Atnaujinkite slapukų nuostatas

Development, Duality, and the International Economic Regime: Essays In Honor of Gustav Ranis [Kietas viršelis]

Edited by , Edited by
  • Formatas: Hardback, 504 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 229x152x40 mm, weight: 800 g, 38 drawings, 71 tables
  • Serija: Studies in International Economics
  • Išleidimo metai: 04-Jan-1999
  • Leidėjas: The University of Michigan Press
  • ISBN-10: 0472109820
  • ISBN-13: 9780472109821
  • Formatas: Hardback, 504 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 229x152x40 mm, weight: 800 g, 38 drawings, 71 tables
  • Serija: Studies in International Economics
  • Išleidimo metai: 04-Jan-1999
  • Leidėjas: The University of Michigan Press
  • ISBN-10: 0472109820
  • ISBN-13: 9780472109821
A stellar group of economists examine and evaluate important issues in development economics


When Gustav Ranis began his scholarly career in the field of economic development, the global economy presented a landscape of widely contrasting conditions for its participants. Almost two-thirds of the global population was ill-fed, ill-housed, illiterate, and lacking access to proper medical care. Today, four decades later, while standards of living have generally improved, and some areas of Asia, Latin America, and the Middle East have become highly productive economies, the gap between the wealthy few and the rest of the world has widened. Very significant areas of the globe remain desperately poor.
In a much-needed effort to assess the current issues facing developing countries and development economics, Ranis's former students, present and past colleagues at Yale, and fellow development economists honor him with this volume. Contributors examine and evaluate four areas of concern: duality and the evolution of labor markets in developing economies; trade, technological transfer, and economic development; the international economic regime and economic development; and finance and economic development. Among many new findings, several essays present evidence that duality in labor markets may be self-perpetuating absent selective government intervention. Others find that, contrary to earlier conjectures, trade liberalization will have more than just a one-time impact on national economic performance. Still others suggest that using a nominal exchange rate anchor as a tool of stabilization policy in developing economies is fraught with difficulties.
Contributors include Albert Berry, Willem Buiter, Jonathan Eaton, Robert Evenson, Gary Fields, Mark Gersovitz, Koichi Hamada, Yujiro Hayami, Samuel Kortum, Anne Krueger, Poori Marino, Richard Nelson, Jennifer C. O'Hara, Keijiro Otsuka, Howard Pack, Janet Rothenberg Pack, Jonathan Putnam, Mark Rosenzweig, Gary Saxonhouse, T. N. Srinivasan, Frances Stewart, Joseph Stiglitz, and Brian Wright.
Introduction 1(8) Gary R. Saxonhouse T.N. Srinivasan
1. The Evolution of Development Economics and Gustav Raniss Role 9(46) Albert Berry Frances Stewart Part
1. Duality and the Evolution of Labor Markets in Developing Economies 55(100)
2. Duality and Development: Some Reflections on Economic Policy 55(30) Joseph E. Stiglitz
3. Community Mechanism of Employment and Wage Determination: Classical or Neoclassical? 85(22) Yujiro Hayami
4. Schooling, Economic Growth, and Aggregate Data 107(23) Mark R. Rosenzweig
5. Changing Income Inequality in Taiwan: A Decomposition Analysis 130(25) Gary S. Fields Jennifer C. OHara Mitchell Part
2. Trade, Technological Transfer, and Economic Development 155(110)
6. Trade Orientation, Trade Liberalization, and Economic Growth 155(42) T. N. Srinivasan
7. Firm Competencies, Technological Catch-up, and the Asian Miracle 197(23) Richard R. Nelson Howard Pack
8. Factor Proportions and Industrial Development in China 220(24) Keijiro Otsuka
9. Economic Development and the Art of Maintenance 244(21) Mark Gersovitz Part
3. The International Economic Regime and Economic Development 265(110)
10. The Economic Consequences of a Declining Hegemon 265(36) Koichi Hamada
11. Technological Specialization in International Patenting 301(29) Jonathan Eaton Robert Evenson Samuel Kortum Poorti Marino Jonathan Putnam
12. Can Agricultural Genetic Resources Be a Bonanza for the South? 330(29) Brian D. Wright
13. When Are Voluntary Import Expansions Voluntary? 359(16) Gary R. Saxonhouse Part
4. Finance and Economic Development 375(102)
14. Nominal Anchor Exchange Rate Policies as a Domestic Distortion 375(23) Anne O. Krueger
15. Aspects of Fiscal Performance in Some Transition Economies under Fund-Supported Programs 398(54) Willem H. Buiter
16. Foreign Aid and Fiscal Stress 452(25) Howard Pack Janet Rothenberg Pack Contributors 477(2) Index 479