Socio-economic development:
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Cambridge
Cambridge Univ. Press
2015
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Ausgabe: | 2. ed. |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XXX, 763 S. graph. Darst. |
ISBN: | 9781107624498 9781107045958 |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | Titel: Socio-economic development
Autor: Szirmai, Adam
Jahr: 2015
CONTENTS
Listoftables xv
List offigures xvii
List ofboxes xviii
Preface xxi
Acknowledgements xxv
List ofacronyms and abbreviations xxvi
1 Developing countries and the concept of development 1
1.1. Approaches to development 1
1.2. The development debate 4
1.3. Growth and development 4
1.4. Are growth and development desirable? 9
1.5. Development and Westernisation 11
1.6. Indicators of growth and development 12
1.7. Does the Third World exist? 15
1.8. The gap between rieh and poor countries 27
1.9. What do developing countries have in common? 31
1.10. The framework of proximate, intermediate and ultimate sources of growth
and development 37
Questions for review 39
Further reading 39
2 Development of the international economic order, 1450-2015 41
2.1. International economic order 41
2.2. Economic breakthrough and external expansion from Western Europe 41
2.2.1. Economic growth before 1500 42
2.2.2. Pre-modern international orders 43
2.2.3. China in the fourteenth and fifteenfh centuries 44
2.3. Why expansion from Europe instead of from China? 45
2.4. European expansion in the world 49
2.4.1. Types of international economic orders 51
2.4.2. The first wave of expansion, 1400-1815 53
2.4.3. The first wave of decolonisation 56
2.4.4. The second phase of European expansion, 1815-1913 56
2.4.5. The period 1870-1913 58
2.4.6. Migration flows 59
2.4.7. Non-colonised areas 65
2.4.8. Latecomers in the process of economic development 65
2.4.9. The period 1913-50 66
2.4.10. The period after the Second World War 66
2.4.11. Two perspectives on developments in the world economy, 1450-2015 68
2.5. Key issues in development 69
Questions for review 70
Further reading 71
3 Growth and Stagnation: theories and experiences 73
3.1. What are the sources of growth and development? 73
3.2. Classical thinking about growth, development and Stagnation 80
3.2.1. Adam Smith 80
3.2.2. The classical economists Ricardo, Malthus and Mill 80
3.2.3. Friedrich List 81
3.2.4. Classical sociologists: Spencer, Tönnies and Durkheim 81
3.2.5. Karl Marx 82
3.2.6. Theories of imperialism 84
3.2.7. Max Weber and Joseph Schumpeter 84
3.3. Internal and external approaches 86
3.4. Explanations of economic backwardness 87
3.4.1. Rostow s theory of the stages of economic growth 87
3.4.2. Kuznets preconditions for industrialisation 89
3.4.3. Neoclassical theories of growth 90
3.4.4. Growth accounting 92
3.4.5. New growth theory 93
3.4.6. North and Thomas: efficient institutions 94
3.4.7. Myrdal: institutional reforms 95
3.4.8. Rodrik: identifying the binding constraints to growth 95
3.5. Explanations of underdevelopment 97
3.5.1. Neo-Marxist theories of underdevelopment 99
3.5.2. Structuralism and theories of unequal exchange 100
3.5.3. Underdevelopment theories: an evaluation 102
3.6. Combining internal and external influences 103
3.6.1. Advantages of technological backwardness 104
3.6.2. Evolutionary theories of economic change 106
3.7. Empirical study of development experiences 107
3.7.1. Growth of income per capita: can developing countries escape
Stagnation? 108
3.7.2. Investment: how important is capital? 112
3.7.3. Export Performance 113
3.7.4. Can primary exporters become manufacturing exporters? 116
3.7.5. External finance: does money flow from poor to rieh countries? 116
3.7.6. Are developing countries dominated by foreign interests? 120
3.7.7. Are developing countries capable of structural change? 121
3.7.8. How unequal is the income distribution? 125
Questions for review 128
Further reading 129
4 Technology and development 131
4.1. The role of technology 132
4.2. The technology race 133
4.3. Technological change and increases in productive capacity 134
4.3.1. How to increase labour productivity? 136
4.3.2. Investing in technological change 138
4.3.3. Diffusion of technology and absorptive capabilities 138
4.3.4. The knowledge economy: technology, productivity and competitiveness 139
4.4. Indicators for science, technology and innovation 140
4.5. Economic theories about the role of technological change revisited 141
4.6. Consequences of the acceleration of technological development for
developing countries 143
4.6.1. Acceleration of global technological change 143
4.6.2. Knowledge gaps 143
4.6.3. New opportunities offered by technological development 145
4.6.4. Newthreats 149
4.7. International technology transfer and technology diffusion 149
4.7.1. International technology transfer 149
4.7.2. Intellectual property rights 150
4.7.3. Absorptive capacity 151
4.8. Biotechnology and information and communication technology 155
4.8.1. Biotechnology 155
4.8.2. Information and communication technology 156
4.9. National and international policy 156
Questions for review 158
Further reading 158
5 Population and development 160
5.1. Introduction 161
5.2. Perspectives on population growth 162
5.3. Growth of world population 162
5.4. The demographic transition 165
5.5. Demographic developments in developing countries 167
5.6. Socio-economic consequences of population growth 172
5.6.1. Pessimistic and optimistic perspectives 172
5.6.2. Malthusian analyses 174
5.6.3. The Neo-Malthusian trap 174
5.6.4. Growth of national income, growth of per capita income and the
dependency ratio 175
5.6.5. Changes in the age structure and the demographic dividend 176
5.6.6. Dependency ratio and savings 176
5.6.7. Population growth and investment 177
5.6.8. Population growth, education and healthcare 178
5.6.9. Employment, income distribution and poverty 178
5.6.10. Population growth and the environment 181
5.6.11. Population growth and technological progress 187
5.6.12. Consequences of population growth: concluding remarks 188
5.7. Why do people in developing countries have so many children? 188
5.7.1. Introduction 188
5.7.2. Intermediate determinants of fertility: the Bongaarts model 189
5.7.3. Economic explanations of fertility 190
5.7.4. Cultural and institutional explanations of fertility 192
5.8. Policy 194
Questions for review 197
Further reading 197
6 Health, healthcare and development 199
6.1. The State of health in developing countries 200
6.1.1. Quantitative indicators of the State of health 200
6.1.2. Infant and child mortality 201
6.1.3. Life expectancy 203
6.1.4. Patterns of disease and health 206
6.1.5. Common infectious and parasitic diseases in developing countries 207
6.1.6. Epidemiological transition 213
6.2. Theoretical explanations of changes in health and morbidity 214
6.2.1. Factors affecting the State of health 215
6.2.2. Preston: per capita income and life expectancy 216
6.2.3. McKeown: the importance of nutrition 217
6.2.4. Preston and McKeown 217
6.2.5. The Mosley model and the importance of education 218
6.2.6. Caldwell: the importance of healthcare policy 221
6.2.7. Standards of living, education, medical technology and healthcare
Systems: a synthesis 225
6.3. Health and economic development 226
6.4. Healthcare policy 229
Questions for review 234
Further reading 235
7 Education and development 237
7.1. Theories of the contribution of education to economic development 238
7.1.1. Human capital theory 238
7.1.2. Criticisms of human capital theory 242
7.1.3. Screening theory 242
7.1.4. Criticisms of Screening theory 244
7.1.5. An evaluation of the human capital debate 244
7.1.6. Education as a necessary but not sufficient condition for
development: thresholds and complementarities 246
7.2. Indicators of educational development 249
7.2.1. Indicators of educational enrolment 249
7.2.2. Educational attainments 251
7.2.3. Financial indicators 251
7.2.4. Physical indicators 251
7.2.5. Educational outcomes: literacy 251
7.2.6. Educational outcomes: cognitive skills 252
7.3. Educational Performance in developing countries 252
7.3.1. The initial Situation after the Second World War 252
7.3.2. Increases in educational enrolment 253
7.3.3. Education completed 256
7.3.4. Years of education per member of the population 257
7.3.5. Educational expenditures 257
7.3.6. Cognitive skills 263
7.3.7. Non-formal and informal education 263
7.3.8. Literacy 265
7.3.9. Nation building 269
7.3.10. Summary: comparison with developments in more developed
countries 270
7.4. Problems and challenges 271
7.4.1. Discrepancies between educational needs and financial resources 271
7.4.2. The quality of education 272
7.4.3. Lack of relevance 272
7.4.4. Unequal access to education 274
7.4.5. Mismatch between education and the labour market 275
7.4.6. Education and the national Innovation System 276
7.4.7. The knowledge economy: increased importance of tertiary
education 276
7.4.8. Brain drain versus brain circulation 277
7.5. Policy 278
Questions for review 279
Further reading 280
8 Economic development, structural change and industrialisation 282
8.1. Economic development and structural transformation 283
8.1.1. Definitions of economic sectors 284
8.1.2. Structural change 286
8.2. Capital accumulation and structural change 291
8.2.1. Capital accumulation and industrialisation 291
8.2.2. Accumulation of industrial capital in open and closed modeis of the
economy; early and late stages of development 292
8.3. The debate about engines of growth 294
8.3.1. Introduction 294
8.3.2. Manufacturing as the engine of growth 295
8.3.3. Is the agricultural sector a stagnant or a dynamic sector? 298
8.3.4. What about service-led growth? 300
8.3.5. Conclusion 301
8.4. Structural change in closed economies at early stages of development 301
8.4.1. The development of agriculture as a prerequisite for industrialisation
at early stages of development 301
8.4.2. Historical examples of relationships between agriculture and industry 302
8.4.3. Conclusion 303
8.5. Open model: are primary exports an engine of growth and structural
transformation? 303
8.5.1. Introduction 303
8.5.2. Intermezzo: comparative advantage and the role of trade in development 304
8.5.3. Primary exports between 1870 and 1913: vent for surplus 306
8.5.4. Can primary exports function as an engine of growth? 308
8.5.5. Export pessimism 311
8.5.6. Debates about export pessimism and export optimism 315
8.5.7. Concluding remarks 321
8.6. Closed model: interactions between agriculture and industry in later stages of
development and structural change 321
8.6.1. Introduction: import-substituting industrialisation in the closed model 321
8.6.2. Transfer mechanisms 322
8.6.3. Towards a balance between agriculture and industry 322
8.6.4. The mix of negative and positive incentives in a balanced growth path 324
8.7. Open model: labour-intensive manufactured exports 326
8.8. Concluding remarks 326
Questions for review 327
Further reading 328
9 Industrial development 330
9.1. Introduction 331
9.2. Large-scale industrialisation and balanced growth strategies, 1950-80 333
9.2.1. Economic development with unlimited supplies of labour 333
9.2.2. Capital-output ratio 336
9.2.3. Shortage of capital as the key bottleneck in economic development 337
9.2.4. Does economic development result in increasing income inequality? 337
9.2.5. The two-gap model of foreign finance: the role of financial flows
from abroad 339
9.2.6. Big is beautiful: large-scale investment, government planning and
import Substitution 340
9.3. Criticisms of orthodox industrialisation strategies 345
9.3.1. Shortcomings of the Lewis model 345
9.3.2. Is capital really so important? 346
9.3.3. How important is the scale of investment? 347
9.3.4. Urban industrial bias and the neglect of agriculture 348
9.4. Alternative industrialisation strategies 350
9.4.1. Balanced growth path 350
9.4.2. Unbalanced growth 351
9.4.3. Medium and small-scale enterprises and the urban informal sector 354
9.5. Export-oriented industrialisation 357
9.5.1. The shift from import Substitution to export orientation 357
9.5.2. Technological upgrading and learning 363
9.5.3. Global value chains, FDI and the role of MNCs in development 364
9.5.4. Resource-based industrialisation as an alternative export strategy
for resource rieh economies 366
9.6. Criticisms of market-oriented policies and the re-emergence of industrial
policy 368
9.7. Outcomes of industrialisation strategies 372
9.8. Conclusions, new challenges and new paradigms 378
Questions for review 3 79
Further reading 380
10 Agricultural development and rural development 382
10.1. Is there enough food to feed the world population? 383
10.2. What are the sources of growth of agricultural produetion? 390
10.2.1. How much land is still left for eultivation? 390
10.2.2. Intensification of land use 396
10.2.3. Increasing yields per harvest 401
10.2.4. Models of agricultural development 404
10.2.5. The green revolution: increase in yields per harvest 408
10.2.6. The green revolution continued: biotechnology and genetically
modified crops 413
10.2.7. Summary and prospects 416
10.3. Food consumption and nutrition 417
10.3.1. Concluding remarks on agricultural policy 422
10.4. Rural development versus agricultural development 423
10.4.1. Changes in rural societies 426
10.4.2. Three perspectives on rural development 427
10.4.3. The peasant economy and peasant households 430
10.4.4. Rationality, risk and survival strategies in peasant societies 435
10.5. Land reform 439
10.5.1. Varieties of land reform 439
10.6. Policies for rural development 447
Questions for review 448
Further reading 449
11 State formation and political aspects of development 451
11.1. Concepts 452
11.2. Marxist and Weberian perspectives on the State 455
11.3. Processes of State formation in Europe 458
11.4. State formation in developing countries 462
11.4.1. The importance of external penetration in processes of State
formation 463
11.4.2. Internal political instability 467
11.4.3. External political interference as a destabilising factor 468
11.4.4. The role of the military in politics 476
11.4.5. One-party states 480
11.4.6. Is there a resurgence of democracy in developing countries? 482
11.4.7. Rapid expansion of the public sector since 1945 484
11.4.8. Soft states and the political economy ofrent seeking 485
11.5. The role of government in economic development 487
11.5.1. The role of the State in economic development: five examples 488
11.6. Interactions between political and economic developments 496
11.6.1. Political instability as a source of economic Stagnation 496
11.6.2. Economic development and political stability 497
11.6.3. Is there a relationship between democracy and economic
development? 499
11.6.4. Good governance and economic development 501
11.7. The predatory State as an obstacle to economic development in
Sub-Saharan Africa 503
11.8. Concluding remarks 506
Questions for review 507
Further reading 507
12 Cultural and institutional dimensions of development 510
12.1. Introduction 511
12.1.1. Concepts: culture and institutions 511
12.1.2. How important is culture? 512
12.1.3. How important are institutions? 514
12.2. Culture and development 515
12.2.1. The Protestant Ethic and the rise of capitalism 515
12.2.2. Traditional versus modern cultures 517
12.2.3. Are there cultural obstacles to economic development? 521
12.3. Institutions as one of the key sources of development 529
12.3.1. Rediscovery of institutions 530
12.3.2. Efficient institutions 530
12.3.3. Colonial legacy: extractive or inclusive institutions 531
12.3.4. Reversal of fortunes 532
12.3.5. Controlling violence: limited and open access orders 533
12.4. Conclusion 534
Questions for review 534
Further reading 535
13 The international economic and political order since 1945 537
13.1. Characteristics of international relations since 1945 538
13.1.1. Economic aspects 538
13.1.2. Political aspects 544
13.2. International institutions and institutional change since 1945 549
13.2.1. A chronological overview 549
13.2.2. The evolution of the post-war international order 550
13.3. The liberal international economic order, 1944-73 555
13.4. The New International Order, 1960-82 558
13.4.1. Institutional responses to the New International Economic Order 560
13.4.2. Criticisms of the New International Economic Order 563
13.5. Debt and how to deal with it 564
13.5.1. The 1982 debt crisis 564
13.5.2. Is there anything wrong with debt? 564
13.5.3. What caused the 1982 debt crisis? 565
13.5.4. Trends in debt and fmancial flows in developing countries,
1982-2012 567
13.5.5. How to deal with debt? 573
13.6. Structural adjustment and the Washington consensus 578
13.6.1. The debt crisis and the rise of the Washington consensus 578
13.6.2. Neo-liberalism versus structuralism 579
13.6.3. Stabilisation and structural adjustment 581
13.6.4. The Cotonou Agreements between the European Union and
ACP countries 583
13.6.5. Foreign direct investment 584
13.6.6. How effective have structural adjustment programmes been? 586
13.6.7. Summary 590
13.7. Financial instability, crises and accelerated growth: 1997-2014 591
13.7.1. The post-1997 international economic order 591
13.7.2. The renewed debate on globalisation and liberalisation 595
13.7.3. Concluding remarks 599
Questions for review 600
Further reading 601
14 Foreign aid and development 603
14.1. Why foreign aid? 604
14.2. The emergence and evolution of foreign aid 608
14.3. Development aid: sources and categories 611
14.4. Quantitative data on aid flows 614
14.4.1. Long-term trends in the magnitude and geographical distribution
of aid flows 615
14.4.2. Development aid in proportion to total resource flows 618
14.4.3. Sectoral allocation of aid 621
14.4.4. Net development assistance as a percentage of GDP 624
14.4.5. Reduction of the real value of aid by tying 624
14.4.6. Conclusion: the volume of aid is not negligible 626
14.5. Theories of development and objectives of aid 626
14.5.1. Aid as a source of investment, capital accumulation and growth 626
14.5.2. The two-gap model of Chenery and Strout 627
14.5.3. Aid, growth and poverty reduction 628
Contents
14.5.4. Technical assistance, human capital theory and growth 630
14.5.5. Policy dialogue and programme aid: policy reform and
improvements in governance and institutions 632
14.5.6. Building institutions and capabilities 633
14.6. Does aid work? Different perspectives on the effectiveness of
development aid 634
14.6.1. Does aid contribute to socio-economic dynamism and
poverty reduction? 634
14.6.2. Radical criticisms of development aid 636
14.6.3. Neoliberal criticism of development aid 638
14.6.4. Criticism of development projects 641
14.6.5. Empirical debates about aid effectiveness and proposals
for reform 642
14.6.6. Making aid work better 652
14.6.7. Epilogue: an attempt at evaluation 654
Questions for review 655
Further reading 656
References 658
Author index 735
Subject index 748
|
any_adam_object | 1 |
author | Szirmai, Adam 1946-2020 |
author_GND | (DE-588)142928410 |
author_facet | Szirmai, Adam 1946-2020 |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | Szirmai, Adam 1946-2020 |
author_variant | a s as |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV042236046 |
classification_rvk | QC 340 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)913243838 (DE-599)BVBBV042236046 |
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edition | 2. ed. |
format | Book |
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id | DE-604.BV042236046 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-10T01:16:02Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9781107624498 9781107045958 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-027674265 |
oclc_num | 913243838 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-M382 DE-945 DE-1050 DE-M468 DE-739 DE-29 DE-N2 |
owner_facet | DE-M382 DE-945 DE-1050 DE-M468 DE-739 DE-29 DE-N2 |
physical | XXX, 763 S. graph. Darst. |
publishDate | 2015 |
publishDateSearch | 2015 |
publishDateSort | 2015 |
publisher | Cambridge Univ. Press |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Szirmai, Adam 1946-2020 Verfasser (DE-588)142928410 aut Socio-economic development Adam Szirmai 2. ed. Cambridge Cambridge Univ. Press 2015 XXX, 763 S. graph. Darst. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Wirtschaftsentwicklung (DE-588)4066438-7 gnd rswk-swf Sozioökonomischer Wandel (DE-588)4318539-3 gnd rswk-swf Sozialer Wandel (DE-588)4077587-2 gnd rswk-swf Wirtschaftsentwicklung (DE-588)4066438-7 s Sozioökonomischer Wandel (DE-588)4318539-3 s Sozialer Wandel (DE-588)4077587-2 s b DE-604 HBZ Datenaustausch application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=027674265&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Szirmai, Adam 1946-2020 Socio-economic development Wirtschaftsentwicklung (DE-588)4066438-7 gnd Sozioökonomischer Wandel (DE-588)4318539-3 gnd Sozialer Wandel (DE-588)4077587-2 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4066438-7 (DE-588)4318539-3 (DE-588)4077587-2 |
title | Socio-economic development |
title_auth | Socio-economic development |
title_exact_search | Socio-economic development |
title_full | Socio-economic development Adam Szirmai |
title_fullStr | Socio-economic development Adam Szirmai |
title_full_unstemmed | Socio-economic development Adam Szirmai |
title_short | Socio-economic development |
title_sort | socio economic development |
topic | Wirtschaftsentwicklung (DE-588)4066438-7 gnd Sozioökonomischer Wandel (DE-588)4318539-3 gnd Sozialer Wandel (DE-588)4077587-2 gnd |
topic_facet | Wirtschaftsentwicklung Sozioökonomischer Wandel Sozialer Wandel |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=027674265&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT szirmaiadam socioeconomicdevelopment |