Early Progress on the "Problem of Economic Development"
Author(s) -
James A. Schmitz
Publication year - 1993
Publication title -
quarterly review
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2163-4378
pISSN - 0271-5287
DOI - 10.21034/qr.1722
Subject(s) - economics , per capita , incentive , diversity (politics) , human capital , capital (architecture) , physical capital , economic system , neoclassical economics , economic growth , microeconomics , political science , sociology , geography , population , demography , archaeology , law
This study describes recent attempts to solve what Lucas has called the "problem of economic development"—the problem of accounting for the great disparity in per-capita output across countries. The study examines a number of economic development theories, including the neoclassical theory of growth, which relies on cross-country differences in physical capital per person to explain the disparity, and newer theories, which stress cross-country differences in human capital, or education. It is argued that these models cannot account for observed per-capita output diversity. More promising theories are those that stress differences in incentives for entrepreneurs to create businesses (i.e., business capital) and adopt new technologies.
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