- The Wealth and Poverty of Nations
"The Wealth and Poverty of Nations" (ISBN 0-393-04017-8), published in 1998 (with an epilogue added to the 1999 paperback edition), is a book by
David Landes , currently Emeritus Professor of Economics and former Coolidge Professor of History at Harvard University. In it, Landes attempts to explain the 'European Miracle', or why European societies experienced a period of explosive growth when the rest of the world did not.In doing so, he revives, at least in part, several theories he believes have been unfairly discarded by academics over the last 40 years. Among them:
* The 'cultural thesis' or 'Protestant work ethic' of
Max Weber * The 'hydraulic thesis' or 'Oriental Despotism thesis' of
Karl A. Wittfogel * The 'climate thesis' that posits that tropical climes are, "
ceteris paribus ", poor candidates for development.* Many of the theories of
Adam Smith , whose "Wealth of Nations " is borrowed from for the title. But this does not necessarily mean a doctrinaire neoclassicism, as Landes notes that 'comparative advantage' can change over time, and also that developed countries, contrary to neoclassical theory, typically developed in an environment ofprotectionism against foreign trade.He also spends a good deal of time in the effort to debunk claims that this miracle did not happen, was not significant, or was financed by European colonialism.
In short, he argues that the vast economic growth of Industrial Revolution was no accident--that several qualities of Europe (its climate, political competition, attitude towards science and religion, etc) and especially certain countries in Europe (firstly
England , but also to an extent theNetherlands , with other countries left to copy their advances with varying degrees of success)Criticism and response
Critics have charged Landes with
Eurocentrism in his analysis, a charge which Landes himself does not deny--in fact, he embraces it explicitly, arguing that an explanation for an economic miracle that happened originally only in Europe (though he deals with the later 'Asian miracle' in "Wealth and Poverty") must of necessity be a Eurocentric analysis, thus siding at least at some level with 'Orientalist' thinkers such asBernard Lewis and against 'Occidentalists' such asEdward Said .Fact|date=May 2008In addition, Landes' disdain for monocausal explanations has also caused his theory to be labeled as confused or contradictory.Fact|date=May 2008 Landes does give several 'causes' and does not go into much detail explaining what he sees to be their relative weights.
For an opposing viewpoint that emphasizes geography rather than culture as the main cause for differences of prosperity among peoples, see
Jared Diamond 's book "".External links
* [http://www.historycooperative.org/journals/ahr/104.4/ah001241.html Book review]
* [http://www.riseofthewest.net/thinkers/landes01.htm Information on Landes and a short critique of theory from David Cosandey, a Swiss-American thinker and critic of theories on the European Miracle]
* [http://www.analyzingeu.eu/konrad/2007/book-review-the-wealth-and-poverty-of-nations/ Book review by Konrad Dwojak (Analyzing EU)]
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