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Overcoming Remoteness in the Peruvian Amazonia: A Growth Diagnostic of Loreto

Author

Listed:
  • Ricardo Hausmann

    (Harvard's Growth Lab)

  • Miguel Angel Santos

    (Center for International Development at Harvard University)

  • Frank Muci

    (Center for International Development at Harvard University)

  • Jorge Tudela Pye
  • Ana Grisanti

    (Center for International Development at Harvard University)

  • Jessie Lu

Abstract

Is there a tradeoff between environmental sustainability and economic development? If there is a place where that question can be approximated, that is Loreto. Located on the western flank of the Amazon jungle, Loreto is Peru’s largest state and the one with the lowest population density. Its capital, Iquitos, is the largest city without road access in the world. For three decades, the region’s income and development has diverged from that of Peru and its other Amazonian peers by orders of magnitude. And yet, despite plummeting contributions from natural resources – that predominate in the policy discussion in and on the state – Loreto has developed a more complex productive ecosystem than one would expect, given its geographical isolation. As a result, it has a stock of productive capabilities that can be redeployed in economic activities with higher value-added, able to sustain higher wages and better living standards. We deployed a thorough Growth Diagnostic of Loreto to identify the most binding constraints preventing private investment and development in sustainable economic activities. In the process, we relied on domestic databases available to the public in Peru and international datasets, combining and validating our analytical insights with extensive field visits to the Peruvian Amazonia and lengthy interviews with policymakers, private businesses, and academia. Improving fluvial connectivity, developing the capacity to sort out coordination failures associated with the process of self-discovery, and substituting oil for solar energy, are the three policy goals that would deliver the largest bang for the reform buck. The latter presents an opportunity for environmental organizations – subsidizing solar – to move away from their status quo of preventing bad things from happening, to a more constructive one that entails enabling good things and sustainable industries to happen.

Suggested Citation

  • Ricardo Hausmann & Miguel Angel Santos & Frank Muci & Jorge Tudela Pye & Ana Grisanti & Jessie Lu, 2022. "Overcoming Remoteness in the Peruvian Amazonia: A Growth Diagnostic of Loreto," Growth Lab Working Papers 166, Harvard's Growth Lab.
  • Handle: RePEc:glh:wpfacu:166
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    References listed on IDEAS

    as
    1. Quamrul H. Ashraf & Ashley Lester & David N. Weil, 2009. "When Does Improving Health Raise GDP?," NBER Chapters, in: NBER Macroeconomics Annual 2008, Volume 23, pages 157-204, National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc.
    2. Acosta, Pablo A. & Lartey, Emmanuel K.K. & Mandelman, Federico S., 2009. "Remittances and the Dutch disease," Journal of International Economics, Elsevier, vol. 79(1), pages 102-116, September.
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