This paper describes the scope for mutual learning and the sharing of innovation between different parts of the world. It argues that the top-down concept of international development - with its connotations that low income countries need to develop in ways that emulate progress in richer more "developed" ones needs to be replaced with the idea of co-development and learning and sharing together. Similarly, it advocates for replacing the term of "reverse innovation" with the concept of global sourcing of innovation.
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