Product Details
The Elusive Quest for Growth: Economists' Adventures and Misadventures in the Tropics

The Elusive Quest for Growth: Economists' Adventures and Misadventures in the Tropics
By William Easterly

List Price: $24.95
Price: $16.47 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details

Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com

121 new or used available from $11.35

Average customer review:

Product Description

Since the end of World War II, economists have tried to figure out how poor countries in the tropics could attain standards of living approaching those of countries in Europe and North America. Attempted remedies have included providing foreign aid, investing in machines, fostering education, controlling population growth, and making aid loans as well as forgiving those loans on condition of reforms. None of these solutions has delivered as promised. The problem is not the failure of economics, William Easterly argues, but the failure to apply economic principles to practical policy work.

In this book Easterly shows how these solutions all violate the basic principle of economics, that people--private individuals and businesses, government officials, even aid donors--respond to incentives. Easterly first discusses the importance of growth. He then analyzes the development solutions that have failed. Finally, he suggests alternative approaches to the problem. Written in an accessible, at times irreverent, style, Easterly's book combines modern growth theory with anecdotes from his fieldwork for the World Bank.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #15743 in Books
  • Published on: 2002-08-08
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 356 pages

Editorial Reviews

Review
"A highly readable and iconoclastic treatment of the determinants of economic growth."
-- Richard N. Cooper, Foreign Affairs

"It is impossible to convey the depth and range of The Elusive Quest for Growth."
-- Bruce Bartlett, Wall Street Journal

Book Info
Written in an accessible, at times irreverent style, Easterly's book combines modern growth theory with anecdotes from his fieldwork for the World Bank. Softcover.

About the Author
William Easterly is the author of The Elusive Quest for Growth: Economists' Adventures and Misadventures in the Tropics (MIT Press, 2001) and The White Man's Burden: Why the West's Efforts to Aid the Rest Have Done So Much Ill and So Little Good. He is Professor of Economics at New York University (Joint with Africa House), Codirector of NYU's Development Research Institute, visiting Fellow at the Brookings Institution, and Nonresident Fellow of the Center for Global Development in Washington, DC.


Customer Reviews

A Partial Answer to the Question of Why the World is the Way it is5
The Elusive Quest for Growth: Economists' Adventures and Misadventures in the Tropics by William Easterly is an honest answer to part of the question, "why hasn't the world improved like we thought it would?" Easterly conducts a post-mortem conference on western aid programs since the end of World War II, finding that in many cases we should have known better. The incentives created by some nations' economic environment, or the aid programs themselves led national economies into periods of stagnant or negative growth. Easterly's mantra is "people respond to incentives." Ignoring this truth, a central tenet of economics, has led to several irrational choices in the area of development aid, and many failures to achieve our objectives.

While pessimistic at times in his evaluation of what we have done in the West, the truth behind the text is that all these problems are preventable. Overall, a valuable and essential piece of information in understanding the state of the world today in regards to differing economic outcomes and how it has come to be that way.

Elementary at Best1
I understand that it's a book written to be accessible to people like myself who are not economists and will NEVER be economists, but that does not mean I have to be treated like I am severely unintelligent. The reading level of this book falls far below what any college educated person should be expected to read. I don't think the author of this book is nearly as deserving of the high accolades (not to mention profits) he has been receiving for writing this book. When a book contains the phrase 'I think learning under the right circumstances is a very good thing' you know that the quality of the writing is deficient. It is elementary at best.

Indispensable read for those interested in economic development4
William Easterly, who worked as an economist for many years at the World Bank, tries to explain why many of the recipes economists devised for economic growth in the Third World didn't work out: neither foreign aid, neither greater expenditure in education, neither population control programs (among others) seemed to work. The reason, says Easterly, is that those recipes ignore a crucial truth in economics: people respond to incentives. None of these programs were devised in making people take advantage of economic growth. Much of the foreign aid was captured by corrupt rent seeking individuals, and very little of the aid trickled down to the poor. Besides, Easterly is very courageous in asserting that ethnic diversity can be detrimental to economic growth. Paradoxically, as I'm writing this (early 2008), emerging countries are going through an economic boom, thanks in great part to high commodity prices, so in some sense this book is a little out of date (it was first published in 2001). However, one wonders what will happen when commodity prices go down (as they inevitably will at some point) There was a high commodity price cycle in the early 70s, but when it panned out, it left the third world poorer and more indebted. In the case of India and China, however, since they have concentrated their production in goods and services with a higher added value, I think a continuing high path growth seems assured, so I'm more optimistic right now than Easterly was when he wrote this book.