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Thomas L. Hutcheson's avatar

As you can tell I have thoughts on this as I actually had to read Rostow and Prebisch and Gerschenkron and Lewis in grad school and ultimately did not find any of them as useful as Solow and Meade. :)

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John McIntire's avatar

Rostow (at least in your 1 para summary) is really doing can-opener economics. Assume « guaranteed property rights » (to what degree and for which properties ? ) and full employment (FE being an outcome of growth and a feature of advanced economies) and start from there. He’s assumed away two of the hard parts. And certainly Wilhoit’s aphorism would apply to property rights in the latifundia economies.

Prebisch, OTOH, tells a simple but true story (though he probably overestimates the elasticity of commodity supply and implicitly understates its variability) in which poor countries provide their value added for the benefit of the rich.

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