17 June 2007

Erik Reinert (2007), 'How Rich Countries Got Rich ... and Why Poor Countries Stay Poor'

Erik Reinert (2007), 'How Rich Countries Got Rich ... and Why Poor Countries Stay Poor'


The new book of my supervisor, Erik S. Reinert, is now available at (online) bookstores: How Rich Countries Got Rich ... and Why Poor Countries Stay Poor (London: Constable, 2007). I am reproducing the details of the book below.


It is fascinating how this book has sparked both intense and intensive debates in economics, business, and the social sciences already, given that it was only published late April. Find out for yourself why Erik's book has elicited interesting debates as soon as it was published from
mainstream economists to heterodox economists to socialists to journalists to bloggers. (Here for Erik's reply to recent debates on his book.)


Do get one for you and for your institutes/organisations/networks/schools/libraries!


*****
HOW RICH COUNTRIES GOT RICH ... AND WHY POOR COUNTRIES STAY POOR
by Erik S. Reinert

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AUTHOR

Erik S. Reinert is editor of Globalization, Economic Development and Inequality: An Alternative Perspective (2004) and co-editor of The Origins of Development Economics: How Schools of Economic Thought Have Addressed Development (2005). He is Professor of Technology Governance and Development Strategies at Tallinn University of Technology, Estonia, and president of The Other Canon foundation in Norway. He is one of the world’s leading heterodox development economists.

For further information see www.othercanon.org.

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SYNOPSIS

From Renaissance Italy to the modern Far East, the development of the world’s wealthy nations has been driven by a combination of government intervention, initial protectionism, and the strategically timed introduction of free trade and investments. So says Erik Reinert, a leading economist who does not subscribe to the orthodoxy. Yet despite its demonstrable success, when it comes to development in the poorer nations, Western powers have largely ignored this approach and have taken the toughest of hard lines on the importance of free trade.

Reinert sets out his revisionist history of economics and shows how the discipline has long been torn between the continental Renaissance tradition on one hand and the free market theories of English and later American economics on the other. He argues that our economies were founded on protectionism and state activism and it was long before they could afford the luxury of free trade. When our leaders come to lecture poor countries on the right road to riches they do so in almost perfect ignorance of the real history of mass affluence.

One country’s medicine could be another country’s poison. A book aimed at a politically aware and progressively minded readership, How Rich Countries Got Rich . . . will bury economic orthodoxy once and for all and open up the debate on why free trade is not the best answer for our hopes of worldwide prosperity.

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CONTENTS

Foreword by Jomo K.S., UN Assistant Secretary-General for Economic Development and Founder Chair of International Development Economics Associates (IDEAs)

Introduction

1 Discovering Types of Economic Theories
2 The Evolution of the Two Different Approaches
3 Emulation: How Rich Countries Got Rich
4 Globalization: the Arguments in Favour are also the Arguments Against
5 Globalization and Primitivization: How the Poor Get Even Poorer
6 Explaining Away Failure: Red Herrings at the End of History
7 Palliative Economics: Why the Millenium Goals are a Bad Idea
8 'Get the economic activities right', or, the Lost Art of Creating Middle-Income Countries

Appendices

I David Ricardo's Theory of Comparative Advantage in International Trade
II Two Different Ways of Understanding the Economic World and the Wealth and Poverty of Nations
III Frank Graham's Theory of Uneven Development
IV Two Ideal Types of Protectionism Compared
V Philipp von Hönigk's Nine Points on How to Emulate the Rich Countries (1684)
VI The Quality Index of Economic Activities

Notes
Bibliography
Index

(365 pages)

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PRAISES

'Reinert forces you to think. He reaches deep into economic history and the history of economics - the history of theory, practice and policy - creatively synthesizing an evolutionary, institutionalist, new 'canon', putting technological progress and production experience - 'learning by doing' - at the centre of economic development. '
- Jose Antonio Ocampo, UN Undersecretary General for Economic and Social Affairs

'Warning: this book will forever change your conception of economic development.'
- Professor Carlota Perez, Tallinn University of Technology and Cambridge University

'Disinters those awkward truths the free trade theorists wanted dead and buried. Reinert's brilliant forensics rebuild a convincing economic blueprint for tackling world poverty.'
- Alex MacGillvray, author of A Brief History of Globalization

'Erik Reinert's book represents a breakthrough in our understanding of the links between technology and the wealth and poverty of nations.'
- Christopher Freeman, Professor Emeritus, SPRU, University of Sussex

'A fascinating overview of how contemporary economics came to follow its historic path, and of a different route it might have, and may still yet, pursue.'
- Robert Heilbroner, on Reinert's 'The Role of the State in Economic Growth'

15 comments:

Anonymous said...

Bro I want to have a copy of this...Mayroon ka ba pdf file nito....Balita ko nga pala...mukhang dinadala ang paa ko sa Green Archers IS Department. Will start September this year....Give me ideas tungkol sa mga Lasallians...

God bless,
RCM

Anonymous said...

salamat, bonn.
hihintayin naming ang kopya mo na pwede naming ma-fotox. hehe

best,

roli

Anonymous said...

Dear Bonn

Great to know that Eric has finally published it!!! I look forward to
getting a copy.

Meanwhile a recent jointly edited book of mine is expected to come out
by the end of this year:

Rajah Rasiah, Yuri Sadoi and Rogier Busser (eds) Multinationals,
Technology and Localization: Evidence from Automotive and Electronics
Firms in Asia

London: Routledge.

Best

Rajah

Anonymous said...

Hi Bonn,

I never really got to thanking you properly for being part of my 50th bday celebration. Your clip was part of the cd presentation that my two girls made for me. Bonn, salamat!

As to the book, how much is it? Can you bring home a copy for me and pay you here? Looking at the contents, I think the book will really give me a crash course on most of what I have always wished to grasp about globalization, past and contemporary political economy.

Sana magkita tayo on your short visit to Manila. Come to our humble home for a delicious homecooked dinner.

I don't know if you will still find me in IPD as my resigation is effective June 30. Otherwise, get my cel and hometel numbers so we can keep track of each other: 4379323 and 09215558359.

Tina is in Holland for a brief vacation and a speaking engagement.

Ingat sa biyahe Bonn,

Tessa

Anonymous said...

Hi Bonn:


pauwi ka daw Pilipinas? kailan? Kinukumusta ka ni Nai. Nandito sya ulit for more data gathering. Kumusta ba ang buhay-buhay natin dyan. Happy Father's day B?

Stone

Anonymous said...

Salamat Bonn for the info. By the way I'll be going to the Philippines this
July 18 to early August, especially to be with my mother in La Union. Are
you also going home or have you decided to stay in Europe?
sally

Anonymous said...

Thanks for ... the links - Erik's books certainly seems to be making some waves which is a good thing. I was surprised by the (generally) supportive tone of the Daily Telegraph review because that paper has a long-standing reputation for its reactionary politics (pro-market, social authoritarianism, Euroscepticism) but the reviewer seemed to concede many of Erik's points. It'll be interesting when the academic journals get round to doing their reviews.

G

Anonymous said...

Hey! I'm reading the same book right now, Dr. Reinert send me a copy! I am delighted with it and I just can't wait to start the master. It seems that the mainstream economists and the marxists "wore the cap", as we can see from their reviews on the book. By the way, a brazilian site translated Paul Collier's critique, but not Reinert's reply...

I see that you are now a "PhD Student", so we will meet then!

Hope to hear from you soon,

regards,

Caetano

Anonymous said...

Thank you Bonn, I am buying the book. How are you?

Best

Carlo

Anonymous said...

It's great that someone of note has finally challenged the infantile fantasy that the precursors of today's developed nations were models of laissez-faire enterprise. Perhaps we can start bringing the economics back into economic history and save the discipline from the third-rate fiction that's too often passed for scholarship in recent years.

Anonymous said...

bonn, galit ako sa yo. waaah. di ka man lang nagparamdam nung dumating ka. tumawag lang kayo ni gary e di ko pa nasagot. pakita ka naman, the next time youre here.

Anonymous said...

Great work.

Ruchira Sen said...

I LOVE this book. It changed so much in my head!

Unknown said...

Dear Eric

I agree with him, state run capitalism is better than super capitalism like USA is now, a disaster. China is running a State capitalism and they have no debt at all. However, most African countries and Asian dictators do not know how to run State ( traditional ) capitalism. Once they control the economy, they steal everything and give to Switzerland and die. Those monkeys.That is why we get poorer and poorer too.

Unknown said...

I agree with him, state run capitalism is better than super capitalism like USA is now, a disaster. China is running a State capitalism and they have no debt at all. However, most African countries and Asian dictators do not know how to run State ( traditional ) capitalism. Once they control the economy, they steal everything and give to Switzerland and die. Those monkeys.That is why we get poorer and poorer.