1st Edition

A History of Development Economics Thought Challenges and Counter-challenges

By Shahrukh Rafi Khan Copyright 2014
    166 Pages
    by Routledge

    166 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book explores the history of economic development thought, with an emphasis on alternative approaches in macro development economics.



    Given that the pioneers of development economics in the 1940s and 1950s drew inspiration from classical political economists, this book opens with a review of key classical scholars who wrote about the progress of the wealth of nations. In reviewing the thinking of the pioneers and those that followed, both their theories of development and underdevelopment are discussed. Overall, the book charts the evolution of development economic thought from the early developmentalists and structuralists, through to the neo-Marxist approach and radical development theory, the neo-liberal counter revolution, and the debate between new developmentalists and neo-liberal scholars. It ends with an assessment of the state of the field today.



    This book will be of interest to all scholars and students interested in the evolution of development economics.

    1. The Classical and Marxist Roots  Part I: Challenging the Mainstream on Underdevelopment and Development  2. Developmentalism  3. Neo-Marxism and the Political Economy of Development  4. Structuralism and Dependency Theory  Part II: Heterodox Challenges from within the Fold  5. Market Friendly Heterodox Approaches  Part III: The Neo-classical Counter-challenge  6. Neo-liberalism and the Washington Consensus  Part IV: Neo-liberalism Challenged  7. Developmentalist Resurgence  8. Reflections

    Biography

    Shahrukh Rafi Khan is Visiting Professor of Economics at Mount Holyoke College, USA.

    "...I believe Khan has made a valuable contribution to the history of thought, and I do not hesitate to recommend it to both students and scholars, particularly as supplementary reading in courses on development economics."

    Farhad Rassekh, University of Hartford, Journal of the History of Economic Thought