ABSTRACT

First published in 1984, Michael Beenstock develops in The World Economy in Transition an original, stimulating and accessible analysis of the world economy in its many aspects, and this second edition includes a chapter on the International Banking Crisis in line with the author’s Transition Theory. The book embraces numerous strands of economic debate as the author provides a powerful and original thesis which focuses on the changing economic relationship between developed and developing nations as well as between manufacturing and primary producing sectors. The analysis also extends to international trade, commodity markets, international finance, energy and economic history. The book discusses, in addition to Transition Theory, other global approaches to the subject, including technology diffusion, long waves, commodity price effects and the oil price hikes, and the insights of Transition Theory are also applied to the historical experience of the British economy, concluding with an evaluation of policy implications.

chapter 1|20 pages

Sea Change in the West

chapter 2|37 pages

Global Theories of SecularStagnation

chapter 3|39 pages

Transition Theory

chapter 4|40 pages

Empirical Aspects of the Transition Theory

chapter 5|23 pages

The Long Wave Hypothesis

chapter 7|18 pages

A Re-run of the 1970s *

chapter 10|35 pages

Postscript: the International Banking Crisis