Synopses & Reviews
This book brings together fourteen articles and papers written by Albert O. Hirschman. About half deal with the interaction of economic development with politics and ideology, the area in which Hirschman perhaps has made most noted contributions. Among these papers are 'The Rise and Declines of Development Economics', a magisterial and yet pointed essay in intellectual history and his famous article 'The Changing Tolerance for Income Inequality in the Course of Economic Development'. Hirschman's ability to trespass - or rather his inability not to trespass - from one social science to another and beyond is the unifying characteristic of the volume. Authoritative, searching surveys alternate here with essays presenting some of Hirschman's characteristic inventions, for instance the 'tunnel effect' and 'obituary-improving activities'. Three of the papers have not been published previously and a number of introductory notes have been especially drafted for the present volume to evoke the intellectual-political climate in which certain groups of essays were written.
Synopsis
This collection of essays provides an overview of the scholarship of one of America's leading political economists. Some of the essays deal with the area in which Albert Hirschman has made his best-known contributions - economic development and its political repercussions - and they provide a new perspective on some fundamental questions. The rest consider political participation, ?rational choice? theory, and the history of economic thought. The essays ignore any narrow disciplinary bounds, and instead ?trespass? from one social science to another, providing expert analysis and insights which will interest particularly those concerned with comparative politics, economic development, or Latin America.
Table of Contents
1. The rise and decline of development economics; Part I. Around National Power and the Structure of Foreign Trade: 2. Beyond asymmetry; Part II. Around The Strategy of Economic Development: 3. The changing tolerance for income inequality in the course of economic development; 4. A generalised linkage approach to development with special reference to staples; 5. The turn to authoritarianism in Latin America and the search for its economic determinants; Part III. Around Journeys Toward Progress: 6. Policy-making and policy analysis in Latin America; 7. On Hegel, imperialism and structural stagnation; 8. The social and political matrix of inflation; Part IV. Around Exit, Voice and Loyalty: 9. Exit, voice and loyalty; 10. Exit and voice; 11. Exit, voice and the state; 12. Three uses of political economy in analysing European integration; Part V. Around The Passions and the Interests: 13. An alternative explanation of contemporary harriedness; 14. Morality and the social sciences; Index of authors cited.