Leap into Modernity – Political Economy of Growth on the Periphery, 1943–1980
Abstract
This book describes struggles of different countries and their development after World War II. It presents a panorama of different ideologies of accelerated development, which dominated the world just before the war and in the next 40 years. The author explains why in the 1970s global and local elites began to turn away from the state, exchanging statism for the belief in the «invisible hand of the market» as a panacea for underdevelopment. He focuses not only on the genesis of underdevelopment, but also on the causes of popularity of economic planning, and the advent of neoliberalism in the discourse of development economics. This book evaluates the power of state as a vehicle of progress and focuses in detail on the Soviet Union, China, Poland, Ghana, Tanzania, and South Korea.
Keywords
1943–1980; 20th century history; Developing countries in 20th century; Economic planning; Economic underdevelopment; Economy; Growth; History of Poland; Leap; Leszczyński; Modernity; Periphery; Political; Political economy of developmentDOI
10.3726/b10801ISBN
9783653048865, 9783631710005, 9783631710012, 9783631656365, 9783653048865Publisher website
https://www.peterlang.com/Publication date and place
Bern, 2017Series
Geschichte – Erinnerung – Politik. Studies in History, Memory and Politics, 16Classification
General and world history
Asian history
African history
Military history
Political science and theory
Political ideologies and movements
Political structure and processes
Economics