The Record of Global Economic Development

Front Cover
E. Elgar, 2002 - Business & Economics - 226 pages
Analyses the long-term and current economic forces which promote or impede globalization, drawing on the experience of economic history to help interpret major trends in modern economies. Brings up-to-date the debate on the origins of, and suitable conditions for, economic growth and discusses themes relating to cultural, institutional and structural change. Rejects cultural explanations of economic growth and emphasizes the institutional and political conditions that support it. An account of long-term world agriculture is followed by a brief history of English agriculture and a critique of the latest arguments for preserving it.

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About the author (2002)

Eric Jones, formerly Professorial Fellow, Melbourne Business School, University of Melbourne, Australia, Emeritus Professor and Distinguished Fellow, Institute for Advanced Study, La Trobe University, Australia and Visiting Professor, University of Exeter, UK

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