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This is a revised edition of a seminal work on the nature of underdevelopment. It includes a new foreword and appendixes on the significance of plantations to Third World economies and the contribution that George Beckford made to Caribbean economic thought.
Examination of the ways in which structural characteristics of the plantation system influence the economic development process in developing countries, particularly in Asian and Caribbean countries and in Brazil - covers demographic aspects, traditional agriculture, resource allocation, the labour supply of rural workers, the impact of technological change on plantation enterprises, etc. Bibliography pp. 287 to 296, diagrams, references and statistical tables.
Author : George L. Beckford Publisher : Canoe Press, University of the West Indies Page : 548 pages File Size : 22,45 MB Release : 2000 Category : Business & Economics ISBN : 9789768125408
This volume presents papers by George Beckford which cover topics ranging from agricultural economics to political economy, to the social economy of man space, to the cultural roots of Caribbean creativity and a vision of one independent, sovereign and self-reliant Caribbean nation.
Author : Lloyd Best Publisher : University of the West Indies Press Page : 284 pages File Size : 40,32 MB Release : 2009 Category : Business & Economics ISBN :
This important book provides a fascinating insight into the conceptual under-pinnings of the theory of plantation economy initiated by Lloyd Best and Kari Levitt in the 1960s as a basis for analysing the nature of the Caribbean economy. While acknowledging an intellectual debt to Latin American structuralists and also to the work of Dudley Seers and William Demas, the authors develop an original and innovative analytical framework as a counter to more "universalist" models which failed to take account of the Caribbean reality. Their work identifies the main features of the plantation economy as a hinterland characterized by subordination and dependency on the dominant metropole. Distinguishing between hinterlands of conquest, settlement and exploitation, Best and Levitt analyse the rules that determine this complex relationship with the metropole. Their economic theories are presented against a background of the historical factors that gave rise to the "structural continuity" of Caribbean economies and which now impede meaningful structural transformation. Book jacket.
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