Articles

  • Jun 26, 2024 | tijd.be | Dorien Emmers

    De ineenstorting van de Chinese economie wordt al jaren voorspeld. We miskijken ons daar beter niet op, schrijft Dorien Emmers. In plaats van op groei focussen de Chinezen op wetenschap en innovatie. ‘Velen in de westerse wereld voelen zich bedreigd door de opmars van China. Dat land heeft niet alleen grote ambities en mogelijkheden in de productie, maar ook qua kennis’, schreef professor Nicolas Standaert in 2005 in De Tijd , tot veler verbazing.

  • Feb 14, 2024 | srcd.onlinelibrary.wiley.com | Dorien Emmers |Wenjing Yu |Yun Shen |Cindy Xin Feng

    CONFLICT OF INTEREST STATEMENT The authors declare no conflicts of interest. Supporting Information Filename Description cdev14068-sup-0001-Supinfo.docxWord 2007 document , 866.9 KB Data S1. REFERENCES , & (2015). Global health and development in early childhood. Annual Review of Psychology, 66(1), 433–457. , , , & (1993). Nine-year outcome of the Vermont intervention program for low birth weight infants. Pediatrics, 91(1), 45–55.

  • Mar 31, 2023 | asiatimes.com | Scott Rozelle |Dorien Emmers

    According to World Bank data, only a handful of economies have risen from middle- to high-income status since 1960, when economic catch-up growth in many developing economies took off. Examples include South Korea, Singapore, Israel and Ireland. Some countries that were high income in 1960 remain so today, such as Denmark and Japan. Others, like Myanmar and North Korea, have stayed poor. Many countries have stayed at middle-income status for decades, seemingly unable to reach high-income status.

  • Mar 30, 2023 | eastasiaforum.org | Dorien Emmers |KU Leuven |Peter McDonald

    Authors: Scott Rozelle, Stanford University and Dorien Emmers, KU LeuvenAccording to World Bank data, only a handful of economies have risen from middle- to high-income status since 1960, when economic catch-up growth in many developing economies took off. Examples include South Korea, Singapore, Israel and Ireland. Some countries that were high income in 1960 remain so today, such as Denmark and Japan. Others, like Myanmar and North Korea, have stayed poor.

  • Mar 30, 2023 | blogarama.com | Dorien Emmers |KU Leuven

    Authors: Scott Rozelle, Stanford University and Dorien Emmers, KU LeuvenAccording to World Bank data, only a handful of economies have risen from middle- to high-income status since 1960, when economic catch-up growth in many developing economies took off. Examples include South Korea, Singapore, Israel and Ireland. Some countries that were high income in 1960 remain so today, such as Denmark and Japan. Others, like Myanmar and North Korea, have stayed poor.

Contact details

Socials & Sites

Try JournoFinder For Free

Search and contact over 1M+ journalist profiles, browse 100M+ articles, and unlock powerful PR tools.

Start Your 7-Day Free Trial →