Whatever Happened to the Third World?: A History of the Economics of Development
Gespeichert in:
Beteilige Person: | |
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Format: | Elektronisch E-Book |
Sprache: | Englisch |
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Cham
Springer International Publishing AG
2020
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Schlagwörter: | |
Beschreibung: | Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources |
Umfang: | 1 Online-Ressource (335 pages) |
ISBN: | 9783030396138 |
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505 | 8 | |a Intro -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- Contents -- List of Figures -- List of Tables -- Chapter 1: Introduction -- 1.1 Introduction -- 1.2 Global Economic Development -- 1.2.1 Growth Patterns of Developing Countries -- 1.2.2 The Gap Between Rich and Poor Countries -- 1.2.3 Inequality Within Countries -- 1.2.4 What Happened to the Third World -- The Middle-Income Trap -- Low-Income Countries and Fragile States -- 1.2.5 The Evolution of Development Economics -- The First Generation -- The Second Generation -- A Third Generation? -- Institutions Matter -- History Matters as Well -- New Economic Geography -- 1.2.6 Trade, Globalisation and Developnment -- International Trade Theories -- Globalisation -- International Trade Institutions -- GATT -- UNCTAD -- WTO -- Regional Trade Agreements -- How Developing Countries Fared -- How to Ward Off Protectionism -- 1.3 Conclusions -- References -- Chapter 2: Whatever Happened to the Third World -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.2 The Evolution of the Third World in Figures -- 2.2.1 Trends -- 2.3 Trends in the Four Developing Regions -- 2.3.1 Asia -- 2.3.2 Latin America -- 2.3.3 Sub-Saharan Africa -- 2.3.4 The Middle East and North Africa -- 2.4 Categories of Countries -- 2.4.1 An Asian Success Story -- 2.4.2 The Middle-Income Trap -- Slowdowns -- Dissenters -- Alternative Approaches -- Skipping Industrialisation -- 2.4.3 Low-Income Countries and Failed States -- Damage Done -- What Can Be Done? -- Appendix 1: Lee Kuan Yew's Singapore -- Introduction -- Success Factors -- Employment and Education -- Anticorruption -- Welfare -- Democracy and Development -- Appendix 2: The Middle-Income Trap in Figures -- References -- Chapter 3: What Preceded Development Economics -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 What Scholars Thought About Development Before World War II -- 3.3 Civilisation and Climate -- 3.4 Dualism | |
505 | 8 | |a 3.5 The Role of Geography Revisited -- 3.6 Dualism Lives On -- References -- Chapter 4: The First Generation of Development Economists -- 4.1 Introduction -- 4.2 The Main Characteristics of the First Generation's Proposals -- 4.2.1 The Role of Government -- 4.2.2 Development Planning -- 4.2.3 Balanced and Unbalanced Growth -- 4.2.4 The Crucial Role of Savings -- 4.2.5 Foreign Aid -- 4.2.6 Almighty Government? -- 4.3 The Harrod-Domar Model -- 4.4 The First Generation in More Detail -- 4.4.1 Paul Rosenstein-Rodan -- 4.4.2 Ragnar Nurkse -- 4.4.3 William Arthur Lewis -- 4.4.4 Simon Kuznets -- Quantitative Aspects of Economic Growth of Nations: VIII-Distribution of Income by Size32 -- 4.4.5 Walt Whitman Rostow -- What Next? -- 4.4.6 Hollis Chenery -- 4.5 Dissenters -- 4.5.1 The Dirigiste Dogma -- 4.5.2 Failed Industrialisation -- 4.5.3 The Financing Gap and Aid -- 4.6 Conclusion -- 4.7 Development Theories in the Marxist Tradition -- References -- Chapter 5: The Second Generation of Development Economists -- 5.1 Introduction -- 5.2 The Philosophy -- 5.3 The Washington Consensus -- 5.4 Growth Theories Revisited -- 5.4.1 From Harrod-Domar to Solow -- 5.4.2 New Endogenous Growth Theory -- 5.4.2.1 Convergence -- 5.5 Empirical Studies -- 5.6 Asia and sub-Saharan Africa Compared -- 5.7 Dissenters -- 5.8 The Best of the Two Generations -- 5.8.1 The East Asian Miracle -- Common Threads -- Getting the Basics Right -- The Role of Government -- Institutions -- Comments -- 5.9 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 6: Main Components of the Third Generation -- 6.1 Introduction -- 6.2 New Institutional Economics -- 6.2.1 The Role of Institutions -- 6.2.2 Path Dependency -- 6.2.3 Transaction Costs -- 6.2.4 Property Rights -- 6.2.5 Types of Societies -- 6.2.6 Why Nations Fail -- 6.2.7 Institutions and Geography -- 6.2.8 Markets Require Institutions | |
505 | 8 | |a 6.2.9 Measurement Challenges -- 6.2.10 Chicken and Egg -- 6.2.11 Democracy, Autocracy and Institutions -- 6.2.12 Conclusion -- 6.3 Economic History -- 6.3.1 From Stagnation to Growth: Unified Growth Theory -- 6.3.2 Demographic Transition in Less-Developed Countries -- 6.3.3 Unified Growth Theory -- 6.3.4 Unified Evolutionary Growth Theory -- 6.3.5 Differential Takeoffs and the Great Divergence -- 6.3.6 Conclusions -- 6.4 Long-Term Economic Growth and the History of Technology -- 6.4.1 A Historical Theory of Technology -- 6.4.2 The Intellectual Roots of the Industrial Revolution -- 6.4.3 The Emergence of Technological Modernity -- 6.4.4 Institutions and Technological Progress -- 6.4.5 Technology, Growth, and the Rise of the Occident -- 6.4.6 Conclusion -- 6.5 New Economic Geography -- 6.5.1 Increasing Returns and Economic Geography -- 6.5.2 Reshaping Economic Geography -- 6.5.3 Does the Report Reshape Economic Geography? -- 6.5.4 Conclusion -- 6.6 Overall Conclusion -- Appendix: Population Issues -- Falling Fertility Rates -- Demographic Dividend -- References -- Chapter 7: Trade, Globalisation and Development -- 7.1 Introduction -- 7.2 International Trade Theories -- 7.3 Globalisation -- 7.3.1 The Downside of Globalisation -- 7.4 The Institutions of Multilateralism -- 7.4.1 GATT -- 7.4.2 UNCTAD -- Prebisch and UNCTAD -- UNCTAD II -- Beyond UNCTAD II -- 7.4.3 GATT, UNCTAD, and the WTO -- The Kennedy Round -- The Uruguay Round -- 7.4.4 WTO -- 7.4.5 Regional Trade Agreements -- 7.5 How Developing Countries Fared -- 7.5.1 Trade Liberalisation and Poverty Reduction -- 7.5.2 Income Distribution -- 7.5.3 No Level Playing Field -- 7.5.4 Renewed Protectionism -- 7.5.5 How to Ward Off Protectionism -- 7.6 Conclusions -- References -- Epilogue -- Index | |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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any_adam_object | |
author | de Haan, Peter |
author_facet | de Haan, Peter |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | de Haan, Peter |
author_variant | h p d hp hpd |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV048222954 |
collection | ZDB-30-PQE |
contents | Intro -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- Contents -- List of Figures -- List of Tables -- Chapter 1: Introduction -- 1.1 Introduction -- 1.2 Global Economic Development -- 1.2.1 Growth Patterns of Developing Countries -- 1.2.2 The Gap Between Rich and Poor Countries -- 1.2.3 Inequality Within Countries -- 1.2.4 What Happened to the Third World -- The Middle-Income Trap -- Low-Income Countries and Fragile States -- 1.2.5 The Evolution of Development Economics -- The First Generation -- The Second Generation -- A Third Generation? -- Institutions Matter -- History Matters as Well -- New Economic Geography -- 1.2.6 Trade, Globalisation and Developnment -- International Trade Theories -- Globalisation -- International Trade Institutions -- GATT -- UNCTAD -- WTO -- Regional Trade Agreements -- How Developing Countries Fared -- How to Ward Off Protectionism -- 1.3 Conclusions -- References -- Chapter 2: Whatever Happened to the Third World -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.2 The Evolution of the Third World in Figures -- 2.2.1 Trends -- 2.3 Trends in the Four Developing Regions -- 2.3.1 Asia -- 2.3.2 Latin America -- 2.3.3 Sub-Saharan Africa -- 2.3.4 The Middle East and North Africa -- 2.4 Categories of Countries -- 2.4.1 An Asian Success Story -- 2.4.2 The Middle-Income Trap -- Slowdowns -- Dissenters -- Alternative Approaches -- Skipping Industrialisation -- 2.4.3 Low-Income Countries and Failed States -- Damage Done -- What Can Be Done? -- Appendix 1: Lee Kuan Yew's Singapore -- Introduction -- Success Factors -- Employment and Education -- Anticorruption -- Welfare -- Democracy and Development -- Appendix 2: The Middle-Income Trap in Figures -- References -- Chapter 3: What Preceded Development Economics -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 What Scholars Thought About Development Before World War II -- 3.3 Civilisation and Climate -- 3.4 Dualism 3.5 The Role of Geography Revisited -- 3.6 Dualism Lives On -- References -- Chapter 4: The First Generation of Development Economists -- 4.1 Introduction -- 4.2 The Main Characteristics of the First Generation's Proposals -- 4.2.1 The Role of Government -- 4.2.2 Development Planning -- 4.2.3 Balanced and Unbalanced Growth -- 4.2.4 The Crucial Role of Savings -- 4.2.5 Foreign Aid -- 4.2.6 Almighty Government? -- 4.3 The Harrod-Domar Model -- 4.4 The First Generation in More Detail -- 4.4.1 Paul Rosenstein-Rodan -- 4.4.2 Ragnar Nurkse -- 4.4.3 William Arthur Lewis -- 4.4.4 Simon Kuznets -- Quantitative Aspects of Economic Growth of Nations: VIII-Distribution of Income by Size32 -- 4.4.5 Walt Whitman Rostow -- What Next? -- 4.4.6 Hollis Chenery -- 4.5 Dissenters -- 4.5.1 The Dirigiste Dogma -- 4.5.2 Failed Industrialisation -- 4.5.3 The Financing Gap and Aid -- 4.6 Conclusion -- 4.7 Development Theories in the Marxist Tradition -- References -- Chapter 5: The Second Generation of Development Economists -- 5.1 Introduction -- 5.2 The Philosophy -- 5.3 The Washington Consensus -- 5.4 Growth Theories Revisited -- 5.4.1 From Harrod-Domar to Solow -- 5.4.2 New Endogenous Growth Theory -- 5.4.2.1 Convergence -- 5.5 Empirical Studies -- 5.6 Asia and sub-Saharan Africa Compared -- 5.7 Dissenters -- 5.8 The Best of the Two Generations -- 5.8.1 The East Asian Miracle -- Common Threads -- Getting the Basics Right -- The Role of Government -- Institutions -- Comments -- 5.9 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 6: Main Components of the Third Generation -- 6.1 Introduction -- 6.2 New Institutional Economics -- 6.2.1 The Role of Institutions -- 6.2.2 Path Dependency -- 6.2.3 Transaction Costs -- 6.2.4 Property Rights -- 6.2.5 Types of Societies -- 6.2.6 Why Nations Fail -- 6.2.7 Institutions and Geography -- 6.2.8 Markets Require Institutions 6.2.9 Measurement Challenges -- 6.2.10 Chicken and Egg -- 6.2.11 Democracy, Autocracy and Institutions -- 6.2.12 Conclusion -- 6.3 Economic History -- 6.3.1 From Stagnation to Growth: Unified Growth Theory -- 6.3.2 Demographic Transition in Less-Developed Countries -- 6.3.3 Unified Growth Theory -- 6.3.4 Unified Evolutionary Growth Theory -- 6.3.5 Differential Takeoffs and the Great Divergence -- 6.3.6 Conclusions -- 6.4 Long-Term Economic Growth and the History of Technology -- 6.4.1 A Historical Theory of Technology -- 6.4.2 The Intellectual Roots of the Industrial Revolution -- 6.4.3 The Emergence of Technological Modernity -- 6.4.4 Institutions and Technological Progress -- 6.4.5 Technology, Growth, and the Rise of the Occident -- 6.4.6 Conclusion -- 6.5 New Economic Geography -- 6.5.1 Increasing Returns and Economic Geography -- 6.5.2 Reshaping Economic Geography -- 6.5.3 Does the Report Reshape Economic Geography? -- 6.5.4 Conclusion -- 6.6 Overall Conclusion -- Appendix: Population Issues -- Falling Fertility Rates -- Demographic Dividend -- References -- Chapter 7: Trade, Globalisation and Development -- 7.1 Introduction -- 7.2 International Trade Theories -- 7.3 Globalisation -- 7.3.1 The Downside of Globalisation -- 7.4 The Institutions of Multilateralism -- 7.4.1 GATT -- 7.4.2 UNCTAD -- Prebisch and UNCTAD -- UNCTAD II -- Beyond UNCTAD II -- 7.4.3 GATT, UNCTAD, and the WTO -- The Kennedy Round -- The Uruguay Round -- 7.4.4 WTO -- 7.4.5 Regional Trade Agreements -- 7.5 How Developing Countries Fared -- 7.5.1 Trade Liberalisation and Poverty Reduction -- 7.5.2 Income Distribution -- 7.5.3 No Level Playing Field -- 7.5.4 Renewed Protectionism -- 7.5.5 How to Ward Off Protectionism -- 7.6 Conclusions -- References -- Epilogue -- Index |
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dewey-full | 338.9 |
dewey-hundreds | 300 - Social sciences |
dewey-ones | 338 - Production |
dewey-raw | 338.9 |
dewey-search | 338.9 |
dewey-sort | 3338.9 |
dewey-tens | 330 - Economics |
discipline | Wirtschaftswissenschaften |
format | Electronic eBook |
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indexdate | 2024-12-20T19:38:56Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9783030396138 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-033603687 |
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psigel | ZDB-30-PQE |
publishDate | 2020 |
publishDateSearch | 2020 |
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publisher | Springer International Publishing AG |
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spelling | de Haan, Peter Verfasser aut Whatever Happened to the Third World? A History of the Economics of Development Cham Springer International Publishing AG 2020 ©2020 1 Online-Ressource (335 pages) txt rdacontent c rdamedia cr rdacarrier Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources Intro -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- Contents -- List of Figures -- List of Tables -- Chapter 1: Introduction -- 1.1 Introduction -- 1.2 Global Economic Development -- 1.2.1 Growth Patterns of Developing Countries -- 1.2.2 The Gap Between Rich and Poor Countries -- 1.2.3 Inequality Within Countries -- 1.2.4 What Happened to the Third World -- The Middle-Income Trap -- Low-Income Countries and Fragile States -- 1.2.5 The Evolution of Development Economics -- The First Generation -- The Second Generation -- A Third Generation? -- Institutions Matter -- History Matters as Well -- New Economic Geography -- 1.2.6 Trade, Globalisation and Developnment -- International Trade Theories -- Globalisation -- International Trade Institutions -- GATT -- UNCTAD -- WTO -- Regional Trade Agreements -- How Developing Countries Fared -- How to Ward Off Protectionism -- 1.3 Conclusions -- References -- Chapter 2: Whatever Happened to the Third World -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.2 The Evolution of the Third World in Figures -- 2.2.1 Trends -- 2.3 Trends in the Four Developing Regions -- 2.3.1 Asia -- 2.3.2 Latin America -- 2.3.3 Sub-Saharan Africa -- 2.3.4 The Middle East and North Africa -- 2.4 Categories of Countries -- 2.4.1 An Asian Success Story -- 2.4.2 The Middle-Income Trap -- Slowdowns -- Dissenters -- Alternative Approaches -- Skipping Industrialisation -- 2.4.3 Low-Income Countries and Failed States -- Damage Done -- What Can Be Done? -- Appendix 1: Lee Kuan Yew's Singapore -- Introduction -- Success Factors -- Employment and Education -- Anticorruption -- Welfare -- Democracy and Development -- Appendix 2: The Middle-Income Trap in Figures -- References -- Chapter 3: What Preceded Development Economics -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 What Scholars Thought About Development Before World War II -- 3.3 Civilisation and Climate -- 3.4 Dualism 3.5 The Role of Geography Revisited -- 3.6 Dualism Lives On -- References -- Chapter 4: The First Generation of Development Economists -- 4.1 Introduction -- 4.2 The Main Characteristics of the First Generation's Proposals -- 4.2.1 The Role of Government -- 4.2.2 Development Planning -- 4.2.3 Balanced and Unbalanced Growth -- 4.2.4 The Crucial Role of Savings -- 4.2.5 Foreign Aid -- 4.2.6 Almighty Government? -- 4.3 The Harrod-Domar Model -- 4.4 The First Generation in More Detail -- 4.4.1 Paul Rosenstein-Rodan -- 4.4.2 Ragnar Nurkse -- 4.4.3 William Arthur Lewis -- 4.4.4 Simon Kuznets -- Quantitative Aspects of Economic Growth of Nations: VIII-Distribution of Income by Size32 -- 4.4.5 Walt Whitman Rostow -- What Next? -- 4.4.6 Hollis Chenery -- 4.5 Dissenters -- 4.5.1 The Dirigiste Dogma -- 4.5.2 Failed Industrialisation -- 4.5.3 The Financing Gap and Aid -- 4.6 Conclusion -- 4.7 Development Theories in the Marxist Tradition -- References -- Chapter 5: The Second Generation of Development Economists -- 5.1 Introduction -- 5.2 The Philosophy -- 5.3 The Washington Consensus -- 5.4 Growth Theories Revisited -- 5.4.1 From Harrod-Domar to Solow -- 5.4.2 New Endogenous Growth Theory -- 5.4.2.1 Convergence -- 5.5 Empirical Studies -- 5.6 Asia and sub-Saharan Africa Compared -- 5.7 Dissenters -- 5.8 The Best of the Two Generations -- 5.8.1 The East Asian Miracle -- Common Threads -- Getting the Basics Right -- The Role of Government -- Institutions -- Comments -- 5.9 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 6: Main Components of the Third Generation -- 6.1 Introduction -- 6.2 New Institutional Economics -- 6.2.1 The Role of Institutions -- 6.2.2 Path Dependency -- 6.2.3 Transaction Costs -- 6.2.4 Property Rights -- 6.2.5 Types of Societies -- 6.2.6 Why Nations Fail -- 6.2.7 Institutions and Geography -- 6.2.8 Markets Require Institutions 6.2.9 Measurement Challenges -- 6.2.10 Chicken and Egg -- 6.2.11 Democracy, Autocracy and Institutions -- 6.2.12 Conclusion -- 6.3 Economic History -- 6.3.1 From Stagnation to Growth: Unified Growth Theory -- 6.3.2 Demographic Transition in Less-Developed Countries -- 6.3.3 Unified Growth Theory -- 6.3.4 Unified Evolutionary Growth Theory -- 6.3.5 Differential Takeoffs and the Great Divergence -- 6.3.6 Conclusions -- 6.4 Long-Term Economic Growth and the History of Technology -- 6.4.1 A Historical Theory of Technology -- 6.4.2 The Intellectual Roots of the Industrial Revolution -- 6.4.3 The Emergence of Technological Modernity -- 6.4.4 Institutions and Technological Progress -- 6.4.5 Technology, Growth, and the Rise of the Occident -- 6.4.6 Conclusion -- 6.5 New Economic Geography -- 6.5.1 Increasing Returns and Economic Geography -- 6.5.2 Reshaping Economic Geography -- 6.5.3 Does the Report Reshape Economic Geography? -- 6.5.4 Conclusion -- 6.6 Overall Conclusion -- Appendix: Population Issues -- Falling Fertility Rates -- Demographic Dividend -- References -- Chapter 7: Trade, Globalisation and Development -- 7.1 Introduction -- 7.2 International Trade Theories -- 7.3 Globalisation -- 7.3.1 The Downside of Globalisation -- 7.4 The Institutions of Multilateralism -- 7.4.1 GATT -- 7.4.2 UNCTAD -- Prebisch and UNCTAD -- UNCTAD II -- Beyond UNCTAD II -- 7.4.3 GATT, UNCTAD, and the WTO -- The Kennedy Round -- The Uruguay Round -- 7.4.4 WTO -- 7.4.5 Regional Trade Agreements -- 7.5 How Developing Countries Fared -- 7.5.1 Trade Liberalisation and Poverty Reduction -- 7.5.2 Income Distribution -- 7.5.3 No Level Playing Field -- 7.5.4 Renewed Protectionism -- 7.5.5 How to Ward Off Protectionism -- 7.6 Conclusions -- References -- Epilogue -- Index Development economics-History Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe de Haan, Peter Whatever Happened to the Third World? Cham : Springer International Publishing AG,c2020 9783030396121 |
spellingShingle | de Haan, Peter Whatever Happened to the Third World? A History of the Economics of Development Intro -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- Contents -- List of Figures -- List of Tables -- Chapter 1: Introduction -- 1.1 Introduction -- 1.2 Global Economic Development -- 1.2.1 Growth Patterns of Developing Countries -- 1.2.2 The Gap Between Rich and Poor Countries -- 1.2.3 Inequality Within Countries -- 1.2.4 What Happened to the Third World -- The Middle-Income Trap -- Low-Income Countries and Fragile States -- 1.2.5 The Evolution of Development Economics -- The First Generation -- The Second Generation -- A Third Generation? -- Institutions Matter -- History Matters as Well -- New Economic Geography -- 1.2.6 Trade, Globalisation and Developnment -- International Trade Theories -- Globalisation -- International Trade Institutions -- GATT -- UNCTAD -- WTO -- Regional Trade Agreements -- How Developing Countries Fared -- How to Ward Off Protectionism -- 1.3 Conclusions -- References -- Chapter 2: Whatever Happened to the Third World -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.2 The Evolution of the Third World in Figures -- 2.2.1 Trends -- 2.3 Trends in the Four Developing Regions -- 2.3.1 Asia -- 2.3.2 Latin America -- 2.3.3 Sub-Saharan Africa -- 2.3.4 The Middle East and North Africa -- 2.4 Categories of Countries -- 2.4.1 An Asian Success Story -- 2.4.2 The Middle-Income Trap -- Slowdowns -- Dissenters -- Alternative Approaches -- Skipping Industrialisation -- 2.4.3 Low-Income Countries and Failed States -- Damage Done -- What Can Be Done? -- Appendix 1: Lee Kuan Yew's Singapore -- Introduction -- Success Factors -- Employment and Education -- Anticorruption -- Welfare -- Democracy and Development -- Appendix 2: The Middle-Income Trap in Figures -- References -- Chapter 3: What Preceded Development Economics -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 What Scholars Thought About Development Before World War II -- 3.3 Civilisation and Climate -- 3.4 Dualism 3.5 The Role of Geography Revisited -- 3.6 Dualism Lives On -- References -- Chapter 4: The First Generation of Development Economists -- 4.1 Introduction -- 4.2 The Main Characteristics of the First Generation's Proposals -- 4.2.1 The Role of Government -- 4.2.2 Development Planning -- 4.2.3 Balanced and Unbalanced Growth -- 4.2.4 The Crucial Role of Savings -- 4.2.5 Foreign Aid -- 4.2.6 Almighty Government? -- 4.3 The Harrod-Domar Model -- 4.4 The First Generation in More Detail -- 4.4.1 Paul Rosenstein-Rodan -- 4.4.2 Ragnar Nurkse -- 4.4.3 William Arthur Lewis -- 4.4.4 Simon Kuznets -- Quantitative Aspects of Economic Growth of Nations: VIII-Distribution of Income by Size32 -- 4.4.5 Walt Whitman Rostow -- What Next? -- 4.4.6 Hollis Chenery -- 4.5 Dissenters -- 4.5.1 The Dirigiste Dogma -- 4.5.2 Failed Industrialisation -- 4.5.3 The Financing Gap and Aid -- 4.6 Conclusion -- 4.7 Development Theories in the Marxist Tradition -- References -- Chapter 5: The Second Generation of Development Economists -- 5.1 Introduction -- 5.2 The Philosophy -- 5.3 The Washington Consensus -- 5.4 Growth Theories Revisited -- 5.4.1 From Harrod-Domar to Solow -- 5.4.2 New Endogenous Growth Theory -- 5.4.2.1 Convergence -- 5.5 Empirical Studies -- 5.6 Asia and sub-Saharan Africa Compared -- 5.7 Dissenters -- 5.8 The Best of the Two Generations -- 5.8.1 The East Asian Miracle -- Common Threads -- Getting the Basics Right -- The Role of Government -- Institutions -- Comments -- 5.9 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 6: Main Components of the Third Generation -- 6.1 Introduction -- 6.2 New Institutional Economics -- 6.2.1 The Role of Institutions -- 6.2.2 Path Dependency -- 6.2.3 Transaction Costs -- 6.2.4 Property Rights -- 6.2.5 Types of Societies -- 6.2.6 Why Nations Fail -- 6.2.7 Institutions and Geography -- 6.2.8 Markets Require Institutions 6.2.9 Measurement Challenges -- 6.2.10 Chicken and Egg -- 6.2.11 Democracy, Autocracy and Institutions -- 6.2.12 Conclusion -- 6.3 Economic History -- 6.3.1 From Stagnation to Growth: Unified Growth Theory -- 6.3.2 Demographic Transition in Less-Developed Countries -- 6.3.3 Unified Growth Theory -- 6.3.4 Unified Evolutionary Growth Theory -- 6.3.5 Differential Takeoffs and the Great Divergence -- 6.3.6 Conclusions -- 6.4 Long-Term Economic Growth and the History of Technology -- 6.4.1 A Historical Theory of Technology -- 6.4.2 The Intellectual Roots of the Industrial Revolution -- 6.4.3 The Emergence of Technological Modernity -- 6.4.4 Institutions and Technological Progress -- 6.4.5 Technology, Growth, and the Rise of the Occident -- 6.4.6 Conclusion -- 6.5 New Economic Geography -- 6.5.1 Increasing Returns and Economic Geography -- 6.5.2 Reshaping Economic Geography -- 6.5.3 Does the Report Reshape Economic Geography? -- 6.5.4 Conclusion -- 6.6 Overall Conclusion -- Appendix: Population Issues -- Falling Fertility Rates -- Demographic Dividend -- References -- Chapter 7: Trade, Globalisation and Development -- 7.1 Introduction -- 7.2 International Trade Theories -- 7.3 Globalisation -- 7.3.1 The Downside of Globalisation -- 7.4 The Institutions of Multilateralism -- 7.4.1 GATT -- 7.4.2 UNCTAD -- Prebisch and UNCTAD -- UNCTAD II -- Beyond UNCTAD II -- 7.4.3 GATT, UNCTAD, and the WTO -- The Kennedy Round -- The Uruguay Round -- 7.4.4 WTO -- 7.4.5 Regional Trade Agreements -- 7.5 How Developing Countries Fared -- 7.5.1 Trade Liberalisation and Poverty Reduction -- 7.5.2 Income Distribution -- 7.5.3 No Level Playing Field -- 7.5.4 Renewed Protectionism -- 7.5.5 How to Ward Off Protectionism -- 7.6 Conclusions -- References -- Epilogue -- Index Development economics-History |
title | Whatever Happened to the Third World? A History of the Economics of Development |
title_auth | Whatever Happened to the Third World? A History of the Economics of Development |
title_exact_search | Whatever Happened to the Third World? A History of the Economics of Development |
title_full | Whatever Happened to the Third World? A History of the Economics of Development |
title_fullStr | Whatever Happened to the Third World? A History of the Economics of Development |
title_full_unstemmed | Whatever Happened to the Third World? A History of the Economics of Development |
title_short | Whatever Happened to the Third World? |
title_sort | whatever happened to the third world a history of the economics of development |
title_sub | A History of the Economics of Development |
topic | Development economics-History |
topic_facet | Development economics-History |
work_keys_str_mv | AT dehaanpeter whateverhappenedtothethirdworldahistoryoftheeconomicsofdevelopment |