Pacific Island Nations (PINs) represent a distinctive group of states whose economic development trajectories are shaped by a complex interplay of structural vulnerabilities, environmental pressures, and institutional challenges. Despite sustained international development assistance and global attention to their unique context, these states continue to grapple with sluggish economic growth and persistent development disparities. This article investigates the multidimensional constraints to economic growth in PINs, combining a comprehensive literature review, secondary data analysis, and a qualitative assessment of policy frameworks to offer an integrated understanding of their economic fragility. Drawing on comparative insights from over 20 Pacific states, the study identifies four primary categories of impediments: geographic isolation and limited market access, environmental and climate-related vulnerabilities, weak governance and institutional capacity, and limited economic diversification. The analysis highlights how these factors are not merely additive but deeply interwoven, often reinforcing each other to entrench cycles of underdevelopment. For instance, remoteness increases trade costs, which in turn limits private sector development, while climate shocks continuously divert fiscal resources away from long-term investments. The article concludes with policy recommendations aimed at enhancing economic resilience and sustainability. These include strengthening digital and transport connectivity, integrating climate adaptation into all infrastructure planning, improving institutional quality through targeted governance reforms, and expanding human capital through education and vocational training. The findings underscore the need for a holistic, context-sensitive, and regionally coordinated approach to economic policy in PINs. Without such an approach, efforts to promote sustainable growth in these nations will remain fragmented and insufficient in the face of mounting global challenges.
Callahan et al. (Fri,) studied this question.