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Vulnerability, trade, financial flows and state failure in small island developing states

journal contribution
posted on 2010-05-01, 00:00 authored by Mark McGillivray, W Naude, A Santos-Paulino
Small Island Developing States (SIDS) are very different to other developing countries. Relative to GDP they have the highest levels of foreign trade and aid receipts of all developing countries. Remittances from abroad are a far more important source of income for SIDS, and some depend very heavily on export revenues. The quality of governance varies tremendously among SIDS, they are over-represented among countries classified as fragile states and many are prone to state failure. These and other factors combine to make SIDS highly vulnerable to external economic shocks. Achieving development in SIDS is as a consequence an especially complex task that requires an understanding of the roles played by aid, trade, remittances and governance in these countries. This paper looks at these issues, along with providing various stylised facts about SIDS. In so doing it serves as a background and broad contextual setting for the papers that follow in this Special Issue on 'Fragility and Development in Small Island Developing States'.

History

Journal

Journal of development studies

Volume

46

Issue

5

Pagination

815 - 827

Publisher

Routledge

Location

London, England

ISSN

0022-0388

eISSN

1743-9140

Language

eng

Notes

This articles was also presented as a chapter : Vulnerability, trade, financial flows and state failure in small island developing states, in Understanding small-island developing states : fragility and external shocks, Routledge, London, England, 2010, pp.1-12.

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2010, Taylor & Francis

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