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Joseph Stiglitz and the World Bank

Joseph Stiglitz and the World Bank

Ha-Joon Chang

(2001)

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Abstract

In controversial speeches made around the world, Stiglitz has undone the conventional wisdom that dominated policy-making at the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund and the US Treasury Department. For the first time, Stiglitz's nine most revealing speeches have been gathered together, covering such topics as the failure of shock therapy and transition economics, the limits of capital market liberalization, the myopia of the Washington consensus, the role of knowledge in markets, the process of developing market institutions and the primacy of openness and worker participation. A landmark collection of material for economists everywhere.


'This is a book that puts John Keble in his literary, cultural, political, and theological context as never before. It is essential reading for Students of nineteenth-century English literature as much as of religious history.' —Peter Nockles, author of 'The Oxford Movement in Context'


No one has challenged the policies of the international financial community as profoundly as Joseph Stiglitz, the former Chief Economist of the World Bank. In controversial speeches made around the world, Stiglitz has undone the conventional wisdom that dominated policy-making at the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund and the US Treasury Department.

For the first time, Stiglitz's nine most revealing speeches have been gathered together, covering such topics as the failure of shock therapy and transition economics, the limits of capital market liberalization, the myopia of the Washington consensus, the role of knowledge in markets, the process of developing market institutions and the primacy of openness and worker participation. Along with Dr Ha-Joon Chang's insightful commentary, they form the most powerful representation of Stiglitz's thinking to be found anywhere. A landmark collection of material for economists everywhere.


Joseph E. Stiglitz is the former Chief Economist of the World Bank. He is currently Professor of Economics at Columbia University and Nobel Laureate, to NDTV


'Undoubtedly, the book has extended the frontiers of development economics and development assisting institutions should take note. […] It is a must for those interested in development policy-making processes and graduate students of development economics.' —S. N. Kulkarni, in ‘Development and Change’ book reviews


'A powerful collection of key speeches from one of the most controversial economists of our time... The most provocative book on international financial policy to appear for a long time.' —Jeff Madrick, 'Challenge Magazine', contributing columnist, 'New York Times'


Table of Contents

Section Title Page Action Price
Cover 1
Front Matter\r 2
Half Title\r 2
Title\r 3
Joseph E. Stiglitz\r 4
Ha-Joon Chang\r 6
Contents\r 7
Commentary by Ha-Joon Chang\r 10
Notes\r 25
Main Body\r 26
Chapter 1. More Instruments and Broader Goals: Moving Toward the Post-Washington Consensus. The 1998 WIDER Annual Lecture, Helsinki, January 1998 \r 26
Notes\r 58
References\r 62
Chapter 2. Towards a New Paradigm for Development: Strategies, Policies and Processes. The 1998 Prebisch Lecture at UNCTAD Geneva, October 1998\r 66
References\r 101
Chapter 3. Redefining the Role of the State - What should it do? How should it do it? And how should these decisions be made? Paper presented at the Tenth Anniversary of MITI Research Institute Tokyo, March 1998\r 103
Notes\r 127
References\r 132
Chapter 4. Whither Reform? - Ten Years of the Transition. Paper presented at the Annual Bank Conference on Development Economics, Washington DC, April 1999\r 136
Notes\r 169
References\r 174
Chapter 5. The Role of International Financial Institutionsin the Current Global Economy. Address to the Chicago Council on Foreign Relations, Chicago, February 1998\r 181
Chapter 6. Scan Globally, Reinvent Locally: Knowledge Infrastructure and the Localization of Knowledge. Keynote Address to the First Global Development Network Conference, Bonn, December 1999\r 203
Notes\r 224
References\r 225
Chapter 7. Participation and Development: Perspectives from the Comprehensive Development Paradigm. Remarks at the International Conference on Democracy, Market Economy and Development, Seoul, February 1999\r 229
Notes\r 252
References\r 255
Chapter 8. On Liberty, the Right to Know and Public Discourse: The Role of Transparency in Public Life. Oxford Amnesty Lecture, Oxford, January 1999\r 259
Notes\r 283
References\r 285
Chapter 9. Democratic Development as the Fruits of Labor. Keynote Address at the Industrial Relations Research Association, Boston, January 2000\r 288
Notes\r 316
References\r 318
End Matter 325
Index\r 325
List of Figures\r 8
Public Sector Deficits: Latin America versus East Asia\r 30
Inflation: Latin America versus East Asia\r 31
Inflation Rates in Developing Countries 1985-1995\r 33
Volatility of GDP growth, 1970-95\r 36
GDP growth before and after banking crises, 1975-94\r 38
Government spending in selected countries\r 49
Tertiary level students in technical fields\r 52
Russian and Chinese Gross Domestic Product\r 138
Russian Growth and Inequality\r 138
Transition economics 1997 GDP \r 174
Infant Mortality and GDP per Capita, 1996\r 242
Secondary shool enrollment and GDP per capita, 1995\r 242
List of Tables\r 8
Fiscal costs of banking crises in selected countries\r 37
Battle of Metaphors\"\r 164
Summary of knowledge dimensions\r 218
Low Road/ High road comparison \r 307