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2. The following summary remarks were made in the general session following the small group discussions of Papers #1-4
- Published
- 1973
3. U.S. AGRICULTURAL EXPORTS: THE NEED TO ESTABLISH THE TERMS OF REFERENCE: Discussion of the Paper by Dr. Leroy Blakeslee
- Author
-
Godwin, Marshall R.
- Published
- 1969
4. Comments on Leontief's Paper
- Author
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Sebestyén, Josef
- Published
- 1964
5. Proceedings of the Council of Economics of the American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, Inc. [4th volume; 21 papers, 1 appeared previously; selected papers indexed individually]
- Author
-
Kaufman, A [ed.]
- Published
- 1969
6. DISCUSSION OF PAPER BY E. M. BERNSTEIN.
- Author
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SAMMONS, ROBERT L.
- Subjects
FINANCIAL crises ,ECONOMIC development ,DEVELOPING countries ,FOREIGN assets ,LABOR productivity - Abstract
This article presents a discussion of E. M. Bernstein's paper about the financial problems of economic development. Bernstein discusses five facets of this problem: to decrease the size of the development program, to energize the inflow of foreign capital, to encourage domestic savings, to gather together the available resources, and to allocate the resources available to the private sector in a way that will stimulate the greatest increase in production. The author believes that this analysis leaves no room for argument.
- Published
- 1957
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. INTERNATIONAL MONETARY FUND STAFF PAPERS.
- Author
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Altman, Oscar L., Romanis, Anne, Williams, David, Ahrensdorf, Joachim, Abdel-Rahman, A., and Perry, Patrick A.
- Subjects
INTERNATIONAL finance ,MONETARY policy ,EUROCURRENCY market ,BALANCE of payments ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
This article presents abstracts of several papers about international monetary published in the March 1965 issue of the journal International Monetary Fund Staff Papers. In the article Euro-Dollars: Some Further Comments, Oscar L. Altman discussed some issues concerning the use of Euro-dollars in the U.S. While in the article Balance of Payments Adjustment Among Developed Countries, Anne Romanis argued that persistent disequlibria often originate in once-and-for-all changes and tend to abate in time, that the adjustment process can be strengthened by deliberate long-term policies and that if imbalances impose intolerable pressures on particular countries, recourse should be had to exchange rate adjustments at infrequent intervals.
- Published
- 1965
8. OXFORD ECONOMIC PAPERS: OCTOBER 1962.
- Author
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Mishan, E.J., Scott, M.F.G., MacBean, A.J., Lloyd, Cliff, Stern, R.M., MacDougall, Donald, Dowley, Monica, Fox, Pauline, and Pugh, Senta
- Subjects
ECONOMETRIC models ,ECONOMETRICS ,INTERNATIONAL trade ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
Presents various econometric models of different countries. Problem of stabilization policy in underdeveloped countries; Productivity and comparative costs of Great Britain and the U.S. in international trade.
- Published
- 1963
9. Peace Research and the Developing Countries
- Author
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Chaudhri, Mohammed Ahsen
- Published
- 1968
10. Possibilities for Application of Operational Research to Problems of Development
- Author
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Tinbergen, J.
- Published
- 1964
11. THE FEASIBILITY STUDY: ITS RÔLE IN THE INDUSTRIALIZATION OF DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
- Author
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GRANT, JULIUS
- Published
- 1966
12. National Development from a Social Psychological Perspective.
- Author
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Hefner, Robert and Delamater, John
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,EDUCATIONAL sociology ,INTERPERSONAL relations ,DEVELOPMENT economics ,SOCIAL institutions ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
This article presents information regarding the problems faced by the developing countries in their course of development. The problems faced by the developing countries of the world are numerous and of critical importance. These problems include those of industrialization and economic development, of changing traditional social institutions such as stratification and power mechanisms so that they facilitate rather than inhibit modernization, and of providing ever-increasing percentages of citizens with an education that teaches the economic and social skills requisite to assuming rewarding roles in a changing society. However, in the array of social and behavioral sciences that have been brought to bear upon the problems of developing countries, social psychology has been noticeably absent. Anthropologists have carried over their interest in traditional societies to include concern with the problems these societies face in the processes of modernization and development, particularly as these processes affect values and institutions such as the family and religion.
- Published
- 1968
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. CONTRIBUTION TO THE STUDY OF MULTINATIONAL CORPORATIONS
- Author
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Ádám, Gy.
- Published
- 1974
14. Bibliography on Unemployment N.S. No. 10
- Author
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Gutkind, P.C.W.
- Published
- 1973
15. THE EVALUATION OF FORESTRY INVESTMENTS IN UNDERDEVELOPED COUNTRIES BY INVESTMENT CRITERIA STANDARDS
- Author
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SCHREUDER, GERARD F.
- Published
- 1970
16. Three Patterns of Research in Developing Countries
- Author
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ZIMAN, JOHN
- Published
- 1971
17. AMERICAN ECONOMIC REVIEW.
- Subjects
MONEY ,LABOR ,INVESTMENTS ,PUBLIC spending ,MONEY supply ,INCOME ,AGRICULTURE ,UNEMPLOYMENT ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
This section presents abstracts of articles on money and labor published in the September 1965 issue of the journal American Economic Review. The article titled The Relative Stability of Monetary Velocity and the Investment Multiplier by Albert Ando and Franco Modigliani modifies both the model and the procedure employed by Milton Friedman and David Meiselman in their earlier work in order to assess their results and their interpretation as evidence for the relative stability of monetary velocity and the investment multiplier. Meanwhile, the paper titled Tests of the Relative Importance of Autonomous Expenditures and Money by Michael DePrano and Thomas Mayer presents a critique of a study by Milton Friedman and David Meiselman which claimed that the stock of money is far more important in determining income than are autonomous expenditures. This critique covers the period 1929-63 using sub-periods as well as data for the whole period. The main criticism of the Friedman-Meiselman study is that it defines autonomous expenditures in a way which includes many endogenous elements. Furthermore, the paper Surplus Agricultural Labor and Development: Facts and Theories by Morton Paglin used the Indian data to challenge the widely held assumption that disguised unemployment and surplus labor are prevalent in the agricultural sector of underdeveloped countries.
- Published
- 1965
18. A Theory of Tax Level Determinants for Developing Countries.
- Author
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Lotz, Joergen R. and Morss, Elliott R.
- Subjects
TAXATION ,TAX administration & procedure ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
This paper gives detailed consideration to some of the factors likely to affect tax levels in developing countries While important gaps remain to be covered, our results suggest that the availability of taxable bases is a more important determinant of tax levels in developing countries than variations in the demand for government expenditures. In developed countries, variations in tax levels suggest that demand factors come into play. This conclusion is based on our findings that factors measuring tax administrative capacity, while not very meaningful as indicators of demand for public services, are highly significant in explaining the tax ratios in developing countries. The introduction of these variables enables us to explain about 45 percent of the variation in the ratios. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1970
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19. Notes on a Non-Weberian Model of Bureaucracy: The Case of Development Bureaucracy.
- Author
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Kaplan, Berton H.
- Subjects
BUREAUCRACY ,INTERORGANIZATIONAL relations ,SOCIAL systems ,PUBLIC administration ,ORGANIZATIONAL sociology ,SOCIAL change ,ORGANIZATIONAL effectiveness ,DEVELOPING countries ,DIVISION of labor ,POLITICAL science - Abstract
This paper argues that the traditional Weberian concerns about complex organizations require refinement and extension for the understanding of organizations designed for social development. Six ideal type modes of looking at development bureaucracies are proposed: (1) that the organization is theoretically oriented; (2) that the organization is designed to provide latent structures to meet the changing contingencies of the development process; (3) that the organization is client centered and is consequently designed to work with the entire social system(s); (4) that the organization is designed to perform a socialization or resocialization function; (5) that social development organizations are ideally committed to a norm emphasizing experimental design as the primary consideration in program design; (6) and that the organization for social development is constrained by the limited alternatives for change available at any given time. In addition, brief attention is given to the great importance of community disintegration and ego impairment as critical constraints on attempts to repair and/or modernize a social system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1968
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- View/download PDF
20. Entrepreneurial Succession.
- Author
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Davis, Stanley M.
- Subjects
ENTREPRENEURSHIP ,EXECUTIVE succession ,EXECUTIVE recruiting ,PERSONNEL changes ,DEVELOPING countries ,INDUSTRIAL management ,BUSINESS success ,INDUSTRIALIZATION ,FAMILY-owned business enterprises ,MODERNIZATION (Social science) ,ETHICS - Abstract
This paper examines three patterns of entrepreneurial succession in private enterprise in developing countries. The process may be thought of as the succession from entrepreneurs to executives. The findings suggest significant variation in the adaptability of each type to the development of modern organizations in which the function of management is distinct from the manager as a person. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1968
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. BASIC METHODS FOR DISTRIBUTING SPECIAL DRAWING RIGHTS AND THE PROBLEM OF INTERNATIONAL AID.
- Author
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GRUBEL, HERBERT G.
- Subjects
SPECIAL drawing rights ,INTERNATIONAL finance ,INTERNATIONAL economic assistance ,MONETARY policy ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
This paper attempts to show that the method for distributing SDRs adopted through the Rio Agreements was designed not to lead to the redistribution of income and wealth among nations either on the occasion of the initial allocations or through the use of the SDRs in the financing of temporary deficits. This objective may not be attained because IMF quotas fail to reflect nations' long-run average demand for reserves or because the quantity of reserves in existence fails to establish an average equality of interest plus liquidity yield on SDRs to the marginal productivity of real resources. If the Rio Agreements are deficient in these respects, relatively simple technical adjustments in the operation of the scheme are necessary. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1972
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- View/download PDF
22. SOME THEORETICAL CONSIDERATION IN THE STUDY OF SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT IN THE THIRD WORLD.
- Author
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Jayaraman, Raja
- Subjects
SOCIAL change ,SOCIAL development ,SOCIAL goals ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
Copyright of Sociologia Ruralis is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 1973
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. International Economics.
- Subjects
INTERNATIONAL economic relations ,LIQUIDITY (Economics) ,INTERNATIONAL finance ,INTERNATIONAL trade ,COMMERCIAL policy ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
The article presents some abstracts of published materials concerning international economics. The paper entitled "International Liquidity: Meaning and Significance for the Haves and the Have-nots," by J. Amuzegar discusses the significance of international liquidity problem of the haves and have-nots with reference to three issues, the magnitude and adequacy of international liquidity now and in the near future, the involvement of different countries in the creation and use of needed additional reserves, and the appropriate ways and means of effecting necessary changes in the present world payments and reserve system. The abstract entitled "International Trade Theory in a Vintage-Capital Model," by P.K. Bardhan contains an analysis of the pattern of comparative advantage in a model of growing international economy where intercountry productivity differentials are affected by, among other things, differences in economic life of machines in different countries. The paper entitled "External Impact on Economic Development," by H. Burgard is a lecture on some problems arising from the international economic relations of developing countries.
- Published
- 1968
24. MANAGEMENT SCIENCES IN AN UNDERDEVELOPED COUNTRY: THE CASE OF OPERATIONS RESEARCH IN PERU.
- Author
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Sagasti, Francisco R.
- Subjects
MANAGEMENT science ,DEVELOPING countries ,OPERATIONS research ,EMERGING markets ,DEVELOPING countries commerce ,BUSINESS & education ,MANAGERIAL economics ,COMMERCE - Abstract
This paper examines the development of management sciences in Peru, with particular reference to the introduction and diffusion of operations research in the 1960's. The reactions of government officials and executives in private industry to management science are analyzed. The educational and institutional aspects of the future of OR are also examined. The paper ends with a discussion of the methodological aspects of operations research work in underdeveloped countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1972
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Reply.
- Author
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Singer, H. W.
- Subjects
BUSINESS ,INTERNATIONAL trade ,INVESTMENTS ,DEVELOPING countries ,ECONOMISTS ,ECONOMICS ,FOREIGN investments - Abstract
The article author comments on views of economist A.N. McLeod on his (author's) paper on trade and investment in underdeveloped areas. McLeod has expressed apprehension about absence of a definition for underdeveloped areas. In his paper, the author had referred to countries which are poor for reasons other than war destruction. These countries also happen to be mainly agricultural and exporters of primary products. The author also notes that McLeod himself falls back "more on usage than pure logic," so he should not be bothered about absence of definition. The author did not mean "a country that is not at present industrialized." The under-developed countries are agricultural (or mining) countries, but not all agricultural (or mining) countries are under-developed. The author does not have to show that merely geographic investment is "actually harmful to the recipient country." Foreign indebtedness is bad, even if the results of the investment are not "actually harmful." The onus is onus is on someone to demonstrate that the investment is positively useful.
- Published
- 1951
26. Basement tinkerer scoops the pros.
- Subjects
TECHNOLOGICAL innovations ,WASHING machines ,DEVELOPING countries ,KNIT goods ,NONWOVEN textiles - Abstract
The article focuses on Richard Rhodes Walton and his invention called the hand-operated washing machine which is designed for use in the underdeveloped countries. It notes that most of the major inventions of Walton involved in either making or washing clothes. Moreover, it mentions other Walton's inventions such as the Compactor that is used to shrinkproof cotton knit goods and Microcreper machines that soften and elasticize paper and non-woven materials.
- Published
- 1968
27. THE EVOLUTION OF MARXIST THEORIES OF POPULATION: MARXISM RECOGNIZES THE POPULATION PROBLEM.
- Author
-
Brackett, James W.
- Subjects
POPULATION ,SOCIALISM ,SOCIAL problems ,DEVELOPING countries ,SOCIAL policy ,CITIES & towns - Abstract
Copyright of Demography (Springer Nature) is the property of Springer Nature and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 1968
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. AN ANALYSIS OF NEWS FLOW FROM DEVELOPED AND DEVELOPING NATIONS.
- Author
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HESTER, AL
- Subjects
FOREIGN news ,INTERNATIONAL cooperation on communication ,TELETYPE ,CONTENT analysis ,IBM computers ,DEVELOPING countries ,DEVELOPED countries - Abstract
The article focuses on a study which analysis the news flow from developed and developing nations. It mentions that the study which used the main trunk teletype wire of the Associated Press (AP) in the U.S. focus on the comparison of the news flow from such states with the news flow form more economically and politically developed areas of the world. It states that the I.B.M. 1108 computer at the University of Wisconsin was used to compile the comparative content analysis data during the study. Moreover, the study shows that the largest percentage of news from individual developed countries was concerned in the U.S.
- Published
- 1971
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL SCIENCE ASSOCIATION: FREUDENSTADT ROUND-TABLE MEETINGS.
- Subjects
ASSOCIATIONS, institutions, etc. ,CONFERENCES & conventions ,POLITICAL rights ,CONSTITUTIONAL law ,COURTS ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
The article focuses on the International Political Science Association's Freudenstadt Round Table Meetings, held as of November 1, 1963. Four sessions were devoted to this first subject of the round table. Proceedings followed rather closely the arrangement set out in the general rapporteurs first working paper, the role of courts in administering civil and criminal law and in developing individual rights, the role of these courts in deciding constitutional issues affecting governmental and political structure, the position of these courts within the governmental framework. Three sessions of the conference were devoted to a discussion of the role of a constitution in apolitical system. The final session centred on the problem of constitutionalism in newly developing nations.
- Published
- 1963
30. Economic History; Economic Development; National Economies.
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMIC history ,SAVINGS ,DEVELOPING countries ,ECONOMIC policy ,LABOR supply - Abstract
The article presents some abstracts of published materials concerning economic history, economic development and national economies. The paper entitle "Economic Growth in Britain in the Inter-War Years: A Re-assessment," by D.H. Aldcroft presents calculations based on the statistical data collected by these authors and suggests that the growth of the British economy not only compared favorably with that of other industrial countries but was also considerably better than pre 1914 achievements. The purpose of the paper entitled "Capital Formation and Government Capital Policy in Developing Economies," by H. Ben-Shahar is to suggest a rationale for such an intervention in the capital market, particularly in developing countries, where the financial system is underdeveloped, and to suggest optimum techniques for government operation. Another paper entitled "Factor Pricing with "Unlimited" Supplies of Labour," by A. Bottomley and D. Nudds sets out to show that there are strong theoretical reasons for supposing that the supply of Labour in overpopulated countries is not perfectly elastic at the subsistence wage.
- Published
- 1968
31. THE INDIAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL.
- Subjects
ECONOMICS ,AGRICULTURAL productivity ,FARM management ,CENTRAL banking industry ,DEVELOPING countries ,STEEL industry - Abstract
This article presents abstracts of articles on economics published in the January-March 1965 issue of The Indian Economic Journal. In the paper An Activity Analysis Approach to Measure Productive Efficiency in Agriculture: A Case Study of Ahmednagar and Nasik Districts, by K. R. Bharadwaj and R. Bharadwaj, the authors have made an attempt to employ the activity analysis technique to measure productive efficiency of agriculture in India. This technique enables the authors to handle more efficiently multiple inputs without varying the usual index number problems. The approach requires only the more general convexity condition on the production set and the non-positivity of the slope of the isoquant. In the first two sections the methodological issues and the empirical procedure have been discussed. In the final section the results of an empirical enquiry using the farm management data pertaining to the Ahmednagar and Nasik districts have been presented. Furthermore, the article Central Banking in Developing Countries: Some Lessons of Australian Experience, by H. W. Arndt considers each of the major central banking functions such as foreign exchange policy, control of money supply, selective control of credit and development of capital market in order to show how they have come to be exercised by Australia's Central Bank, what problems have arisen and what lessons the Australian experience may hold for central banking in the developing countries. Moreover, the purpose of the paper Production Function for Indian Steel Industry, by A. K. Sarkar is to study the functional relationship of output in the Indian steel industry with that of different inputs. The modified Cobb-Douglas type regression equation has been fitted to the time-series data by the method of least squares in the multiple regression equation with a linear relationship.
- Published
- 1965
32. THE QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF ECONOMICS.
- Author
-
Watson, Andrew M., Dirlam, Joel B., Krueger, Anne O., Peterson, Harold, Thomson, Herbert F., Schatz, Sayre P., McClelland, David C., Grubel, Herbert G., Bower, Joseph L., Yaari, Menahem E., and Heller, H. R.
- Subjects
ECONOMICS ,CENTRAL economic planning ,DEVELOPING countries ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
This article presents abstracts of several papers about economics published in the May 1965 issue of the Quarterly Journal of Economics. In the paper The Impact of Underdevelopment on Economic Planning, Andrew M. Watson and Joel B. Dirlam argued that certain fundamental handicaps have been insufficiently considered in setting the goals of, and establishing the institutions for, economic planning in developing countries. While the article N Achievement and Economic Growth: A Critique, discussed the theory of David McClelland on economic development such as his hypothesis on the relationship between n Achievement and economic growth, and not with the validity or reliability of his measures of n Achievement.
- Published
- 1965
33. DISCUSSION.
- Author
-
Aubrey, Henry G. and Schlesinger, Eugene R.
- Subjects
COMMERCIAL policy ,INTERNATIONAL trade ,BALANCE of payments ,SUPPLY & demand ,INCOME ,ELASTICITY (Economics) ,DEVELOPING countries ,DEVELOPED countries - Abstract
This article presents a discussion on a research paper "Commercial Policy in the Underdeveloped Countries," published in the May 1959 issue of the journal "American Economic Review," by Raul Prebisch from the United Nations Economic Commission for Latin America. In dealing with mechanisms that are supposedly "inherent" in elasticities or terms of trade, one cannot help feeling uneasy about the degree of generalization and the inference from historical statistics that the material of the research paper permits. General methods of determining elasticities, especially over the long term, are far less than perfect, and the difficulties of terms-of-trade analysis are also great enough to warrant caution. The numerical examples used by Prebisch are based on the usual assumption of an income elasticity of less than unity for primary products. On the demand side this assumption seems reasonable enough, but long-term supply elasticities within the industrial countries have been shifting significantly in developing countries. However, the domestic output of certain minerals has not kept up with demand, so that the import requirements are rising relative to income growth in the industrial world, notwithstanding some protectionist interference.
- Published
- 1959
34. Organizational Transfer and Class Structure.
- Author
-
Farmer, Richard N.
- Subjects
INNOVATION adoption ,TECHNOLOGY transfer ,ORGANIZATIONAL behavior ,SOCIAL classes ,SOCIAL structure ,DEVELOPING countries ,CULTURE ,CULTURE & globalization ,DIFFUSION of innovations ,ATTITUDES toward technology ,EMERGING markets - Abstract
Nations borrowing technology from more developed countries often fail to realize that much of the developed country's class structure, behavior and attitude are often implicitly built into its technology. Thus, a developing nation may be obtaining more than it bargained for in such technological borrowing. The developing country may either have to change its own class structure or partially fail in its efforts to borrow. This paper examines some of the reasons why class structures are built into technology and what some of the implications of such technological borrowing are. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1966
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. JAHRBÜCHER FÜR NATIONALÖKONOMIE U ND STATISTIK.
- Author
-
Braun, Oswald, Wittmann, Walter, and Recktenwald, Horst Claus
- Subjects
ECONOMICS ,STATISTICS ,FOREIGN exchange futures ,ECONOMIC development ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
This article presents abstracts of several papers about economics and statistics published in a 1965 issue of the journal Jahrbücher Für Nationalökonomie Und Statistik. The subject of the paper Problems of the Theory of the Forward-Exchange Market is the effects of interventions in forward-exchange market in comparison and addition to interventions in the spot-exchange market. In the article The Economic Growth of Developed and Underdeveloped Countries, Walter Wittman analyzed the economic growth of developed countries and compared the economic development of the advanced countries with that of underdeveloped nations.
- Published
- 1965
36. ECONOMIA INTERNAZIONALE: MAY 1962.
- Subjects
ECONOMICS ,ABSTRACTS ,DEVELOPING countries ,FINANCE - Abstract
Presents information related to several abstracts on economics published in the May 1962 issue of the journal 'Economia Internazionale.' Custom unions and underdeveloped countries; Self-financing and its importance on the working of the economic system.
- Published
- 1963
37. DISCUSSION.
- Author
-
McKenzie, Lionel W., Harding, Lowell S., and Schuh, G. E.
- Subjects
ECONOMIC research ,DEVELOPING countries ,INTERNATIONAL finance ,CAPITAL movements ,FINANCIAL performance - Abstract
The article presents a discussion of "Stochastic Stability of a General Equilibrium Model," by Roy Weintraub, "Equilibrium Growth and Capital Movements Between Open Economies," by Myron Myers and "Farmer's Response to Price in Underdeveloped Areas: The Nicaraguan Case," by Pedro Belli, all in this issue. Comments on Weintraub's paper include a caution in interpreting results and an injunction to introduce the peculiarities of an economic problem into stability conditions. Belli's paper invites criticism on the grounds that is provides insufficient supporting detail to further elucidate the problem, but is praised for employing a testing method in development studies. Myers's paper engenders comments on capital movement.
- Published
- 1970
38. Economic Development and Aid.
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,INTERNATIONAL economic assistance ,INTERNATIONAL economic relations ,DEVELOPING countries ,PLANNING ,ECONOMIC policy ,INTERNATIONAL relations - Abstract
The article presents a list of books and papers about economic development and aid. The books and papers include "Development Planning," by Albert Waterston, C.J. Martin, August T. Schumacher and Fritz A. Steuber, "Unsolved Problems of International Development," published in "International Development," "Patterns of Economic Growth," "Developing Countries," published in "Realites," "What Do We Know About Planning," published in "International Development Review," and "Development Finance: Planning and Control," by Ursula K. Hicks.
- Published
- 1966
39. Conference on the Rural Base for National Development.
- Author
-
Chambers, Robert
- Subjects
CONFERENCES & conventions ,ECONOMIC development ,DEVELOPING countries ,SOCIAL development - Abstract
This conference, held under the auspices of the British Ministry of Overseas Development, was the twenty-first in the series of annual University of Cambridge Overseas Studies Committee conferences. Originally devoted to colonial administration and development, especially in Africa, their concern has now spread to the third world as a whole. All the same, among the 150-odd academics, administrators, and politicians who attended, Africans and Africanists still predominated, as did African examples in the 14 papers presented. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 1968
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Less Developed Countries- Technology Transfer and Adaptation: The Role of the Indigenous Science Community.
- Author
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Nelson, Richard R.
- Subjects
SCIENTISTS ,ECONOMIC conditions in developing countries ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
What is the role of the scientific community in a less developed country (LDC) in furthering that country's development? In this paper I will try to develop a perspective on this question by describing the view of underdevelopment and the development process that tends to be held by development economists and then contrasting the economist's view with the one that tends to be held by the natural scientist. The development economist, by and large, has placed less weight on organized science as a factor in development than has the natural scientist; while the natural scientist may overestimate the role of science in development, the economics community may underestimate it. In any case, the reasons for the differences are well worth exploring. What is the role of the scientific community in a less developed country (LDC) in furthering that country's development? In this paper I will try to develop a perspective on this question by describing the view of underdevelopment and the development process that tends to be held by development economists and then contrasting the economist's view with the one that tends to be held by the natural scientist. The development economist, by and large, has placed less weight on organized science as a factor in development than has the natural scientist; while the natural scientist may overestimate the role of science in development, the economics community may underestimate it. In any case, the reasons for the differences are well worth exploring.NNWhat is the role of the scientific community in a less developed country (LDC) in furthering that country's development? In this paper I will try to develop a perspective on this question by describing the view of underdevelopment and the development process that tends to be held by development economists and then contrasting the economist's view with the one that tends to be held by the natural scientist. The development economist, by and large, has placed less weight on organized... [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1974
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. The Theory of Effective Protection and Preferences.
- Author
-
Johnson, Harry G.
- Subjects
INTERNATIONAL trade ,TARIFF ,CUSTOMS unions ,EXPORTS ,DEVELOPING countries ,INTERNATIONAL markets - Abstract
In this paper I shall not attempt any sort of comprehensive survey of the contributions to empirical knowledge that have been accumulating in consequence of the application of the new concept, though I shall refer to some of them in the course of the argument. Instead, I shall attempt, first, to outline the essentials of the new approach, second, to apply it to the problems of the measurement of tariff barriers and the cost of protection, and third, to develop some of its implications for customs-union theory, in the particular case of the proposal advanced at UNCTAD for the granting of preferences for the manufactured exports of the less-developed countries in the markets of the developed countries. In the first part of the paper I must necessarily be brief; such brevity can be excused on the grounds that the main points are rather simple, and that several good expositions are available in print.[1] In the second and third parts, I shall deliberately use very crude models of the economic system, essentially partial-equilibrium models or general-equilibrium models from which most of the substitution possibilities of such models have been removed. The reason for proceeding in a fashion so contrary to the general-equilibrium spirit of modern international trade theory is two-fold; to avoid the use of complex mathematical formulae, and to make the results potentially applicable to empirical study. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1969
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. THE RETURN FROM INVESTMENT IN POPULATION CONTROL IN LESS DEVELOPED COUNTRIES.
- Author
-
Bower, Leonard G.
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,INVESTMENTS ,RATE of return ,RESOURCE allocation ,DEMOGRAPHY ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
Copyright of Demography (Springer Nature) is the property of Springer Nature and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 1968
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. A Pre-Election Survey in a Semi-Literate Society.
- Author
-
Birmingham, W B. and Jahoda, G.
- Subjects
ELECTIONS ,PUBLIC opinion ,PUBLIC opinion polls ,SOCIAL surveys ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
The article presents a pre-election survey in a semi-literate society. Public opinion survey techniques have become very useful instruments for the administrator of the now rapidly developing under-developed areas. In this article, the authors describe some of the special problems involved in a pre-election survey done in Africa. They conclude that, though the difficulties are different from those facing researchers in Western society, the techniques developed in literate countries can be applied in radically different environments. Public opinion surveys among the indigenous populations of African territories present problems, which are intriguing but as yet very little explored. Self-governing institutions are being established in some of these territories more rapidly than are educational institutions and the ballot-paper is already in the grasp of many a hand that has never held a pen. This inquiry was on too small a scale to bear the weight of much generalization but it does suggest that the difficulties of making public opinion surveys among predominantly illiterate African populations are not insuperable.
- Published
- 1955
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. ACCEPTANCE OF INDUSTRIALIZATION AND ITS ATTENDANT CONSEQUENCES FOR THE SOCIAL PATTERNS OF NON-WESTERN SOCIETIES.
- Author
-
Theodorson, George A.
- Subjects
INDUSTRIALIZATION & society ,SOCIAL structure ,DEVELOPING countries ,ECONOMIC systems ,SKILLED labor ,DEVELOPMENT economics - Abstract
The main thesis of this paper is that industrialization of non-western societies will eventually lead to the development of new societal patterns. The view that only very limited aspects of western culture can be imported into the non-machine societies while certain other "less desirable" aspects can be excluded is naive, unless it is based on an understanding of those aspects of culture which are independent of the industrial economic institution, and those which are inextricably tied up with it. One important change which will occur in a society with the introduction of industrialization will be the creation of new roles. These new roles are predominantly economic in nature thus introducing an entirely new pattern of behavior into a society. The separation of the economic functions from a totally integrated system would throw the entire system into a state of disequilibrium. Another factor which further disrupts the old system is the decline of certain old roles, such as skilled craftsmen and magicians. Man needs to make various adjustments to machinery and its effects on social organization.
- Published
- 1953
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. PAYMENTS UNIONS AMONG THE LESS DEVELOPED COUNTRIES AND THEIR ECONOMIC INTEGRATION.
- Author
-
Vanek, Jaroslav
- Subjects
LABOR unions ,WAGES ,PURCHASING power parity ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
The point of departure of the analysis presented in this paper is the observation that by far the most important part of the underdeveloped world today has overvalued currencies. By 'overvaluation' we understand here a high degree of scarcity of hard currency earnings in the less developed countries, at the going rate of exchange, and given commercial policy, rather than a concept derived from purchasing power parity comparisons. Also we use as an element of our analysis the fact that international commercial transactions today are settled in terms of convertible currencies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1966
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. REGIONAL INTERNATIONAL COMPANIES AS AN APPROACH TO ECONOMIC INTEGRATION.
- Author
-
Little, I.M.D.
- Subjects
INDUSTRIALIZATION ,DEVELOPING countries ,INTERNATIONAL economic integration - Abstract
The following suggestion was inspired by the draft report of the Secretary-General of UNCTAD on 'Trade Expansion and Economic Integration among Developing Countries', and a paper prepared by Dr. Miguel S. Wionczek for the UN Symposium on Industrial Development in Africa (Cairo, January 1966), entitled 'The Experiences of the Central American Economic Integration Programme as Applied to East Africa. These papers lay considerable stress on the need to ensure that all participating countries share in the potential benefits of integration. But they also stress the need for a gradual approach. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1966
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. EVALUATIONS OF SELECTED JOBS AND OCCUPATIONS BY UNIVERSITY STUDENTS IN A DEVELOPING COUNTRY: PAKISTAN.
- Author
-
Eister, Allan W.
- Subjects
JOB evaluation ,COLLEGE students ,OCCUPATIONS ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
Utilizing the North-Hatt method, scores for 52 jobs and occupations were calculated from responses of 129 university students in West Pakistan. Where comparisons were possible, these evaluations were examined alongside those reported by U.S. respondents. Ratings of a smaller number of occupations were also compared for Philippine, Pakistan and U.S. samples. The paper proposes that such inquiry can, under certain conditions, provide a useful measure of the relative capacity of an important segment of the population of a developing country to staff and operate a technically advanced, complex, industrial-commercial economy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1965
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. An Application of Innovation Theory to the Strategy of Administrative Reform in Developing Countries.
- Author
-
Hahn-Been Lee
- Subjects
DEVELOPING countries ,POLICY sciences ,POLITICAL planning ,ADMINISTRATIVE law ,POLICY scientists ,LEADERSHIP - Abstract
Conscious pursuit of public goals is the essence of public policymaking. Policy process involves among other things activating and mobilizing various administrative elements such as authority, structure, resources, procedures, and relations. Rationality requires that these elements become continuously restructured, revamped, and realigned in order to maximize the goal effectiveness of policy. The effort to gear administrative elements to the achievement of deliberate policy goals is administrative reform. This is a continuous and prevasive process. Now the crux of administrative reform is innovation, that is, injection of new ideas and new people in new combinations of tasks and relationships into the policy and administration process. This is, however, not an automatic process. It requires strategy in order to facilitate its adoption and diffusion throughout the public organization. The purpose of this paper is to examine the relevance of innovation theory to administration in developing countries in general and administrative reform in particular and then to devise a heuristic matrix of administrative reform strategy that brings to the fore innovational leadership and environmental factors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1970
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. THE INDIAN ECONOMIC JOURNAL July-September1965.
- Author
-
Schiller, Badley R., Patel, Surendra J., Jain, K. L., Da Costa, G. C., and Brahmananda, P. R.
- Subjects
ECONOMICS ,COMPARATIVE advantage (International trade) ,DEVELOPING countries ,INTEREST rates ,PRODUCTION (Economic theory) ,RENT (Economic theory) - Abstract
The article discusses the abstracts of several papers on economics published in the July-September 1965 issue of the "Indian Economic Journal." Some of the article presented in the journal are: "The Compatibility of the Theory of Comparative Cost With the Development Needs of Today's Economically Less-Developed Countries," by Badley R. Schiller; "Educational Distance Between Nations: Its Origin and Prospects," by Surendra J. Patel; "Some Aspects of Interest Rate Policy for Economic Growth," by K.L. Jain; "Elasticities of Demand for Indian Exports--An Empirical Investigation," by G.C. Da Costa; and "A Ricardian Treatment of the Modern Circular-Flow Economy--Labor Homogeneisation, Differential Rents, Variability in Scale," by P.R. Brahmananda. The first article of the journal by Badley R. Schiller, critically analyses the controversy over trade theory and discusses the implications of that analysis for the commercial policy of underdeveloped countries. Recent emphasis on education and training of skilled manpower for accelerated development reflects the full recognition of education's strategic role.
- Published
- 1966
50. THE ECONOMIC JOURNAL September 1965.
- Author
-
Becker, Gary S., Hinrichs, Harley H., Singer, H. W., Guillebaud, C. W., Iida, Tsuneo, and Michaely, Michael
- Subjects
ECONOMICS ,REVENUE sharing (Governments) ,REVENUE ,INTERGOVERNMENTAL tax relations ,DEVELOPING countries ,INTERNATIONAL economic integration - Abstract
The article discusses the abstracts of several papers on economics published in the 1965 issue of the "Economic Journal." Some of the abstracts which are presented: "A Theory of the Allocation of Time," by Gary S. Becker; "Determinants of Government Revenue Shares Among Less-Developed Countries," by Harley H. Hinrichs; "For Plans or Projects?" by H.W. Singer; "The Marshall-Macmillan Correspondence Over the NET Book System," by C.W. Guillebaud; "A Non-Neoclassical Analysis of Resource Allocation in the Dual Economy," by Tsuneo Iida; and "On Customs Unions and the Gains From Trade," by Michael Michaely. The first article by Gary S. Becker presents a theory of the allocation of time between different activities. At the heart of the theory is an assumption that households are producers as well as consumers; they produce commodities by combining inputs of goods and time according to the cost-minimization rules of the traditional theory of the firm. The second article of the journal analyzes a multiple regression study of sixty countries various determinants of government revenue shares.
- Published
- 1966
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