Development and Stagnation: The Debate between Developmentalists and Neoclassical Liberals

Author:   Christine Jennifer Wight ,  André Nassif
Publisher:   Brill
Volume:   327
ISBN:  

9789004734289


Pages:   316
Publication Date:   31 July 2025
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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Development and Stagnation: The Debate between Developmentalists and Neoclassical Liberals


Overview

This book presents the theoretical debate on economic development and stagnation in a clear and organized manner. It examines the complexity of economic theory, shaped by the interactions of diverse agents—firms, households, governments, and banks—across various markets. Despite its abstract nature, economic theories can be made accessible through careful explanation. Here, André Nassif covers the main theoretical foundations of economic development, incorporating key contributions from Latin America, offering a comprehensive overview that critically engages with these theories while maintaining academic rigor.

Full Product Details

Author:   Christine Jennifer Wight ,  André Nassif
Publisher:   Brill
Imprint:   Brill
Volume:   327
Dimensions:   Width: 15.50cm , Height: 2.50cm , Length: 23.50cm
Weight:   0.653kg
ISBN:  

9789004734289


ISBN 10:   9004734287
Pages:   316
Publication Date:   31 July 2025
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.
Language:   Portuguese

Table of Contents

Foreword  Luiz Carlos Bresser-Pereira Preface Figures and Tables Introduction  Economic Development and Stagnation: the Different Theoretical Views  An Illustrative Case: Brazil from Economic Development to Stagnation  What to Expect from This Book  Organisation of the Book Part 1: The Developmental School Prologue to Part 1 1 The Conceptual Roots of Developmentalism  1 Introduction  2 Smith and Increasing Returns  3 Marx and Capital Accumulation  4 Schumpeter and Technological Progress as a Process of “Creative Destruction”  5 Conclusion 2 Classical Developmentalism and Its Recent Unfoldings  1 Introduction  2 Economic Development as Structural Change: the Lewis Model with Unlimited Labour Supply  3 The Big Push Model and Development as a Balanced Process  4 Production Linkages and Development as an Unbalanced Process  5 Industrialisation, Deindustrialisation and Stagnation  6 Conclusion 3 The Centre-Periphery Model and eclac’s Political Economy: Yesterday and Today  1 Introduction  2 The Centre-Periphery Model as a Theoretical Basis for Latin American Developmental Structuralism  3 eclac’s Political Economy and the Developmental State  4 eclac’s Neostructuralism and the Centre-Periphery Model Today  5 Conclusion 4 Underdevelopment, Development, and Stagnation: Celso Furtado’s Theoretical Relevance  1 Introduction  2 Underdevelopment, Development and Stagnation under Furtado’s View  3 The Dutch Disease and the Resource Curse: Furtado’s Seminal Analysis  4 Conclusion 5 Prologue to New Developmentalism: Notes on the Inflation Targeting Regime and Fiscal Austerity  1 Introduction  2 Inflation Targeting Regime  3 Fiscal Austerity  4 Conclusion 6 New Developmentalism: Integrating Macroeconomics with Development Theory  1 Introduction  2 The Central Theses of New Developmentalism  3 Critical Points of the New Developmental Theory  4 Conclusion 7 Conclusion and Policy Implications of Part 1: in Defence of the Return of National Development Plans Part 2: The Neoclassical Liberal School Prologue to Part 2 8 International Trade Theories and the Case for Free Trade  1 Introduction  2 New International Trade Theories and the Reaffirmation of Free Trade  3 Conclusion 9 The Neoclassical Macroeconomics of Growth  1 Introduction  2 Growth Models in Closed Economies  3 Neoclassical Growth Models in Open Economies  4 Neoclassical Growth Models: the Developmental Critique  5 Conclusion 10 The Washington Consensus and the Ideology of Neoliberalism  1 Introduction  2 The Bretton Woods Era and Regulated Liberalism  3 The Washington Consensus and the Spread of Neoliberalism  4 Conclusion 11 Conclusion and Policy Implications of Part 2: Market Failures as a Criterion for Adopting Public Policies   A Critical Evaluation of the Neoclassical Liberal Argument  1 Market Failures as a Criterion for Adopting Public Policies: the Neoclassical Liberal Argument  2 Market Failures: a Critique of the Neoclassical Liberal Argument Conclusion Bibliography Index

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Author Information

André Nassif, Ph.D. (UFRJ, 2003), is an Associate Professor at Fluminense Federal University, Brazil, specializing in Macroeconomics, Economic Development, and International Economics. A former BNDES economist, he has taught globally and published widely in academic journals and edited volumes.

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