The Mechanics of Modernity in Europe and East Asia: Institutional Origins of Social Change and StagnationRoutledge, 2004年8月2日 - 256 頁 Why, from the eighteenth century onwards, did some countries embark on a path of sustained economic growth, while others stagnated? This text looks at the kind of institutions that are required in order for change to take place, and Ringmar concludes that for sustained development to be possible, change must be institutionalized. Taking a global view, Ringmar investigates the implications of his conclusion on issues facing the developing world today. |
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... action than Marx suspected that the long-term prospects for economic growth were bleak.25 However, what none of these nineteenth-century economists sufficiently had considered was the possibility of improvements in productivity.26 ...
... action than Marx suspected that the long-term prospects for economic growth were bleak.25 However, what none of these nineteenth-century economists sufficiently had considered was the possibility of improvements in productivity.26 ...
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... action for which someone or something is to be held responsible. Hence the economists' attempts to account for growth by breaking it down into various factors of production plus an, embarrassingly large, residual. Hence also the ...
... action for which someone or something is to be held responsible. Hence the economists' attempts to account for growth by breaking it down into various factors of production plus an, embarrassingly large, residual. Hence also the ...
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... action begins. It is the entrepreneur who actualises the potential that reflection has discovered; it is he or she or it who brings new things into the world. While entrepreneurs and entrepreneurship usually are associated with economic ...
... action begins. It is the entrepreneur who actualises the potential that reflection has discovered; it is he or she or it who brings new things into the world. While entrepreneurs and entrepreneurship usually are associated with economic ...
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... action will be embarked upon; the more alternative actions that are embarked upon, the quicker the pace of social change.4 While all societies are reflective, entrepreneurial and tolerant to some extent, some are more so than others ...
... action will be embarked upon; the more alternative actions that are embarked upon, the quicker the pace of social change.4 While all societies are reflective, entrepreneurial and tolerant to some extent, some are more so than others ...
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... action; and society has worked out a way of dealing with the coexistence of many incompatible things. Institutionalised. change. Yet the argument needs one more component before it is complete. So far change has been discussed as though ...
... action; and society has worked out a way of dealing with the coexistence of many incompatible things. Institutionalised. change. Yet the argument needs one more component before it is complete. So far change has been discussed as though ...
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