Economic DevelopmentM.E. Sharpe |
From inside the book
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... capital, population growth, education, international trade, international finance, and the like. Within each chapter, there isgenerally a theoretical presentation,which is then illustratedthrough reference to a number of countryspecific ...
... capital, population growth, education, international trade, international finance, and the like. Within each chapter, there isgenerally a theoretical presentation,which is then illustratedthrough reference to a number of countryspecific ...
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... capital, natural resource endowments, population density, degree of openness,market structures, government policies,technology, geography, integration (trade), and institutional differences. Some factors are exogenous(i.e., caused by ...
... capital, natural resource endowments, population density, degree of openness,market structures, government policies,technology, geography, integration (trade), and institutional differences. Some factors are exogenous(i.e., caused by ...
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... capital inthe growth process, rekindled interest in growth theory. Paul Romer and Robert Lucas's workson increasing returnstoscale and endogenous growth marked anew eraof interest in growth. Growth literaturein the 1990s and early2000s ...
... capital inthe growth process, rekindled interest in growth theory. Paul Romer and Robert Lucas's workson increasing returnstoscale and endogenous growth marked anew eraof interest in growth. Growth literaturein the 1990s and early2000s ...
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... capital as a necessary ingredient for growth. This introduced educationand training as important prerequisites for growth.According to Seers,development was a social phenomenon that involvedmore than growth in per capita output. Seers ...
... capital as a necessary ingredient for growth. This introduced educationand training as important prerequisites for growth.According to Seers,development was a social phenomenon that involvedmore than growth in per capita output. Seers ...
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... capital. Many factorsthat improve human capitalcan also improvethequality ofhuman resources. Effortsatquantifying and identifying proxies for these measures have led to several different indexes. Someof these measures areskewed ...
... capital. Many factorsthat improve human capitalcan also improvethequality ofhuman resources. Effortsatquantifying and identifying proxies for these measures have led to several different indexes. Someof these measures areskewed ...
Contents
Growth Versus Development HistoryofDevelopment Theory | |
References | |
European Emergence Growth Duringthe IndustrialRevolution | |
Protoindustrialization and Trade | |
Exploitation and Slavery The Evolutionand Role of Political Institutions | |
Recent Experience | |
The Chinese Experience | |
Explanation forDifferent ReformPaths Recent Chinese Experience | |
Urban Bias and Migration | |
Lineage Groups Fertility andthe Transition Demographic | |
Role of the Government What We Have Learned | |
Population Growth the Commitment Problem | |
TheMiddle East and North Africa | |
The Emergence of NationStates Petroleum Exports and the Petroleum Exporters | |
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Common terms and phrases
accumulation agricultural productivity agricultural sector andthe argued Asia Botswana bythe capital capital accumulation China Chinese colonial commercial comparative advantage competition created decline demographic dividend dependency theorists dependent developing countries developmental discussed domestic dramatically economic development economic growth efflorescences England environment environmental equilibrium Europe European expansion experience exports extract farmers firms fromthe growth rate impact important incentive income increased independence India Industrial Revolution industrialization infrastructure inputs institutional structure inthe investment involved Japan Japanese labor laborintensive land Latin America lineage groups longterm manufacturing Mform occur ofthe onthe organization output patronclient peasant percent periphery policies political population poverty predatory problem profit protoindustrial rapid reduce reform region rent seeking result revenue ruling elite rulingelite rural significant Smithian growth social South Asia South Korea Soviet Union subSaharan Africa surplus Taiwan theruling elite tobe tothe trade transition urban wealth withthe workers