Journal ArticleDOI
Economic development : theory, policy, and international relations
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This article is published in Economica.The article was published on 1983-08-01. It has received 247 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Foreign policy analysis & Foreign relations.read more
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The Rise of "The Rest": Challenges to the West from Late-Industrializing Economies
TL;DR: A great divide had developed within "the rest", the lines drawn according to prewar manufacturing experience and equality in income distribution by 2000 as mentioned in this paper, and a select number of countries outside Japan and the West had built their own national manufacturing enterprises that were investing heavily in R&D.
Journal ArticleDOI
Regions, globalization, development
Allen J. Scott,Michael Storper +1 more
TL;DR: Cott et al. as mentioned in this paper argue that regions are an essential dimension of the development process, not just in the more advanced countries but also in less-developed parts of the world.
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Chapter 8 The agricultural transformation
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors define the agricultural transformation through at least four phases that are roughly definable: the first phase is when agricultural productivity per worker rises, which in the second phase can be tapped directly, through taxation and factor flows, or indirectly, through government intervention into the rural-urban terms of trade.
Book ChapterDOI
Chapter 7 Patterns of structural change
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a review on the basic concepts of the empirical research program into the economic structure of developing countries during the transition process, which originated with the monumental work of Simon Kuznets.
Journal ArticleDOI
Power and Visibility: Development and the Invention and Management of the Third World
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present the basic argument and major results and lines of analysis of a doctoral dissertation on the constitution of a number of nations (much of Asia, Africa, and Latin America) as "Third World" or "underdeveloped", and their treatment as such thereafter (Escobar 1987).