Abstract
In a memorable speech to the United Nations General Assembly,
Nikita Krushehev predicted that communism would bury capitalism. In less
emotive and more economistic terms, he was saying in effect that
centrally planned economies would outperform market economies in terms
of both output growth and social justice. History has not been kind to
Krushehev. Not only central planning but even milder forms of state
interventionism now stand discredited, and developing countries round
the world are desperately trying to install functioning market
economics. This sea-change in development philosophy generally owes
something to donor conditionalities associated with structural
adjustment credits, to the extent that “reforms” and “structural
adjustment” have become virtually synonymous. Shortterm internal or
external balance crises, and longer-term stagnation, also signalled to
policy-makers the bankruptcy of over-interventionist policies—a lesson
driven home by the phenomenal growth performance of the NIC’s,
apparently the fruit of marketfriendly policies.
Publisher
Pakistan Institute of Development Economics (PIDE)
Subject
Development,Geography, Planning and Development
Cited by
2 articles.
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