Keun Lee is distinguished professor at Seoul National University, fellow of CIFAR, an editor for Research Policy, a regular writer for Project Syndicates, the winner of the 2014 Schumpeter Prize, and the 2019 KAPP Prize. He served as an economic advisor for the President of Korea, as the President of the International Schumpeter Society, was a member of the UN CDP, and of the World Economic Forum (GFC).
'A richly detailed and highly stimulating book on how latecomers, especially middle-income countries, can overcome the multiple obstacles they face. The key, Keun Lee argues, is not to emulate the experience of rich countries but to develop institutional innovations better suited to their needs – through industrial policies that emphasize domestic knowledge and ownership of firms and mediate the economy's relationship with the global economy, while leveraging the discipline of global competition. Drawing on extensive empirical studies of firms and industries around the world, this book presents a rich menu of development pathways.' Dani Rodrik, Professor, Harvard University 'In this original, thought-provoking book, Keun Lee shows that in a new context of de-globalization, policies and strategies of 'catching up' need to be revised. It is not enough to follow in the tracks of the rich countries or to trust market forces. Multiple pathways with different combinations of local and global knowledge sourcing and learning may be followed. To be successful they require a developmental state with a readiness to initiate detours and leapfrogging.' Bengt Åke Lundvall, Professor, Aalborg University; founder of Globelics 'Few catching-up countries in the world were able to escape the middle-income trap. Based on multi-dimensional, empirical analyses of those successful few in recent decades, Keun Lee challenges conventional wisdoms and provides insightful lessons for firms and governments in other middle-income countries to achieve a similar successful catching up. The key for the success is the changing pattern of interactions between leading firms and the state to foster global competitiveness along the catching-up process. The book is a must-read for business, academic, and policy communities in the developing countries and global development circles.' Justin Yifu Lin, Dean of the Institute of New Structural Economics and Institute of South–South Cooperation and Development, Peking University; former Chief Economist, World Bank