Synopses & Reviews
In this book, Thompson and Hickson strongly challenge the standard interpretation of the basis of growth and viability of dominant wealthy nations. Briefly, efforts of the economically wealthy and the government leaders to increase their wealth and protect it from aggressors, internal and external, are cast in a new evolutionary light. The challenge is to the idea that societies' leading intellectual formulators of political and social policy have been helpful. Their alternative, and persuasive, interpretation is that the rise and survival of wealthier nations has been achieved because of an `effective democracy'. The authors explain why an effective democratic state must avoid `narrow, short-sighted', rational-appearing concessions to a sequence of aggressors. In short, the Thompson-Hickson interpretation of the rise of wealthy dominant nations does not rely on the advice of superior intellectual advisors, but instead rests on the pragmatic, almost ad hoc, actions of democratic legislators.
Description
Includes bibliographical references (p. [381]-396) and index.
Table of Contents
Foreword; A. Alchian. Preface. Acknowledgements. Prologue. 1. Overview. 2. The Efficiency Problem, The Distribution Problem, and a Possible Solution. 3. A New Interpretation of Guilds, Tariffs, and Laissez Faire. 4. On the Gold Standard: Why Depressions Have Been a Necessary Evil, or How the Economics of Keynes Dethroned Europe. 5. On Modern International Cooperation: Exchange Controls, Hyperinflation, and Costly Social Revolution as Efficient National Responses to Externally Imposed Trade Liberalization. 6. Summary, Policy Implications, and a Final Test. References for the Text and A-Appendices. Index.