Economic miracle
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Economic miracle is an informal economic term for a period of dramatic economic development that is entirely unexpected or unexpectedly strong. Economic miracles have occurred in the recent histories of a number of countries, often those undergoing an economic boom or described as a tiger economy.
Great Divergence
[edit]See Great Divergence.
- Commercial revolution (c. 1000–1760)
- Industrial Revolution (c. 1760–1840)
- Second Industrial Revolution (c. 1870–1914)
Post-World War II
[edit]See Post–World War II economic expansion.
- Four Asian Tigers (South Korea, Taiwan, Hong Kong, and Singapore, c. 1960s–1990s)
- Miracle on the Han River (South Korea, c. 1962–1997)
- Taiwan Miracle (1961–2000)
- Swiss miracle (c. 1940s-2000s)
- Japanese economic miracle (c. 1945–1990)
- Trente Glorieuses (France, c. 1945–1975)
- Record years (Sweden, c. 1947–1974)
- Wirtschaftswunder (West Germany and Austria, c. 1950s–1970s)
- Mexican miracle (c. 1940s–1970s) (term not used by economists)
- Belgian economic miracle (1945–1948)
- Greek economic miracle (1950–1973) (Eventually followed by downturn)
- Italian economic miracle (c. 1950–1973)
- Spanish miracle (1959–1974)
- Costarrican Ochomogo economic miracle (1950-1979)
Later
[edit]- Tiger Cub Economies (Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand, the Philippines, and Vietnam, c. 2010s–present)
- Indonesian economic boom (1976–present)
- Malaysian miracle (1971–present)
- Philippine economic boom (1986–present)
- Thai economic boom (1980s–present)
- Đổi Mới (Vietnam, 1986–present)
- Brazilian Miracle (1968–1973)
- Miracle of Chile (1975–2010)(Debatable)
- Economic liberalisation in India (1991–present)
- Chinese economic reform (1978–present)
- Massachusetts Miracle (1980s)
- Gulf Tiger (Dubai city, c. 1990s–2008)
- Celtic Tiger (Ireland, c. 1995–2007)
- Baltic Tigers (Estonia, Latvia, or Lithuania, c. 2000–2007)
- Tatra Tiger (Slovakia, 2002–2007)
- 2000s Turkish economic boom (Turkey, c. 2000–2018)
- Adriatic Tiger (Slovenia, 2004–2009)
- Carpat Tiger (Romania, 1991–2009)
References
[edit]Further reading
[edit]- Seliger, Bernhard (2010). "Theories of economic miracles" (PDF). Diskurs (1): 1–26. Broken link