Economic Development: A Regional, Institutional, and Historical ApproachM.E. Sharpe, 2007 - 320 pages This innovative textbook provides an introduction to economic development in both an historical and contemporary, comparative, and systems framework. The text takes a regional approach, with the theory developed within regional contexts. This leads to the second innovative aspect, an emphasis on institutional structures unique to each region. Third, the authors analyze the development process within the historical context of each region, and consider institutional inheritance from both the pre-colonial and colonial eras and in contemporary times. Thoroughly classroom tested, the text requires no previous courses in economics, although basic principles of economics would be useful. An Instructor's Manual with discussion questions, a test bank, and PowerPoint slides is available online to instructors who adopt the text. |
From inside the book
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Page ix
... Problem 217 What We Have Learned 220 Key Terms References 7. The Middle East and North Africa Early Economy in the Precolonial Era The Precolonial and Colonial Eras 221 222 225 225 228 The Emergence of Nation - States 231 Petroleum ...
... Problem 217 What We Have Learned 220 Key Terms References 7. The Middle East and North Africa Early Economy in the Precolonial Era The Precolonial and Colonial Eras 221 222 225 225 228 The Emergence of Nation - States 231 Petroleum ...
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Contents
Growth Versus Development | 5 |
Tables | 7 |
TABLES FIGURES AND MAPS | 11 |
History of Development Theory | 12 |
Changes in Recent Development Thinking | 27 |
References | 33 |
Steadystate Growth | 37 |
European Emergence | 39 |
South Asia | 153 |
European land in the Americas | 196 |
Latin America | 197 |
35 | 222 |
North Africa and the Middle East | 224 |
The Middle East and North Africa | 225 |
Key Terms | 247 |
China and Russia | 250 |
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Common terms and phrases
absolute convergence agricultural productivity agricultural sector argued bias Botswana capita income century China colonies commitment problem convergence costs created decline discussed domestic dramatically East Asia economic development economic growth environment environmental equilibrium Europe expansion experience exports extract factors farmers fertility firms Gini coefficients growth rates human capital impact import substitution important incentive increased India industrial inputs institutional structure investment Japan Japanese labor land Latin America lineage group manufacturing MENA countries migration nations occur output percent period periphery policies political population growth poverty predatory profits property rights protoindustrial rapid reduce reform region relative rent seeking result revenue role ruling elite rural Russia significant Smithian growth social society South Asia South Korea Soviet Union strategy Sub-Saharan Africa Taiwan theory tion total factor productivity trade traditional transition University Press urban wealth workers World Bank