Advances in transport and communication technologies in the 1980s and 1990s allowed the proliferation of global value chains that spurred the East Asian growth miracle (Baldwin 2016, Williamson and O’Rourke 2017). Recent decades have seen a new wave of disruptive technologies like robots, AI and digital platforms. Yet, this period has coincided with a deceleration in East Asian productivity (‘total factor productivity’) growth.
While this productivity slowdown has been global, it is far from uniform. In OECD economies, the top-performing firms – often referred to as the ‘global frontier’ – have maintained rapid productivity growth. The overall slowdown in OECD economies comes from a growing gap between these leaders and the rest (Blanchenay et al. 2017, Criscuolo et al. 2017). What remains less understood is how these dynamics play out in emerging economies.
Frontier firms in East Asia are falling behind
Why has this productivity slowdown in East Asia come at a time of rapid technological progress? To address this question, in De Nicola et al. (2025) we use newly harmonised firm-level data from national statistical agencies across five major East Asian economies.
First, in East Asia, around three quarters of aggregate productivity growth has been due to increases within existing firms. Very little is contributed to productivity growth by the reallocation of market share across firms or from firm entry and exit. In fact, the market share of the national frontier firms – the 10% most productive firms in a sector – is declining. Resources appear to be trapped in less-productive firms that should shrink or exit, which could enable more-productive firms to scale up.
Second, productivity growth within the national frontier firms has been slower than among less productive firms. Frontier firms account for a large share of output and employment and around half of all within-firm productivity growth, so their stagnation weighs heavily on overall productivity.
While slower growth relative to less productive firms may reflect desirable domestic convergence, productivity gaps between East Asia’s frontier firms and the global frontier are widening in digital-intensive sectors — such as electronics, IT services, and pharmaceuticals. Between 2005 and 2015, global frontier firms in digital manufacturing boosted productivity by 76%. In contrast, national frontier firms in Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, and Viet Nam achieved only a 34% increase over the same period (refer to Figure 1).
One reason for the underperformance of leading firms in East Asia is the uneven adoption of advanced technology. The gap in technology use between firms in East Asia and Pacific (EAP) and the world’s most sophisticated firms has widened, much more so than the gap between the average EAP firms and their global counterparts. The diffusion of accessible technologies like mobile internet is almost universal, whereas big differences persist for sophisticated technologies that drive frontier firm growth.
Figure 1 The national frontier in EAP countries is falling behind the global frontier, especially in digital sectors
Note: “National frontier” refers to the 90th percentile of the firm productivity distribution for each country and industry and “global frontier” to the 95th percentile of the firm productivity distribution across high-income economies within an industry. The distance between the national and global frontier productivity is normalized to 0 in the first year, such that negative numbers reflect the national frontier falling further behind the global frontier relative to the first year, and positive numbers reflect the national frontier catching up with or exceeding the global frontier. Sector “digital intensity” is defined according to Eurostat’s Digital Intensity Index, which classifies high-technology manufacturing and high-knowledge-intensive services as “digital-intensive sectors” and other manufacturing and services sectors as “less-digital-intensive sectors.” CHN = China; IDN = Indonesia; MYS = Malaysia; PHL = Philippines; VNM = Viet Nam.
Why are the leaders not leading? How can policy help?
The relative stagnation of East Asia’s top firms may be because they lack adequate competition incentives and the relevant capabilities, such as high-quality skills and infrastructure.
1 Firms need stronger incentives
Barriers to competition in both goods and services markets stifle the incentive for the top firms to innovate. Firms that are close to the frontier innovate to stay ahead of their competitors, whereas laggard firms are discouraged and innovate less (Aghion et al. 2021). For example, Chinese import competition has been found to increase the innovation of leading firms but to depress it among nonleading firms in several countries (Cusolito et al. 2021, Iacovone 2012).
Although tariffs on goods are relatively low in East Asia, non-tariff measures in manufacturing and restrictions on services limit competition. For instance, in sectors dominated by state-owned enterprises (SOEs), frontier firm productivity growth is significantly lower than in other sectors.
Policy reforms that increase exposure to competition can be powerful tools to accelerate productivity growth. For example, liberalisation of services markets following Viet Nam’s WTO accession in 2007 are associated with 5% faster productivity growth of frontier firms in these same services sectors and over 10% in downstream manufacturing firms that use these services (see Figure 2).
Figure 2 Opening services to competition in Viet Nam increased productivity in these services sectors as well as in downstream manufacturing sectors that use services inputs
Note: The figure presents within-firms estimates of changes in total factor productivity between 2008 and 2016 and changes in the STRI of the World Bank and World Trade Organization. Coefficients reflect the estimated increase in productivity for a 1 standard deviation decrease in STRI. All coefficients are statistically significant at the 95 percent level. “Frontier firms” are defined as the top 10 percent most-productive firms within an industry, and “laggard firms” are the bottom 10 percent. The main explanatory variable is the change in STRI values in the trade, transport, finance, professionals, and telecommunications sectors between 2016 and 2008 in the “direct own-sector effect,” and the change in the “downstream” STRI for manufacturing sectors in “downstream effect.” The downstream STRI is a sector-specific measure for each two-digit manufacturing sector, calculated by the average STRI of the 5 services sectors, weighted by the corresponding purchasing value from each manufacturing sector. The regression sample in “direct own-sector effect” consists of all enterprises operating in the trade, transport, finance, professionals, and telecommunications sectors, and all manufacturing enterprises in “downstream effect,” in 2008 and 2016. STRI = Services Trade Restrictions Index.
2 Firms need stronger capabilities
Productivity growth and adoption of sophisticated technologies require a broad range of skills and high-quality digital infrastructure. Yet basic skills remain limited. In several East Asian economies, more than half of 10-year-olds are unable to read an age-appropriate passage. Management quality remains a challenge, with the best-managed firms in the region especially far behind the best-managed firms globally. Meanwhile, access to high-speed fibre broadband – critical for cloud-based tools and AI – is uneven across and within countries.
Improving skills is key. Reforms are needed to fix the foundation of basic skills on which more-advanced skills can be built. Equipping workers with the skills that complement new technologies and enhancing the abilities of managers are crucial to accelerating productivity (Arias et al. 2025). Increased investment in new technologies is correlated with higher firm productivity in Viet Nam, but only for firms with a sufficiently skilled workforce (see Figure 3).
Figure 3 Productivity gains from technology adoption accrue to firms with more-skilled workers
Note: The figure presents results from an estimation of within-firm changes in TFP on changes in the (log) value of a firm’s primary production technology per worker, interacted with a skills quartile dummy. Based on 2010–18 firm-level data for Viet Nam. Skills are measured in the initial period and reflect the share of a firm’s workers with a university degree, and quartiles are calculated within a two-digit industry. Error bars denote 90 percent confidence intervals; hence, the coefficients on the bottom skill quartile are not significantly different from zero. TFP = total factor productivity.
3 The case for coordinated reforms
Boosting productivity at the frontier requires a package of mutually reinforcing reforms: enhancing competition by liberalising services and reducing non-tariff barriers; building skills, from foundational literacy to advanced technical and managerial capabilities; and expanding digital infrastructure, thus ensuring access to high-speed internet and cloud services.
Synchronizing reforms can help exploit the synergies between enhanced human capital, infrastructure, and competition. For example, both openness to foreign competition and access to fibre broadband for firms in the Philippines increased technology adoption, but their combined impact was more than double. Similarly, widening access to higher education in China increased productivity, especially for foreign-owned firms. Also, trade liberalization in Indonesia led to productivity-enhancing increases in foreign direct investment, especially for firms with more-skilled workforces.
Conclusions
The relative stagnation of East Asia’s frontier firms is a challenge for long-term growth. In a world of accelerating technological change, maintaining competitiveness requires more than broad access to digital infrastructure. It requires ensuring that the most productive firms can innovate, expand, and adopt cutting-edge technologies. Our findings call for coordinated reforms – in skills, infrastructure, and competition – that can unleash the potential of East Asian firms and ensure they keep pace with the best in the world.
Authors’ note: The opinions expressed in this column are entirely those of the authors. They do not necessarily represent the views of the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development/World Bank and its affiliated organisations, or those of the Executive Directors of the World Bank or the governments they represent.
References
Arias, O, D Fukuzawa, D Le and A Mattoo (2025), “Future jobs: AI, robots, and jobs in developing countries”, VoxEU.org, 30 August.
Aghion, P, C Antonin, and S Bunel (202a), The Power of Creative Destruction: Economic Upheaval and the Wealth of Nations, Harvard University Press.
Baldwin, R (2016), The Great Convergence: Information Technology and the New Globalization, Harvard University Press.
Blanchenay, P, C Criscuolo, and G Berlingieri (2017), “Great Divergences: The growing dispersion of wages and productivity in OECD countries”, VoxEU.org, 15 May.
Cusolito, A P, A Garcia-Marin, and W F Maloney (2021), “Proximity to the frontier, markups, and the response of innovation to foreign competition”, VoxEU.org, 4 November.
Criscuolo, C, P Gal, and D Andrews (2017), “The best vs the rest: The global productivity slowdown hides an increasing performance gap across firms”, VoxEU.org, 27 March.
De Nicola, F, A Mattoo, and J Timmis (2025), Firm Foundations of Growth: Productivity and Technology in East Asia and Pacific, East Asia and Pacific Development Studies, World Bank.
Iacovone, L (2012), “The Better You Are, The Stronger It Makes You: Evidence on the Asymmetric Impact of Liberalization”, Journal of Development Economics 99(2): 474–85
Williamson, J G and K O’Rourke (2017), “The spread of modern manufacturing to the poor periphery”, VoxEU.org, 3 April.


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