ABSTRACT
This chapter reviews the empirical parts of the analysis and suggests that the interwar period was a turning point in reconceptualization of economic growth both in academia and politics. After the First World War, there emerged growth conceptions that were explicitly oriented towards growth. The chapter presents a typologization of both capitalist and anti-capitalist growth conceptions and suggests that further studies could seek to expand the analysis with other typologies, national perspectives, and source materials.
