Global Economic Prospects is an annual World Bank flagship report.
New, published January 2008
Global Economic Prospects 2008: Technology Diffusion in the Developing World
Rapid technological progress in developing countries has helped to raise incomes and reduce the share of people living in absolute poverty from 29 percent in 1990 to 18 percent in 2004. Despite these gains, the technology gap between rich and poor countries remains enormous, and the capacity of developing economies to adopt new technology remains weak. Developing countries must improve their capacity to absorb and use technology.
Last Four Reports
Global Economic Prospects 2007: Managing the Next Wave of Globalization
Over the next 25 years developing countries will move to center stage in the global economy. Global Economic Prospects 2007 analyzes the opportunities - and stresses - this will create. While rich and poor countries alike stand to benefit, the integration process will make more acute stresses already apparent today - in income inequality, in labor markets, and in the environment.
Global Economic Prospects 2006: Economic Implications of Remittances and Migration
This year’s edition of Global Economic Prospects focuses on the flow of international migrant remittances and improving their development impact. It presents available data on migration flows and examines current thinking on issues pertaining to migration and its development impact. The bulk of the book covers remittances, including their size, determinants, development impact, and steps to strengthen financial infrastructure and reduce transaction costs.
Global Economic Prospects 2005: Trade, Regionalism, and Development
This report examines the proliferation of bilateral and regional preferential trading arrangements and what this means for the multilateral Doha trade negotiations. It tackles three main questions: What types of agreements help promote—and which ones impede—development? Do bilateral and regional agreements promote a deeper integration that the multilateral system cannot deliver on? Do they negatively impact a country’s incentive to engage in multilateral Doha trade talks?
Global Economic Prospects 2004: Realizing the Development Promise of the Doha Agenda
The report analyzes the most critical issues and suggests policy options that would raise living standards in developing countries and reduce global poverty. It reviews trade patterns and policies, agricultural trade, labor mobility and the WTO, trading costs (transport, trade facilitation and logistics), especially in the context of new security concerns, and the special treatment of developing countries in the world trading system.
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