000 02038nam a22002177a 4500
003 JGU
005 20250204165523.0
008 250204b |||||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
020 _a9780241279168
_qhbk.
040 _beng
_cJGU
041 _aeng
100 _aCollier, Paul,
_eauthor
245 _aLeft behind :
_ba new economics for neglected places /
_cPaul Collier.
260 _aLondon :
_bAllen Lane,
_c2024.
520 _a"Since the 1970s, the Western consensus in economic policy has been governed by the assumption that any poor area-a city, a state or even an entire country-will find a way to progress through market forces. If local economies fail to revive, and market shifts have made a location unsuited to business needs, the workforce can and should relocate to more prosperous locales. Either way, no outside intervention is necessary: one way or another, the problem will work itself out. Except it doesn't. Using examples of the "left behind" regions, renowned development economist Paul Collier shows that centralized western economies have been the most ineffective to alleviate poverty-even if nationally the country seems to be growing. South Yorkshire, once a hub of the steel industry, is now the poorest region in England. From the United States to Japan, Zambia to Colombia, regions and nations experiencing economic decline find themselves with little recourse, ignored by the powers that could come to their aid. In Left Behind, Collier examines how this one-size-fits-all, hands-off approach to economic policy has devastated areas and nations all over the world and made society vastly more unequal. With keen insight, he draws lessons from such disparate fields as behavioral psychology, evolutionary biology, and moral philosophy to explain how we can adapt to the needs of individual economies in order to build a brighter and fairer global future"--
650 _aEquality -- Economic aspects
650 _aIncome distribution
999 _c3095059
_d3095059