Development Economics

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Balassa Samuelson Effect
BNDES Loans
Brazil's GDP
Brazil’s GDP
Capita Income Growth Rate
Capital Account Management
Capital Flows
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critical perspectives on western economic models
dependency theory
Develop Country MNCs
economic instability
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ERP Solution
Exchange Rate Misalignment
Federal Reserve
Feminist Institutionalism
Gdp Growth
global inequality
Income Elasticity
institutional change
Jana Andolan
Keynes's Notion
Keynes’s Notion
Latin American development
Monetary Hegemony
Neoliberal Movement
Nepali Congress
Peripheral Countries
postcolonial economics
Real Exchange Rate
Real Exchange Rate Devaluation
Real Exchange Rate Misalignment
Revista Brasileira De Politica Internacional
Wage Share
WDI World Bank Database

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032212104
  • Weight: 600g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 28 Feb 2022
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Since the inception of development economics in the post-World War II period, most of its proponents have prescribed the adoption of western institutions as the path for prosperity – the unequivocal solution for poverty, illiteracy, hunger, inequality, and violence in the world. Seventy years of attempts, or at least the pretense thereof, to reproduce the western model in completely different historical and cultural contexts have proven to be no more than a mirage for most.

Faced with this scenario, why do economists insist on the ideas of development, convergence, and emulation of the lifestyle of western countries? Is it possible to disassociate development from multidimensional instability, dependency, subordination, and exploitation? Is the current social, political, ecological, and economic organized destabilization observed in the western countries a model to follow, a desirable end of history? These questions raised earlier by some fellow economists, have become ever more pressing in the present context of generalized instability. The book questions how ethical and professionally responsible it is for economists to continue to undiscerningly prescribe miraculous one-size-fits-all market-oriented models to solve socio-economic problems everywhere. The contributors of this edited volume invite the readers to consider these questions and further similar inquiries in the future.

The chapters in this book were originally published as a special issue of the journal Review of Political Economy.

Natalia Bracarense is Associate Professor of Economics at North Central College, Naperville, USA, and an ATER at SciencesPo Toulouse, France. Specialised in International Political Economy and History of Economic Thought, Dr. Bracarense analyses the historical unfolding of development policies implemented in several countries to inform economic theory towards a framework that views economic transformation as a non-linear and non-teleological process.

Louis-Philippe Rochon is Full Professor of Economics at Laurentian University, Canada. He is the Editor-in-Chief of the Review of Political Economy and the founding Editor (now Emeritus) of the Review of Keynesian Economics. He has published over 150 book and journal articles and written or edited over 30 books.