Newly Industrializing Countries and World Markets
Gerardo P. Sicat
Asian Development Review (ADR), 1983, vol. 01, issue 01, 54-62
Abstract:
During the past ten years or so, more and more attention has been focused on a small group of developing countries that have achieved high economic growth rates by following a strategy of exporting manufactures: the Newly Industrializing Countries or NICs, as they have come to be known. Their success in expanding exports to developed countries accounted, in no small measure, for the imposition of new protectionist measures by the developed countries in the 1970s. These countries have different backgrounds: their social systems are as varied as their geographical locations. All are now classified as middle-income developing countries, and the most successful of them are at the threshold of becoming developed countries.
Date: 1983
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DOI: 10.1142/S0116110583000032
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