Moving out of Aid
Dependency: Lessons
from the South Korean
experience
Irma Adelman
University of California, Berkeley
Moving out of Aid Dependency: Lessons
from the South Korean experience
Accelerated development is possible
The essence of development policy consists
of the creation of dynamic comparative
advantage.
Requires anticipatory and coordinated
restructuring of :
-production and investment
patterns
- technology
- social development
- economic, social and political
institutions
- investment and trade policies
The critical factors needed to generate
economic development are both tangible
and intangible
-leadership commitment to
development
- social capital, including not only the
level of human resources but also
the degrees of social cohesion, social
trust, cooperative norms and
willingness to act in the social
good
- institutional and social resilience and
malleability
- appropriate policy design in
investment, capital accumulation,
technology and trade
Government has a central role in the
promotion of economic development. But its
functions must adapt dynamically evolving
from prime-mover and direction-setter into
a quasi-Smithian State. A sound economy
therefore requires a sound State
The economy, society, institutions and
policies must be malleable and capable of
even abrupt change
The prospects for economic development
are intimately linked not only to the
country’s own institutions and policies but
also to existing global operational rules of
global institutions
KOREAN EXAMPLE
In the early 1960’s South Korea was thought to be “a
bottomless sink” for foreign aid and “a hopeless case
In what was thought to be a miracle it became a fully
developed and industrialized nation in a short period
South Korean development went through 4 phases:
•Classical import substitution (1963-1966)
•Labor-intensive export-led growth (1967-1972)
•Heavy industry promotion (1973-1978)
•Stabilization, liberalization and economic
maturity( 1979-1996)
•Financial crisis (1997–1999)
•Reform, restoration of growth (1999-present
WTO rules either prohibit or severely
restrict most measures used by South
Korea for its accelerated development
Aid to South Korea was mostly untied;
current flows are tied