Recent
debates on aid and development are waged
on narrow terms in comparison to the debates
in the 1950s and 1960s. The principal
concern of the 'structuralist' pioneers
of development economics, and the key
absence in the current debates, was an
understanding of the structural impediments
faced by countries going through late
industrialisation and rapid urban growth.
These result in chronic trade deficits,
shortages of foreign exchange and persistent
balance of payments disequilibria. The
positive potential of aid was understood
to lie in its ability to mediate these
imbalances in the context of national
industrialisation strategies. By the same
logic, this potential is lost if countries
run trade surpluses. Current debates on
aid mostly overlook this dual logic, despite
the fact that both positive and negative
experiences of post-war development largely
vindicate these structuralist insights,
particularly in light of current global
financial imbalances.
November
10, 2009.
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