|
Showing 1 - 4 of
4 matches in All Departments
This book shows that the existing theories on economic growth have
clear limitations in terms of how much they can effectively
contribute to actual economic growth. Therefore, this book presents
a more effective theory on economic growth for countries and
leaders looking to promote economic growth. It is essentially
centered around the theory of economic growth and theory of
national development, written for agricultural developing countries
pursuing industrialization and late-starting industrialized
countries pursuing their own development. Nevertheless, it also
makes a significant contribution to the very development of human
civilization through the growth of developing countries,
late-starting industrialized countries and early industrialized
countries throughout the world.
This book revisits the historically different paths to economic
development that Spain, the Netherlands, Great Britain and the
United States followed at different time periods since the early
modern period. Addressing the questions of how economic growth came
about in these four countries and why sustained economic growth was
achieved only by the two latter economic powers - Great Britain and
the United States, it clearly highlights the long-term economic
impact of the individual economic systems each country had
developed. This discussion draws on two important variables in
economic systems: whether its primary activity is agriculture,
commerce, or manufacturing, and whether its productive system
expands or simply reproduces. From this interpretive framework, the
book suggests that the existing literature has not yet paid
sufficient attention to the enduring impact on a nation's long-term
economic performance of their differing economic systems - simple
agricultural reproduction system (Spain), expansive commercial
reinvestment system (the Netherlands), and expansive industrial
reproduction system (Great Britain and the United States). The book
also demonstrates why sustained economic growth was viable only
within an expansive industrial reproduction system, and what
conditions Great Britain and the United States had to fulfill to
create such an economic system in their specific historical
contexts. It concludes by reflecting on the policy implications of
the findings on current discussions concerning economic development
within the global economy.
This book revisits the historically different paths to economic
development that Spain, the Netherlands, Great Britain and the
United States followed at different time periods since the early
modern period. Addressing the questions of how economic growth came
about in these four countries and why sustained economic growth was
achieved only by the two latter economic powers - Great Britain and
the United States, it clearly highlights the long-term economic
impact of the individual economic systems each country had
developed. This discussion draws on two important variables in
economic systems: whether its primary activity is agriculture,
commerce, or manufacturing, and whether its productive system
expands or simply reproduces. From this interpretive framework, the
book suggests that the existing literature has not yet paid
sufficient attention to the enduring impact on a nation's long-term
economic performance of their differing economic systems - simple
agricultural reproduction system (Spain), expansive commercial
reinvestment system (the Netherlands), and expansive industrial
reproduction system (Great Britain and the United States). The book
also demonstrates why sustained economic growth was viable only
within an expansive industrial reproduction system, and what
conditions Great Britain and the United States had to fulfill to
create such an economic system in their specific historical
contexts. It concludes by reflecting on the policy implications of
the findings on current discussions concerning economic development
within the global economy.
This book shows that the existing theories on economic growth have
clear limitations in terms of how much they can effectively
contribute to actual economic growth. Therefore, this book presents
a more effective theory on economic growth for countries and
leaders looking to promote economic growth. It is essentially
centered around the theory of economic growth and theory of
national development, written for agricultural developing countries
pursuing industrialization and late-starting industrialized
countries pursuing their own development. Nevertheless, it also
makes a significant contribution to the very development of human
civilization through the growth of developing countries,
late-starting industrialized countries and early industrialized
countries throughout the world.
|
|