Synopses & Reviews
In these lectures Paul Streeten provides a major statement on his approach to the development problem. The principal theme of the lectures is that human development, not simply income growth, should be the focus of all strategies to eradicate hunger and poverty in the world. His argument allots an important role to reformed government, both in providing social services and in facilitating the functioning of markets, in opposition to the prevailing view that minimal government is more often than not the optimal solution. He also outlines a normative political economy--how to mobilize reformist alliances, how to use interest groups, how to harness coalitions--in the pursuit of effective development.
Review
'\"The arguments are made in clear, lively, and nontechnical prose.\" Jonathan Morduch, Journal of Economic Literature'
Synopsis
A major statement on his approach to the development problem from Paul Streeten, one of the profession's most eminent authorities on economic development.
Synopsis
How can we hope to eradicate poverty and hunger in the world? Paul Streeten, one of the most eminent authorities on economic development, believes that human development, not simply income growth, should be the focus of all strategies. He outlines a normative political economy in the pursuit of effective development.
Synopsis
The principal theme of these lectures is that human development, not simply income growth, should be the focus of all strategies to eradicate hunger and poverty in the world. Paul Streeten, one of the most eminent authorities on economic development, assigns an important role to reformed government, both in providing social services and in facilitating the functioning of markets, in opposition to the prevailing view that minimal government is the optimal solution. He outlines a normative political economy in the pursuit of effective development.
Table of Contents
Preface; Introduction; 1. The evolution of development thought; 2. Global institutions for an interdependent world; 3. The judo trick: the role of direct foreign investment in developing countries; 4. Markets and states: against minimalism and dichotomy; 5. The political economy of reform; Discussion; Bibliography.