dA politician proposes a 25% tariff on all goods imported from China, citing the electronics deficit. Using your knowledge of GVCs, explain why this policy may be counterproductive.
Your answer
Model Answer
1. Taxes allied-country value: The tariff hits the Korean display, Taiwanese chip, and Japanese materials embedded in Chinese-assembled goods — effectively taxing allied countries’ output.
2. Hurts US firms in GVCs: Apple’s supply chain costs rise, reducing its competitiveness relative to non-US rivals not subject to the same tariff. American companies using Chinese assembly are disadvantaged.
3. May not reshore production: Assembly in China is cheap not just because of wages but because of the dense supplier ecosystem built over decades. Tariffs raise costs without replicating the ecosystem; production may simply shift to Vietnam or Mexico rather than returning to the US.
Three dimensions of the counterproductive argument. Award marks for each clearly articulated.
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Part III — Urbanization & City Economics
Q 05
Optimal City Size & the Hukou System
Au and Henderson (2006) find that 50–67% of Chinese cities are too small relative to their optimal size — a counterintuitive finding with major policy implications.
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aDefine ‘optimal city size’ using the marginal benefit / marginal cost framework. What happens to productivity when a city is below vs. above its optimal size?
Your answer
Model Answer

The optimal city size is the population at which the marginal benefit of one additional resident (agglomeration economies, productivity gains) exactly equals the marginal cost (additional congestion, pollution, housing cost pressure, public service demand).

Below optimal: MB > MC — the city is leaving agglomeration benefits unrealized. Firms face higher input costs, thinner labor markets, and weaker knowledge spillovers.
Above optimal: MC > MB — the city imposes net social costs. Negative externalities spiral, livability deteriorates, and high-skill workers start to exit.
Award marks for correctly defining the MB=MC optimum and clearly explaining both the undersized and oversized cases.
bHow does the hukou system prevent cities from reaching their optimal size? What is the estimated productivity loss per worker for a typical undersized Chinese city?
Your answer
Model Answer

China’s hukou system ties official residency — and access to local schools, healthcare, and social insurance — to a citizen’s place of birth. A migrant worker in Shanghai may remain officially registered in their home village, meaning their children cannot attend Shanghai’s public schools. This creates prohibitive non-wage costs to labor mobility.

Workers who would rationally move to more productive cities face barriers: they or their families may lose social services in their home city without gaining equivalent access in the destination. Labor does not flow freely to its most productive use — 50–67% of Chinese cities are smaller than they would be under free mobility.

The estimated productivity loss for a typical undersized city: approximately 17% of net output per worker — a massive inefficiency perpetuated across hundreds of cities simultaneously.

The 17% figure must be cited. Award credit for explaining the mechanism (non-wage barriers) and the aggregate scale (50–67% of cities).
cThe same study finds fewer than 5% of Chinese cities are too large. Yet the popular perception is that megacities are dangerously overcrowded. How do you reconcile these observations?
Your answer
Model Answer

The contradiction dissolves by distinguishing between productivity-based optimality and livability-based comfort. Au & Henderson’s finding is a productivity claim: from the perspective of net output per worker, most Chinese cities still generate positive marginal agglomeration benefits exceeding marginal costs.

The ‘overcrowding’ perception is a livability claim: residents experience real congestion, pollution, and housing unaffordability — genuine problems, but ones the agglomeration model predicts will accompany dense cities. They do not necessarily mean a city has exceeded its productivity-optimal scale.

The productivity optimum and the livability optimum are different concepts that may occur at different city sizes. Improving livability requires better urban management and infrastructure — not necessarily limiting city growth.

The productivity optimum vs. livability optimum distinction is the key conceptual move. Full marks require making this distinction explicit.
dIf China gradually relaxed the hukou system, what would agglomeration theory predict? Identify at least two potential benefits and one cost.
Your answer
Model Answer
Benefit 1 — Productivity gains: Workers moving from undersized to larger cities generate ~17% net output per worker gains. Aggregated across hundreds of cities, this represents a substantial national output boost.
Benefit 2 — Human capital accumulation: Migrant children gaining access to quality urban schools improves educational outcomes — raising future workforce human capital and supporting China’s technological upgrading ambitions.
Cost — Regional depopulation: Cities and regions that workers leave would shrink — thinner markets, reduced tax bases, potential collapse of local services in interior provinces, with social and political consequences.
Regional depopulation cost is often missed — reward it specifically. Award marks for each effect correctly identified and explained.
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Q 06
Urbanization Frictions: A Country Comparison
The lecture examines urbanization frictions in the Philippines, Vietnam, and China — each facing distinct institutional barriers to efficient urban development.
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aFor each of the three countries, identify the primary institutional friction and explain how it affects land use, infrastructure provision, or the distribution of urban gains.
Your answer
Model Answer
Philippines — Weak institutions: Weak municipal governance, limited fiscal capacity, dominant private land interests. Local governments lack revenue and capacity to plan infrastructure. Land use decisions are captured by landowners and developers → severe congestion, inadequate transport, informal settlements in Metro Manila.
Vietnam — Ambiguous property rights: Land is formally state-owned but households hold permanent land use rights (LURs). Converting rural fringe land to urban uses requires contentious compensation negotiations — slow, susceptible to corruption, creating bottlenecks in urban land supply.
China — Misaligned fiscal incentives: Local governments acquire rural collective land at agricultural prices (far below market) and lease it to developers at market rates. The arbitrage is captured as local revenue → incentive to over-requisition land regardless of economic justification → sprawl, displaced farmers, ghost cities.
Award up to 3 marks per country: (1) identifying friction, (2) mechanism, (3) consequence. China is most complex and should receive most scrutiny.
bIn China, local governments have a financial incentive to over-requisition rural land. Explain the mechanism and its consequences for farmers, city planners, and economic efficiency.
Your answer
Model Answer

Local governments compensate village collectives at administratively set agricultural prices (perhaps 10–15x annual crop income — a fraction of urban market value), then lease the land to developers at full market rates. The enormous arbitrage is captured as local revenue.

Consequences for farmers: Displaced at below-market compensation, often lacking skills to integrate into urban labor markets.
Consequences for city planners: Development approved at the urban fringe based on fiscal incentives rather than genuine demand signals, producing inefficient spatial patterns.
Consequences for efficiency: Systematic oversupply of urban space relative to real demand — in some cases producing ghost cities: completed developments with low or zero occupancy.
All three elements required: acquisition/lease price gap, the revenue incentive, and at least two consequences.
cWhat is a ‘ghost city,’ and why does the Chinese land revenue model sometimes produce them? Why can supply and demand for urban space become disconnected?
Your answer
Model Answer

A ghost city is a large-scale urban development — residential towers, commercial areas, civic infrastructure — built in anticipation of population growth that fails to materialize, leaving it largely unoccupied. Ordos Kangbashi in Inner Mongolia is a famous example.

Supply and demand disconnect because: (1) local governments have fiscal incentives to approve development to generate land lease revenue regardless of genuine demand; (2) state-owned developers face limited downside risk (soft budget constraints); (3) housing has been a preferred investment vehicle in China, sustaining speculative demand even in unviable locations.

The result is a systematic tendency to oversupply urban space in smaller inland cities where population growth and economic activity are insufficient to absorb new development — an equilibrium outcome of the incentive structure, not an accidental error.

Award marks for defining ghost city, explaining the incentive mechanism, and connecting to the supply-demand disconnect.
dWhich of the three urbanization friction types do you consider most difficult to reform? Justify your answer.
Your answer
Model Answer

No single correct answer — any friction can be argued most difficult if well-reasoned:

China’s fiscal incentives: Most structurally embedded — land revenue funds local government. Removing the incentive without alternative revenue sources would precipitate a local fiscal crisis. Reform requires comprehensive overhaul of intergovernmental fiscal relations — technically and politically complex.
Vietnam’s property rights: Redistributing power between state and households is politically sensitive in a nominally socialist country where land nationalization is ideologically significant.
Philippines’ institutional weaknesses: Arguably the most intractable — building governance capacity, reducing elite capture, and strengthening municipal fiscal capacity requires long-term institutional development that cannot be mandated by a single reform.
Full marks for any well-reasoned argument. Acknowledging the difficulty of all three strengthens the answer.
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Part IV — Technology & Innovation
Q 07
Technology and the Escape from the Trap
Gill and Kharas argue technological upgrading is the most critical factor for escaping the middle income trap. Korea and Taiwan are held up as the regional success stories.
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aWhat does US patent registration data tell us about East Asia’s technological trajectory between the 1970s and 2004? Quantify the change and identify which economies drove it.
Your answer
Model Answer
US: ~60% of US patent registrations — world’s leading innovation system.
Japan: ~20% — remarkable for 125 million people, reflecting deep manufacturing technology expertise.
Developing East Asia (combined): less than 2% in the 1970s → approximately 8% by 2004 — a quadrupling in three decades.

Korea and Taiwan drove most of this increase. Samsung and LG (Korea) became world leaders in semiconductors. TSMC (Taiwan) became the world’s leading contract chip manufacturer. These represent genuine frontier innovation, not merely manufacturing achievements.

The quadrupling from <2% to ~8% is the key figure and must be cited. Identifying Korea and Taiwan as the drivers earns full marks.
bDistinguish ‘adaptation and imitation’ from ‘frontier innovation.’ Why is this distinction critical for understanding the middle income trap?
Your answer
Model Answer
Adaptation and imitation: Taking technologies developed at the global frontier and adapting them to local conditions, or reverse-engineering products. Highly valuable — it drives rapid catch-up growth when a country is far from the frontier.
Frontier innovation: Generating new-to-the-world ideas and processes that advance the global frontier. Requires world-class universities, sophisticated IP systems, venture capital, and risk-tolerant labor markets.

This distinction is critical because adaptation works well when a country is far from the frontier — but as it approaches high-income status, the pool of available technologies to imitate shrinks. Growth must increasingly come from generating new ideas. Countries that fail to build frontier innovation institutions in time find themselves trapped: adaptation is no longer sufficient, but innovation capacity is not yet ready.

Key insight: adaptation works far from the frontier; innovation is required near it. The institutional requirements for each differ substantially.
cWhat institutional conditions — beyond R&D spending alone — are required to transition from adaptation to frontier innovation? Identify at least three.
Your answer
Model Answer
1. Strong research universities: Generate fundamental scientific knowledge and train scientists/engineers. Without competitive universities, countries must rely entirely on foreign knowledge — increasingly restricted geopolitically.
2. Effective IP protection: Firms invest in innovation only if they can capture returns. Patent law and contract enforcement create the incentive to generate new knowledge rather than imitate.
3. Risk-tolerant financial markets (venture capital): Frontier innovation is inherently uncertain and unprofitable for years. Bank-based systems optimized for lending against collateral are poorly suited to funding early-stage ventures through long periods of loss.
4. Labor market flexibility & failure tolerance: Entrepreneurs need to experiment, fail, and try again. Norms not stigmatizing failure encourage the risk-taking innovation requires.
5. Competition policy: Competitive markets pressure incumbents to innovate continuously; oligopolies may invest in R&D only to maintain market position.
Award 2 marks per well-explained condition up to 6 marks maximum. Conditions must be explained, not just named.
dDoes China’s explosive R&D growth mean it is on track to escape the trap through technological upgrading? Give one reason for optimism and one for caution.
Your answer
Model Answer
Optimism: China’s absolute R&D expenditure is the world’s second largest. Companies like Huawei (telecom), BYD (EVs), and DJI (drones) have achieved genuine technological leadership — not merely imitation. The scale of China’s educated workforce and urban agglomeration economies provides a strong foundation.
Caution: Quantity of patents ≠ quality of innovation. Much of China’s patent explosion consists of utility patents and incremental improvements, not frontier breakthroughs. US export controls on advanced semiconductor manufacturing equipment directly constrain China’s access to the technologies most critical for AI — regardless of how much China spends on R&D.
Both dimensions must be present for full marks. The semiconductor / geopolitics dimension is particularly important for the caution argument.
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Q 08
China’s Current Economic Turbulences
Between 2020 and 2024, China experienced three simultaneous shocks: a severe real estate crisis, a regulatory crackdown on the private sector, and a sharp slowdown in GDP growth — each directly relevant to the middle income trap.
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aExplain the real estate crisis mechanism. Why does the IMF describe the adjustment as ‘uneven,’ and why is a collapse in construction starts so damaging to broader economic activity?
Your answer
Model Answer

China’s property sector accounted for ~25–30% of GDP including upstream and downstream linkages. The 2020–21 ‘Three Red Lines’ tightening of developer lending triggered defaults by Evergrande and Country Garden, halting construction on thousands of pre-sold apartments.

The IMF describes the adjustment as ‘uneven’ because of an unusual price-volume divergence: real estate sales and construction starts collapsed (starts fell to ~40% of pre-crisis levels by late 2022), yet median home prices remained surprisingly sticky — falling far less than volumes. This means the market cannot clear, demand cannot recover, and adjustment is prolonged — the classic debt-deflation dynamic associated with Japan’s ‘lost decades.’

Construction collapse damages broader activity because: local governments depend on land sales revenue to fund public services; the construction sector employs enormous numbers of workers; steel, cement, and furniture industries are also hit.

Three elements: (1) scale of property in the economy, (2) price-volume divergence explaining ‘uneven’, (3) broader economic damage mechanism.
bWhy does regulatory uncertainty deter the types of entrepreneurial investment most needed in a middle-income economy? Use the Jack Ma case to illustrate.
Your answer
Model Answer

Entrepreneurial investment requires a credible expectation that returns on success will be capturable — resting on property rights security and regulatory predictability.

When Ant Group’s $300bn IPO was suspended 48 hours before listing, investors and entrepreneurs received a clear signal: even at the pinnacle of private sector success, regulatory intervention can eliminate years of value creation instantly. When Ma himself disappeared from public view for months, the signal was reinforced: regulatory risk includes personal risk for prominent private actors.

This is particularly damaging for the investments most needed to escape the middle income trap: long-term, high-capital R&D and frontier innovation that require multi-year horizons. Regulatory uncertainty raises the discount rate applied to future returns from such investments, making them less attractive or entirely non-viable — exactly the wrong signal for an economy trying to transition from imitation to innovation.

The key mechanism — uncertainty raises the discount rate on long-term innovation investments — must be explicitly articulated for full marks.
cIdentify two structural factors — distinct from the real estate crisis — that help explain China’s slowdown. For each, discuss its relationship to the middle income trap.
Your answer
Model Answer
Factor 1 — Demographic headwinds: China’s working-age population has been shrinking since ~2012; total population peaked in 2022. A shrinking labor force reduces potential growth mechanically and reduces the savings rate that funded China’s investment-led growth. This is directly relevant to the middle income trap: sustaining capital accumulation becomes harder as the demographic dividend reverses.
Factor 2 — Productivity (TFP) slowdown: Total factor productivity growth has slowed as the ‘easy’ gains from technology adoption and structural transformation (moving workers from agriculture to manufacturing) are exhausted. As China approaches the technological frontier in more industries, further TFP growth requires domestic innovation rather than imitation — precisely the transition that defines the middle income trap challenge.
Two clearly distinct structural factors (not real estate) are required. Demographic headwinds and TFP/productivity slowdown are the most relevant. Credit other well-argued structural factors.
dDo the three shocks represent a temporary cyclical downturn or deeper structural vulnerabilities? Make an argument using evidence from the lecture.
Your answer
Model Answer

The three shocks are best understood as revealing and amplifying deeper structural vulnerabilities rather than constituting purely cyclical fluctuations.

The real estate crisis emerged from a growth model dangerously dependent on property investment — a model that was always going to require painful adjustment as demographics shifted and urbanization matured. The debt-deflation dynamic it triggered is structural, not cyclical.

The regulatory crackdown reflects a deliberate policy choice — prioritizing Party control over growth — that imposes lasting costs on private sector dynamism. Unless reversed, it constitutes a permanent reduction in innovative capacity.

The productivity slowdown reflects the fundamental challenge of the middle income trap itself: the growth model that produced China’s miracle is exhausting its returns, and the transition to innovation-based growth is incomplete. The shocks have made this transition harder and more urgent, but they did not create the underlying challenge.

Top answers distinguish cyclical from structural causes for each shock and argue the structural roots pre-date the immediate crises. Award up to full marks for a coherent argument even if the conclusion differs.
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Part V — Applied & Synthesis
Q 09
Migration and Growth: An Ambiguous Relationship
Unlike trade or agglomeration, the relationship between international migration and economic development is empirically contested. Gill & Kharas largely omit international migration from their 2007 analysis for this reason.
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aDefine ‘brain drain’ and ‘brain gain.’ Explain the theoretical mechanism behind each and the conditions under which each is likely to dominate.
Your answer
Model Answer
Brain drain: Emigration of highly skilled workers from developing to richer countries. The sending country loses the human capital of these workers and their productive contribution. Dominates when: emigration rates are very high, the education system cannot expand in response, and diaspora connections are weak.
Brain gain: The prospect of high-paying emigration raises the expected return to education for the entire population — including those who ultimately don’t emigrate. More people invest in skills; those who stay form a more educated workforce. Dominates when: only a fraction of those gaining skills actually emigrate, the education system can expand supply in response, and the emigration prospect is credible but not universal.
Award marks for correctly defining each mechanism and identifying at least two conditions for each.
bHow do remittances support development in sending countries? Using the Philippines or Bangladesh as an example, identify at least one potential downside.
Your answer
Model Answer

Globally, remittances to developing countries exceed official development aid. In the Philippines and Bangladesh, remittances represent 10%+ of GDP. Benefits: provide foreign exchange stabilizing current accounts; finance household consumption, education, and healthcare; in some contexts provide capital for private enterprise formation — important where financial systems are underdeveloped.

Downside 1 — Dutch disease: Large inflows can appreciate the real exchange rate, making domestically produced tradable goods less competitive — undermining the manufacturing base central to development.
Downside 2 — Dependency: Remittance-receiving households may reduce their own labor supply, decreasing productive contribution. Heavy dependence can reduce incentives for structural economic transformation.
Downside 3 — Brain drain companion: The same migration generating remittances removes skilled workers. Whether remittances compensate for lost productivity is context-specific.
cWhy might the migration-growth nexus be more ambiguous than the trade-growth nexus? What features of migration make its aggregate effects harder to measure and predict?
Your answer
Model Answer

The trade-growth nexus has a clear theoretical prior (comparative advantage raises total output) and is empirically robustly associated with higher incomes. The direction of effect is unambiguous in theory.

Migration is theoretically ambiguous from the outset: the same act generates brain drain AND brain gain simultaneously. Which dominates depends on highly context-specific characteristics — making no single prediction applicable across countries.

Migration is also harder to measure: trade flows are customs-documented; migration — especially irregular — is not fully captured. The counterfactual (what would have happened if the migrant stayed?) is very difficult to estimate. And migration has long time lags: brain gain effects of diaspora connections may take decades to show up in productivity data.

Three dimensions: (1) opposing theoretical effects, (2) context-dependency, (3) measurement difficulties. Award marks for each clearly articulated.
dShould East Asian policymakers encourage high-skilled emigration, restrict it, or remain neutral? Construct a brief policy argument drawing on brain drain, brain gain, and remittance effects.
Your answer
Model Answer
For encouraging/neutral: Brain gain and remittance effects are real. If emigration significantly increases domestic educational investment and diaspora maintain productive ties, the net human capital effect may be positive. Restricting emigration imposes liberty costs and may trigger evasion.
For managed incentives to return: For small economies or sectors with severe skill shortages, brain drain may be too severe. Policies incentivizing return — tax benefits, investment incentives, recognition of foreign qualifications — can capture diaspora benefits without accepting permanent skilled emigration.
For neutrality: Government attempts to manage migration flows are often ineffective. Focus instead on making the domestic environment attractive enough that skilled workers choose to stay or return voluntarily.

A reasonable conclusion: optimal policy is country-specific, depending on scale of skilled emigration, education system responsiveness, and strength of diaspora ties.

Full marks for a balanced argument explicitly drawing on all three mechanisms. No single ‘correct’ conclusion — assess quality of reasoning.
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Q 10
Synthesis: The Middle Income Trap & East Asia’s Future
This final question asks you to synthesize the key themes of Chapter 0, drawing connections across trade, agglomeration, technology, and migration, and applying the framework to a forward-looking policy question.
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aGill and Kharas identify three main drivers of East Asia’s success: regional trade integration, urbanization & agglomeration, and technological upgrading. Explain how these three factors are mutually reinforcing.
Your answer
Model Answer
Trade → Urbanization: Trade-driven manufacturing concentrates production in export clusters, which are inherently urban. Rising density generates agglomeration economies that further raise manufacturing productivity.
Urbanization → Technology: Dense urban environments are the primary locus of knowledge spillovers. East Asia’s technological upgrading occurred overwhelmingly in its great urban clusters — Shenzhen, Seoul, Taipei, Singapore.
Technology → Trade: Technological upgrading enables firms to move up the value chain — from low-value assembly to high-value components. This shift is reflected in the rise of intra-industry trade.
Trade → Technology (closing the loop): Participation in global production networks exposes firms to quality standards and techniques used by leading global firms. Export market discipline accelerates learning in ways protected domestic markets do not.
Award marks for each pairwise reinforcement and its mechanism. The strongest answers close the feedback loop and explain why the three factors are analytically inseparable.
bFor each of three course models, briefly explain what aspect of the East Asian growth story it illuminates: (i) external economies of scale (Ch. 1–2); (ii) Solow growth model (Ch. 3); (iii) North-South model of trade and innovation (Ch. 5).
Your answer
Model Answer
(i) External economies of scale (Ch. 1–2): Explains why East Asian manufacturing became so productive as it scaled — not just because individual firms grew, but because clustering generated spillovers benefiting all co-located firms. Provides the theoretical foundation for agglomeration, the virtuous cycle of concentration and productivity, and the hukou distortion’s efficiency costs.
(ii) Solow growth model (Ch. 3): Formalizes that capital accumulation faces diminishing returns and cannot sustain long-run growth alone. Only TFP growth (technological progress) can drive long-run income growth — providing the theoretical backbone for why the middle income trap is structural: countries that cannot generate TFP growth converge to a middle-income steady state, not high income.
(iii) North-South model (Ch. 5): Formalizes the interaction between technological innovation in rich countries and production offshoring to poor countries. Explains how GVCs emerge endogenously from innovation, comparative advantage, and wage differences — and how developing countries can benefit from GVC participation while upgrading their position. Provides a formal framework for the iPad case study.
Award up to 3 marks per model: (1) identifying analytical focus, (2) connecting to a specific Chapter 0 empirical observation, (3) explaining the insight the model adds.
cConsider a hypothetical middle-income Southeast Asian country with a large rural population, underdeveloped innovation system, and rapidly growing low-cost manufacturing sector. What are the three most important policy priorities to avoid the middle income trap?
Your answer
Model Answer
Priority 1 — Deepen regional trade integration: Pursue openness to trade and FDI, positioning in East Asian production networks. Invest in logistics, ports, and customs efficiency. Vietnam’s successful integration into regional electronics GVCs provides a template — knowledge transfer through supply chains accelerates technological upgrading.
Priority 2 — Build cities that exploit agglomeration economies: Invest in urban infrastructure, housing supply, and local governance capacity. Remove land use regulation constraining housing supply. Invest in public transport to manage congestion as cities grow. Well-managed cities approaching optimal size are the primary locus of productivity gains and knowledge spillovers.
Priority 3 — Begin building innovation institutions now: Even while still in the technology adoption phase, invest in research universities, IP protection, and risk-tolerant financial markets. The long lags in institution-building mean these investments must begin decades before frontier innovation is urgently needed. Korea and Taiwan succeeded precisely because they made these investments early.
Award 3 marks per priority: (1) identifying, (2) explaining mechanism, (3) connecting to a Chapter 0 concept or case. Deduct for redundant or non-course-grounded priorities.
dEssay (~150 words): Do you believe China will escape the middle income trap within 20 years? Use at least two Chapter 0 concepts explicitly.
Your answer (~150 words)
Model Answer (~150 words)

China’s escape from the middle income trap within 20 years is plausible but far from assured. On the optimistic side, BYD and Huawei demonstrate genuine frontier innovation in specific sectors, and the scale of China’s educated workforce and urban agglomeration economies — particularly in coastal clusters like the Yangtze River Delta — provides a strong foundation for continued technological development.

However, three Chapter 0 concepts counsel caution. First, the distinction between adaptation and frontier innovation: productivity growth has slowed as the pool of technologies to imitate shrinks, and frontier innovation requires institutional conditions — strong IP protection, regulatory predictability — that the Tech Crackdown has actively undermined. Second, the optimal city size analysis suggests the hukou system continues imposing significant productivity costs. Third, the real estate crisis is producing a debt-deflation dynamic reminiscent of Japan’s lost decades — a structural drag suppressing investment and innovation for years.

On balance, China’s escape is achievable but not inevitable, and depends critically on policy choices currently moving in the wrong direction.

No single ‘correct’ conclusion. Award for: (1) structured argument (not just listing), (2) explicit use of ≥2 Chapter 0 concepts with correct definitions, (3) engagement with evidence on both sides, (4) a reasoned conclusion following from the argument.
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