This volume is a theoretical and empirical examination of human
resource growth and change in postwar Puerto Rico. The study is
empirically based, but emphasis is given to econometric results as
opposed to econometric methods. The main concern is with issues of
economic efficiency. In particular, the book focuses on efficiency
in the use of human resources during rapid industrialization.
Nonetheless, Santiago subscribes to the notion that economic growth
is a necessary but not sufficient condition for economic
development. Understanding the larger historical and social
processes that encompass economic development requires drawing
together, in a multidisciplinary way, information from diverse
fields and methodologies. This work helps us to better understand
the process of economic development, thus providing directions for
practical solutions to the pressing economic problems faced by the
majority of the population of the planet.
Much of the critique of the Puerto Rican development strategy is
based on its negative impact on income distribution and the fact
that it promotes dependency on the United States. This book
concludes that, despite its focus on economic growth and rapid
industrialization, Puerto Rico's use of resources has been less
than optimal, and that on efficiency grounds, the Puerto Rican
development model offers some successes but significant errors for
developing nations. This work examines those successes and errors
and will instruct both economists and policy makers in development
economics, labor economics, and Latin American studies.
General
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