The two chapters following the Introduction
point to the role of imperialist considerations
in the early economic thought influencing the
development discourse. Hugh Goodacre underscores
the role of such considerations in William Petty's
early colonial development policies, while Utsa
Patnaik exposes the fundamental fallacy in David
Ricardo's enduringly influencial theory of comparative
advantage n international trade. Next, Mehdi
Shafaeddin examines the Friedrich List's mid-nineteenth-century
'infant industry' argument, built on the pioneering
work of the American 'founding father', Alexander
Hamilton. Prabhat Patnaik then highlights Karl
Marx's major contributions to development economics.
Utsa Patnaik assesses Vladimir Ilyich Lenin's
careful treatment of the agrarian question in
Russia, contrasting it with the neoclassical
economic revival of Chayanov's populist analysis
of peasantries. Renee Prendargast assesses Alfred
Marshall's contributions to thinking on economic
development, suggesting much greater nuance
than normally attributed to the father of marginal
economic analysis.
Jayati Ghosh highlights the enduring significance
of Michael Kalecki's political economic approach
to the study of post-colonial economies. John
Toye underscores the significance for development
economics of several less well-known analytical
contributions by John Maynard Keynes. Amiya
bagchi then suggests how Nicholas Kaldor advanced
Keynesian insights to enhance understanding
of economic development. Kari Polanyi Levit
highlights the developmental implications of
Karl Polanyi's diverse contributions, as well
as those of development economics pioneers Raul
Prebisch and Arthur Lewis. C.P. Chandrasekhar
highlights Alexander Gerschenkron's novel insights
for accelerating economic development from his
study of economic history. Finally, Kunibert
Raffer surveys Hans Singer's consistent advocacy
of justice in economic development.
Contents
Preface
Jomo K. S.
1. Why Development Economics?
Prabhat Patnaik
2. William Petty and Some Early Colonial Roots
Of Development Economics
Hugh Goodacre
3. Ricardo's Fallacy
Utsa Patnaik
4. Friedrich List and the Infant Industry Argument
Mehdi Shafaeddin
5. Karl Marx as a Development Economist
Prabhat Patnaik
6. Lenin and the Agrarian Question
Utsa Patnaik
7. Alfred Marshall as a Development Economist
Renee Prendergast
8. Michal Kalecki and the Economics of Development
Jayati Ghosh
9 The Significance of Keynes for Development
Economics
John Toye
10.Kaldor, Keynes and Economic Development
Amiya Kumar Bagchi
11. Karl Polanyi As A Development Economist
Kari Polanyi Levitt
12. Alexander Gerschenkron and Late Industrialization
C. P. Chandrasekhar
13. Raul Prebisch and Arthur Lewis: The Two
Basic Dualities of Development Economics
Kari Polanyi Levitt
14. Hans Singer: Advocating A Fair Distribution
Of The Fruits Of Progress
Kunibert Raffer
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