ABSTRACT

This book explores peripheral visions on economic development, both in the sense that it deals with specific issues of economic development and underdevelopment in countries at the periphery of the world economy, and in terms of its exploration of the economic thinking developed in those regions, particularly in Latin America. Bringing together an international group of historians of thought, economic historians and development economists from Latin America, Europe and other parts of the world, this volume is highly credited and is an excellent contribution to development economic studies.

This book is divided into four parts. Following the introduction, the first set of papers describes the evolution of core-periphery perspectives in key contributions by Raúl Prebisch, Oskar Lange, Albert Hirschman, Celso Furtado and Homero Cuevas. The second set discusses the links between unbalanced productive structures and external trade in peripheral countries. The third set contains papers on critical episodes in the development of monetary and financial systems in Latin America during the 19th and 20th centuries. The fourth set deals with geographical and institutional aspects of path dependence in the governance of external trade and in the development of liberties, property rights and economic education in Europe, Latin America and Africa. Several chapters make use of hitherto unexplored archival material. Other chapters draw attention to important episodes or literatures that have largely gone unnoticed in the English-speaking world. Yet others combine conceptual innovations with work on new historical data and other sources hitherto not utilized in such contexts.

This book is ideal for those who study and research development economics, history of economic thought and economic history, especially in Latin America.

chapter 1|11 pages

Introduction

Mario Garcia-Molina and Hans-Michael Trautwein 1

part I|78 pages

Core and periphery

chapter 2|32 pages

Core and periphery in the early Cold War

A historical analysis of development theory

chapter 3|14 pages

Anarchic accumulation, un-effective demand and institutional constraints

Oskar Lange's critique of capitalist dynamics in the core and the periphery

chapter 4|15 pages

Development economics today

Insights from Hirschman and Furtado

chapter 5|15 pages

Classical thought from the periphery

Homero Cuevas on non-basic goods and the standard commodity

part II|66 pages

Productive structures and external trade

part III|72 pages

Money and finance

chapter 10|14 pages

Nineteenth century monetary utopias in Latin America

The influence of French liberalism on the Colombian free banking experiment

chapter 11|15 pages

Distributive conflict and monetary institutions in peripheral economies

The Argentine experience with the Exchange Office of 1867

chapter 12|15 pages

The Gold-Exchange Standard in practice

Banking devices and international monetary relations, 1890–1914

part IV|108 pages

Geography and institutions

chapter 14|36 pages

Trade and colonization

The development of economic thought about two types of transnational governance

chapter 15|19 pages

Struggling for institutional change

Merchant guilds, trans-imperial entangled policies and Spanish backwardness: Havana in Atlantic perspective, 1792

chapter 16|20 pages

The teaching of political economy, circulation of ideas and economic performance

A review of the Colombian experience in the nineteenth century

chapter 17|31 pages

Path dependence and interdependence in institutions

The Nigerian case