Widening economic inequalities across the globe today can be understood as the historical consequences of different drivers of growth. This important new text examines the proximate factors of labour, capital and productivity across a range of countries, as well as deeper explanations, from geographical and cultural factors, to colonialism, institutions and the openness of markets and borders. It considers these variables, their effects on rates of growth, and how differing rates of growth will enhance or constrain a country's development. The author makes the case that long-standing inequalities between countries should be the primary focus for academic study, and that development plans should be produced on a case-by-case basis, reflecting the individual circumstances of countries and regions. Using a wide range of historical and contemporary examples, he highlights the blind spots and assumptions that are liable to compromise the priorities and actions of policy-makers, and provides a route towards effective economic reform and sustained development.
McCartney
Economic Growth and Development jetzt bestellen!
Zielgruppe
Lower undergraduate
Weitere Infos & Material
1. Introduction.- PART I: THE PROXIMATE SOURCES OF GROWTH IN THE MODERN WORLD ECONOMY SINCE 1950 2. Thinking about Growth.- 3. Growth in the Modern World Economy since 1950.- 4. Domestic and Foreign Direct Investment.- 5. Population and Economic Growth/Development.- 6. Technology and Economic Growth.- 7. Education and Health.- PART II: PATTERNS OF LONG-TERM ECONOMIC GROWTH AND THE DEEPER DETERMINANTS OF ECONOMIC GROWTH 'THE GREAT DIVERGENCE' SINCE 1750 8. Economic Growth and Economic Structure since 1750.- 9. Colonialism.- 10. Institutions.- 11. Geography and Economic Resources.- 12. Culture.- 13. International Trade, Openness and Integration.- 14. Conclusion.
Matthew McCartney is Director of the Contemporary South Asian Studies Programme and Associate Professor of the Political Economy and Human Development of India, University of Oxford, UK.