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The Harvard Center for International Development is home to faculty affiliates from each school at Harvard University, working across sectors in developing nations around the world.

Faculty research is published in a wide range of academic and policy venues and can be found through the feed and filters below. Select faculty research papers are highlighted in our Faculty Research Insights series on our blog, CID Voices.

CID working papers published by Harvard faculty, graduate students, and research fellows prior to 2024 can be found here

Showing results 1 - 8 of 8

Harvard Kennedy School Logo
 
Dwight H. Perkins
Vol. 31, Issue 1, Pages 22-43
This essay focuses on three broad sets of issues that may not slow China's GDP growth to under 3 percent a year, but they will almost certainly create major social and physical…
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Dwight H. Perkins
Vol. 462
Vietnam today is seen by many as another Asian economic tiger that is moving rapidly from a poor rural society to a modern middle-income country with an economy dominated by…
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Dwight H. Perkins
Post-independence Malaysia has achieved significant economic growth: faster than that of most of the developing countries of Africa and Latin America, slower than the tiger…
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Dwight H. Perkins
Vol. 1, Issue 1, Pages 4-20
Purpose: The per capita GDP of the countries of Southeast Asia (SEA) varies from less than $5,000 to over $97,000. This paper aims to analyze the political factors behind such…
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Dwight H. Perkins
Vol. 375
Economic development and political development go hand in hand. Either the egg comes first or the chicken: economic development has often been preceded by political development…