Matthias Schmelzer
The Hegemony of Growth
Matthias Schmelzer
The Hegemony of Growth
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The first comprehensive historical overview of the OECD's role in the concept of economic growth becoming an international norm.
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The first comprehensive historical overview of the OECD's role in the concept of economic growth becoming an international norm.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 398
- Erscheinungstermin: 25. Januar 2017
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 26mm
- Gewicht: 727g
- ISBN-13: 9781107130609
- ISBN-10: 1107130603
- Artikelnr.: 44263412
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 398
- Erscheinungstermin: 25. Januar 2017
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 26mm
- Gewicht: 727g
- ISBN-13: 9781107130609
- ISBN-10: 1107130603
- Artikelnr.: 44263412
Matthias Schmelzer is a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Zürich, Switzerland. His areas of interests include transnational social and economic history, social movements, and the history of capitalism.
Introduction; Setting the stage: a historical introduction to the OECD;
Part I. Paradigm in the Making: The Emergence of Economic Growth as the Key
Economic Policy Norm (1948-59): 1. Measuring growth: the international
standardization of national income accounting; 2. Propagating growth: from
reconstruction and stability to 'selective expansion' and 'productivity';
3. 'Expand or die': international economic mandarins and the transnational
harmonization of growth policies; Part II. Paradigm at Work: A 'Temple of
Growth for Industrialized Countries' in Action (1960-8): 4. Power,
progress, and prosperity: growth as universal yardstick and the OECD's 1961
growth target in perspective; 5. Boosting growth: the Western 'growth
conscience' and policies in the name of accelerated growth; 6. Replicating
growth: the 'development of others' and the hegemony of donor countries;
Part III. Paradigm in Discussion: The 'Problems of Modern Society',
Environment, and Welfare (1969-74): 7. Quantity in question: challenging
the hegemony of growth and the OECD-Club of Rome nexus; 8. Reclaiming
growth: organizational dynamics and the 'dialectic' of qualitative growth;
9. Quantifying quality: managing the environmental costs of growth and the
difficult quest for 'gross national well-being'; Epilogue: paradigm remade
(1975-2011); Conclusion: provincializing growth.
Part I. Paradigm in the Making: The Emergence of Economic Growth as the Key
Economic Policy Norm (1948-59): 1. Measuring growth: the international
standardization of national income accounting; 2. Propagating growth: from
reconstruction and stability to 'selective expansion' and 'productivity';
3. 'Expand or die': international economic mandarins and the transnational
harmonization of growth policies; Part II. Paradigm at Work: A 'Temple of
Growth for Industrialized Countries' in Action (1960-8): 4. Power,
progress, and prosperity: growth as universal yardstick and the OECD's 1961
growth target in perspective; 5. Boosting growth: the Western 'growth
conscience' and policies in the name of accelerated growth; 6. Replicating
growth: the 'development of others' and the hegemony of donor countries;
Part III. Paradigm in Discussion: The 'Problems of Modern Society',
Environment, and Welfare (1969-74): 7. Quantity in question: challenging
the hegemony of growth and the OECD-Club of Rome nexus; 8. Reclaiming
growth: organizational dynamics and the 'dialectic' of qualitative growth;
9. Quantifying quality: managing the environmental costs of growth and the
difficult quest for 'gross national well-being'; Epilogue: paradigm remade
(1975-2011); Conclusion: provincializing growth.
Introduction; Setting the stage: a historical introduction to the OECD;
Part I. Paradigm in the Making: The Emergence of Economic Growth as the Key
Economic Policy Norm (1948-59): 1. Measuring growth: the international
standardization of national income accounting; 2. Propagating growth: from
reconstruction and stability to 'selective expansion' and 'productivity';
3. 'Expand or die': international economic mandarins and the transnational
harmonization of growth policies; Part II. Paradigm at Work: A 'Temple of
Growth for Industrialized Countries' in Action (1960-8): 4. Power,
progress, and prosperity: growth as universal yardstick and the OECD's 1961
growth target in perspective; 5. Boosting growth: the Western 'growth
conscience' and policies in the name of accelerated growth; 6. Replicating
growth: the 'development of others' and the hegemony of donor countries;
Part III. Paradigm in Discussion: The 'Problems of Modern Society',
Environment, and Welfare (1969-74): 7. Quantity in question: challenging
the hegemony of growth and the OECD-Club of Rome nexus; 8. Reclaiming
growth: organizational dynamics and the 'dialectic' of qualitative growth;
9. Quantifying quality: managing the environmental costs of growth and the
difficult quest for 'gross national well-being'; Epilogue: paradigm remade
(1975-2011); Conclusion: provincializing growth.
Part I. Paradigm in the Making: The Emergence of Economic Growth as the Key
Economic Policy Norm (1948-59): 1. Measuring growth: the international
standardization of national income accounting; 2. Propagating growth: from
reconstruction and stability to 'selective expansion' and 'productivity';
3. 'Expand or die': international economic mandarins and the transnational
harmonization of growth policies; Part II. Paradigm at Work: A 'Temple of
Growth for Industrialized Countries' in Action (1960-8): 4. Power,
progress, and prosperity: growth as universal yardstick and the OECD's 1961
growth target in perspective; 5. Boosting growth: the Western 'growth
conscience' and policies in the name of accelerated growth; 6. Replicating
growth: the 'development of others' and the hegemony of donor countries;
Part III. Paradigm in Discussion: The 'Problems of Modern Society',
Environment, and Welfare (1969-74): 7. Quantity in question: challenging
the hegemony of growth and the OECD-Club of Rome nexus; 8. Reclaiming
growth: organizational dynamics and the 'dialectic' of qualitative growth;
9. Quantifying quality: managing the environmental costs of growth and the
difficult quest for 'gross national well-being'; Epilogue: paradigm remade
(1975-2011); Conclusion: provincializing growth.