ABSTRACT

This book examines the critical themes of employment, growth and development to focus on challenges and opportunities, both old and new, in the contemporary world economy. The essential theme that runs through the book is that there is a strong relationship not only between employment and growth, but also between employment and development, where the causation runs in both directions. The author shows how employment transforms economic growth into meaningful development by providing livelihoods and incomes to people. While the book is primarily concerned with developing countries, it considers industrialized countries as points of reference or comparison, since the latter are a large part of an interdependent world, in which problems faced by the two sets of countries are frequently connected and sometimes common. The ten essays in this volume also provide a macroeconomic analysis of development problems situated in the wider context of a changing world economy, exploring possible solutions, to understand the implications for countries and for people.

A timely collection by an eminent economist, this book will be useful to teachers, students and researchers in economics, especially those interested in macroeconomics, political economy and development studies.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

part I|1 pages

Employment and Development

chapter 2|16 pages

Why Employment Matters

Reviving growth and reducing inequality

chapter 3|28 pages

Macroeconomics and Human Development

chapter 4|24 pages

The Millennium Development Goals Beyond 2015

Old frameworks and new constructs

part II|1 pages

Growth and Development

chapter 5|13 pages

The West and the Rest in the World Economy

The next transformation?

chapter 6|37 pages

China, India, Brazil and South Africa in the World Economy

Engines of growth?

part III|1 pages

Development, Polity and Society

chapter 9|18 pages

Globalization and Democracy

chapter 10|20 pages

Discrimination and Justice

Beyond affirmative action