Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 March 2012
Nurkse, Early Development Theory and Modern Monoeconomics
Ragnar Nurkse was part of a group of early theorists of economic development who questioned orthodox Ricardian trade theory as the basis for development policies: ‘In many of the less developed countries today the dominant practical question is whether the available investment funds … should be used to provide activities specialized along lines of comparative advantage internationally or diversified so as to provide markets for each other locally.’ He noted that this ‘clash of prescriptions on the policy plane reflects … a gap between the neoclassical allocation economics and … growth economics’ (Nurkse 1961b, 235–6). The emphasis on growth economics engendered a debate over whether ‘balanced’ or ‘unbalanced’ growth was the best strategy for developing countries to support growth through industrialization. In difference from modern discussions of development, there was a general agreement amongst economists that industrialization was the most efficient means of supporting economic development.
Ragnar Nurkse, along with Paul Rosenstein-Rodan, was the most important and influential advocate of ‘balanced’ growth as a means to support the industrialization of ‘undeveloped’ (to use Oscar Lange's terminology; Lange 1946) economies. It was taken as given that a developed economy was an industrial economy. Nurkse and Rosenstein-Rodan supported balanced growth with what might be called ‘classical’ arguments concerning long-run determinants of the interaction between demand and supply, in particular those advanced by Allyn Young and Josef Schumpeter in the 1920s, joined to an historical analysis of the changing structure of international trade and payments in the twentieth century.
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