Dilemmas of development : reflections on the counter-revolution in development theory and policy
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Dilemmas of development : reflections on the counter-revolution in development theory and policy
B. Blackwell, 1987
- : pbk
Available at / 48 libraries
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Research Institute for Economics & Business Administration (RIEB) Library , Kobe University図書
338.91-157081000076152
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Library, Institute of Developing Economies, Japan External Trade Organization遡
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Note
Bibliography: p. [162]-170
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
- Volume
-
ISBN 9780631145691
Description
Developing countries in severe economic and political difficulties are being bombarded from all quarters with free-market "solutions". How far should they accept these solutions? This book is a careful examination of the counter-revolutionaries in development thinking. John Toye argues that their free market doctrines are not well established in conventional economic logic. He also suggests that an understanding of the nature and limits of government intervention to promote development cannot be derived from economics alone. The dilemmas of current development policy revolve around the question of how to define "economic necessity" within the framework of political justice.
Table of Contents
1. Is the Third World Still There? 2 . Development Policy in the Shadow of Keynes. 3 . Bauer's Dissent on Development and the New Vision of Growth. 4 . The Counter Revolution Arrives: Lal, Little and Balassa. 5 . Left without Dialectics. 6 . The New Political Economy Applied to India's development. 7 . The Counter Revolution in Aid and Trade Policy. Students of development economics and professionals in government and aid agencies.
- Volume
-
: pbk ISBN 9780631145714
Description
Developing countries in severe economic and political difficulties are being bombarded from all quarters with free-market solutions. How far should they accept these solutions? This book is a careful examination of the counter-revolutionaries in development thinking. John Toye argues that their free market doctrines are not well established in conventional economic logic. He also suggests that an understanding of the nature and limits of government intervention to promote development cannot be derived from economics alone. The dilemmas of current development policy revolve around the question of how to define "economic necessity" within the framework of political justice.
Table of Contents
- 1. Is the Third World Still There?
- 2. Development Policy in the Shadow of Keynes.
- 3. Bauer's Dissent on Development and the New Vision of Growth.
- 4. The Counter Revolution Arrives: Lal, Little and Balassa.
- 5. Left without Dialectics.
- 6. The New Political Economy Applied to India's development.
- 7. The Counter Revolution in Aid and Trade Policy.
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