The Economics Book

(Barry) #1

190


O


ne of the central questions
for economists is “how did
poor nations become rich?”
After World War II this question
reemerged with new force. The
crumbling of colonial empires had
spawned young, independent
nations whose living standards were
falling farther and farther behind
those of their former masters. Many
of them were experiencing rapid
population growth and needed a
corresponding growth in the goods
and services they produced in order
to improve living standards.
Europe had quickly recovered
from the war, aided by the Marshall
Plan—a huge infusion of funds from


the US government that funded the
rebuilding of infrastructure and
industries. The Polish economist
Paul Rosenstein-Rodan argued that
to make economic progress, the
newly independent countries of the
1950s and 60s needed a “big push”
in investment, just as Europe had
received from the Marshall Plan.
Another related idea was that
countries pass through a series of
stages, taking them from traditional
societies to mass consumer-based
economies. Walt Rostow, the US
economist who put forward this
theory, said that for traditional
nations to develop, massive capital
investments would be required: it

DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS


IN CONTEXT


FOCUS
Growth and development

KEY THINKERS
Paul Rosenstein-Rodan
(1902–85)
Walt Rostow (1916–2003)

BEFORE
1837 German economist
Friedrich List argues the use
of import protection to help
establish domestic industry.

AFTER
1953 Estonian economist
Ragnar Nurkse proposes the
policy of balanced growth for
developing countries.

1957 Austrian-Hungarian
economist Peter Bauer
criticizes the idea of the big
push and the orthodoxy of
state planning.

is the big push that triggers a take-
off into self-sustained growth. This
eventually transforms poor countries
into mature economies with high
living standards for the majority
of the population. The question of
how the investments needed for a
big push might be made became
the central question of the new field
of development economics.

Building simultaneously
Rosenstein-Rodan argued that in
less-developed countries the market
fails to funnel resources efficiently
into beneficial investments that
generate growth. This is because
big projects such as roads, ports,

If they do so, countries will grow.
All poor countries need is a big push.

To develop, poor countries need
many investments...

... in both infrastructure (such as
roads and ports) and industry (such
as factories and power stations).

Only governments can afford
to make this level of investment.

These investments must all be
made at once, because they
need each other to survive.
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