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Shifting Gears: A Growth Diagnostic of Panama

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2017-01

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Center for International Development at Harvard University
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Hausmann, Ricardo, Luis Espinoza, and Miguel Angel Santos. “Shifting Gears: A Growth Diagnostic of Panama.” CID Working Paper Series 2016.325, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, January 2017.

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Abstract

Leveraging on the Canal, Panama has a developed a major comparative advantage in the exportable services sector. In turn, the stellar growth in this sector has spurred the demand for construction, which has been key to promote upward social mobility and increase labor productivity. But there are signs that this sector is receding, incapable of sustaining growth rates that are higher than the rest of the economy. This threatens to undo some of the progress made in terms of reducing income inequality and poverty in the country, and have the potential to stir social unrest. To face these new challenges, Panama must increase its stock of human capital by improving the quality of education, which is among the lowest in the world. Meanwhile, the country must open up to high-skilled immigration by removing harmful restrictions. To fully profit from immigration, it is equally important to maximize the diffusion of these skills and promote know- how spill overs through adequate policy. Finally, Panama must strengthen its institutions and reduce red tape and corruption, which most firms currently consider the most binding constraint to growth.

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