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      The building blocks of economic complexity.

      Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
      Algorithms, Commerce, economics, Developed Countries, Developing Countries, Humans, Industry, International Cooperation, Models, Economic

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          Abstract

          For Adam Smith, wealth was related to the division of labor. As people and firms specialize in different activities, economic efficiency increases, suggesting that development is associated with an increase in the number of individual activities and with the complexity that emerges from the interactions between them. Here we develop a view of economic growth and development that gives a central role to the complexity of a country's economy by interpreting trade data as a bipartite network in which countries are connected to the products they export, and show that it is possible to quantify the complexity of a country's economy by characterizing the structure of this network. Furthermore, we show that the measures of complexity we derive are correlated with a country's level of income, and that deviations from this relationship are predictive of future growth. This suggests that countries tend to converge to the level of income dictated by the complexity of their productive structures, indicating that development efforts should focus on generating the conditions that would allow complexity to emerge to generate sustained growth and prosperity.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          19549871
          2705545
          10.1073/pnas.0900943106

          Chemistry
          Algorithms,Commerce,economics,Developed Countries,Developing Countries,Humans,Industry,International Cooperation,Models, Economic

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