Å·ÃÀÈÕb´óƬ

Skip to Main Navigation
BRIEF

The Long Term Growth Model

Image

About the Model

The Long Term Growth Model (LTGM) is an Excel-based tool to analyze long-term growth scenarios building on the celebrated Solow-Swan Growth Model. The tool can also be used to assess the implications of growth (and changes in inequality) for poverty rates. The focus of the tool is on simplicity, transparency and ease-of-use: there are no macros, and the very low data requirements mean the tool can be applied in almost any country. The tool is useful for planning/vision documents and country reports, but is not designed for short-term forecasting. The building blocks of growth are savings, investment and productivity, but the model also analyzes human capital, demographics, the external sector (external debt, FDI, CAB) and labor force participation by gender.

The Long Term Growth Model: Fundamentals, Extensions, and Applications (Book, November 2022)

 is a collection of ten chapters that summarize the development of the LTGM over the last decade, and how it has been applied in practice. The volume starts with a description of the Standard LTGM, the simplest and easiest-to-use component of the LTGM suite. It then outlines several extensions to the basic model in important areas such as the implications of growth for poverty (built into the Standard LTGM), the effects of public capital, the determinants of total factor productivity (TFP) growth, and how growth drivers differ in natural resource rich economies. The final part of the book covers six case studies which apply the LTGM in a diverse range of countries: Malaysia, South Korea, Bangladesh, Syria, Egypt, and Sri Lanka. 

Policy Research Talk on The Long Term Growth Model: Fundamentals, Extensions, and Applications (March 2023)

Postcard for the event on The Long Term Growth Model
This Policy Research Talk summarized some of the key findings of the new book , focusing on three policy-relevant extensions to the LTGM framework and providing some applications that illustrate how to use them in practice.
 | Video

Policy Research Talk on Long-Term Growth in Developing Countries (December 2021)

Image
This Policy Research Talk presented the fundamentals of the LTGM, its various extensions, as well as examples of its applications in different countries around the world.
 | Video

LTGM Files

Latest version:  (Excel file)

(PDF)

 (PDF)

(PDF) [ (Excel file)]

Note that example simulations are purely illustrative and do not necessarily reflect the views of the World Bank.

The LTGM is regularly updated so check back for new versions. Last updated: July 2024 

Public Capital Extension (LTGM-PC)

The LTGM-PC is an extension of the standard LTGM (above) which separates the total capital stock into public and private portions, and adjusts the public component for quality. The LTGM-PC spreadsheet allows users to analyze the effect of an increase in public or private investment or the quality of public investment on economic growth. The LTGM-PC spreadsheet is similar to the standard LTGM: transparent (no macros) and easy-to-use, and with all relevant data preloaded for almost all countries. The LTGM-PC also includes a new cardinal Infrastructure Efficiency Index (IEI), which measures the quality of public capital. In the model, public investment generates a larger boost to growth if existing stocks of public capital are low, or if public capital is particularly important in the production function. The LTGM-PC is described in the working paper ¡°Assessing the Effect of Public Capital on Growth: An Extension of the World Bank Long-Term Growth Model¡± by Devadas and Pennings. The Excel tool, working paper, and an appendix to the working paper are downloadable:

LTGM-PC latest version:  (Excel file)

LTGM-PC  | (PDF) | (Excel file)

Total Factor Productivity Extension (LTGM-TFP)

The LTGM-TFP is an Excel-based companion to the standard LTGM that helps users assess a country¡¯s potential for improving its TFP growth rate over the next few decades. The LTGM-TFP toolkit combines a country¡¯s scores for innovation, education, market efficiency, infrastructure, and institutions¡ªwhich have been shown in the literature to affect TFP growth¡ªinto a new ¡°TFP determinant index¡±. Based on a fixed-effects regression model, the ¡°TFP determinant index¡± then quantifies the future path for TFP growth in the LTGM-TFP toolkit for each country. That TFP growth path can be fed into the standard LTGM or LTGM-PC spreadsheets to determine paths for GDP growth or poverty reduction. The methodology is described in the companion working paper (please cite when using the toolkit):

Kim, Young Eun; Loayza, Norman V.. 2019. ¡°Productivity Growth: Patterns and Determinants across the World.¡± Policy Research Working Paper, No. WPS 8852. Washington, D.C.: World Bank Group.

The Excel-based tool and working paper are downloadable:

LTGM-TFP latest version:  (Excel file)

LTGM-TFP  (PDF)

Natural Resource Extension (LTGM-NR)

The LTGM-NR is an extension of the standard LTGM which adds natural resource sector to analyze (i) how long-run growth evolves in commodity exporting countries, (ii) the long-run growth impacts of commodity price shocks and (iii) the long-run growth impacts resource discoveries. The LTGM-NR spreadsheet is similar to the standard LTGM: transparent (no macros) and easy to use, with relevant data preloaded data for 56 resource-rich countries. The LTGM-NR also allows the analysis of how different fiscal rules ¨C such as a Hartwick rule, structural surplus rule, or balanced budget rule ¨C affect long run growth. In the default version of the model, (i) fiscal rules that prioritize public investment generally lead to the largest increases in long-term growth and (ii) we differentiate between different output measures such as real Gross Domestic Income (GDI) (which is directly affected by commodity price shocks) and real GDP (which is only affected indirectly). The LTGM-NR also captures the effect of other (non-resource) growth fundamentals in resource-rich economies, and it is better suited to general growth analysis in these countries than the standard LTGM. However, the LTGM-NR is a long-run supply-side model, and so does not capture the short-run effects of commodity price and discovery shocks that operate through aggregate demand. The LTGM-NR is described in the working paper ¡°Assessing the Effects of Natural Resources on Long-Term Growth: An Extension of the World Bank Long Term Growth Model¡± by Loayza, Mendes, Mendes Ramos and Pennings (please cite when using the tool). The working paper, spreadsheet-based toolkit, and instructions on how to use it (including a worked example) are downloadable:

LTGM-NR latest version:  (Excel file)

LTGM-NR  (PDF) |  (PDF)


Examples

Some examples of publicly available reports or working papers that used the LTGM (including early variants):

  • (2024 Working Paper)
  •  (2024 Working Paper)
  • (2024, Ch 1)
  • (February 2021, Ch 2)
  •  (Working Paper, June 2020)
  •  (2023, Ch 1).
  •  (2022, Introduction & Ch 1).
  •  (2022, Ch 2 & Introduction).
  •  (2022, Ch 1).
  •  (2022, Ch 1 and executive summary). Uses the LTGM-NR.
  •  (2022, Ch 2 and executive summary). Uses the LTGM-NR.
  •  (2022, Ch 2)
  •  (2022, Ch 2)
  • (June 2020, Box 5)
  • (December 2019, Box 5)
  • (June 2019, Box 3)
  • , 2019 Working Paper by Devadas, Elbadawi and Loayza
  • (September 2018, Ch 5)
  • 2018
  • 2018
  •  2018
  •  (by Mijiyawa) 2017 Working Paper
  •  (by Sinha) 2017 Working Paper
  •  (by Jeong) 2017 Working Paper
  •  2016
  • Savings and Growth in Egypt (by Hevia and Loayza): ;
  •  2018
  •  2018
  •  2017
  • Nepal Country Economic Memorandum 2017
  • 2017
  •  November 2017
  •  December 2016
  • 2018
  • 2018
  • 2018
  •  (by Hevia and Loayza); 2013 Working Paper
  •  July 2011

The LTGM is the product of a collaboration between the Development Research Group¡¯s Macroeconomics and Growth Team and the Macroeconomics, Trade and Investment Global Practice.


MULTIMEDIA

Image
click

Experts

Steven Pennings

Senior Economist

Norman Loayza

Director, Global Indicators Group