(Press-News.org) Influential economic ideas first advanced in 1911 — stressing innovation and entrepreneurialism as the fundamental generators of growth and wealth — were deemed inappropriate for developing countries, stunting progress in many parts of the world throughout the 20th century, says a distinguished Harvard academic.
In a newly-published paper, Calestous Juma of the Harvard Kennedy School's Belfer Centre for Science and International Affairs calls on emerging economy countries and development agencies to revisit and adopt ideas rejected in the 1950s by "pessimistic" architects of early international development policies and institutions.
Prof. Juma's paper examines the impact of Joseph Schumpeter, an Austrian-born Harvard scholar ranked among the world's most influential economists, whose 1911 book, The Theory of Economic Development, advanced the notion that innovation and individual entrepreneurship are the dynamic foundations of a nation's economic evolution, that "creative destruction" and the renewal of tools and processes within an economy continuously refreshes the system and results in rising prosperity.
His then ground-breaking ideas inspired innovation-led economic policies in industrialized countries but were dismissed as irrelevant to developing countries as policies and programs took shape within fledgling institutions in the 1950s such as the United Nations, World Bank and International Monetary Fund.
According to Prof. Juma, "pessimism" prevailed in early development economics, resulting in an emphasis on "the use of basic or 'appropriate technologies,' central planning, role of bureaucracies as sources of economic stability, and food aid" for developing nations, rather than innovation, entrepreneurship and industrial development.
Appearing in a new journal, Policy and Complex Systems, Prof. Juma notes that after a decade of debate the architects of development economics rejected innovation-oriented policies and adopted "static, linear, and incremental view of economic change" for the newly independent countries.
To quote US central banker Henry Wallich, one leading economic thinker of 1952: "In applying this (Schumpeter's) doctrine to the less developed countries of our day, we find that it does not fit."
Said Mr. Wallich, in less developed countries the entrepreneur "is not the main driving force, innovation is not the most characteristic process, and private enrichment is not the dominant goal." He advocated the idea of "derived development" — i.e. derived from innovation in other countries.
Says Prof. Juma: "This view would lock emerging countries at the tail end of the product cycle, making them perpetual importers of foreign products with no capacity for technological learning."
"Technical fields such as science, technology, and engineering were largely considered irrelevant to emerging countries except in limited areas where they supported assimilation of imported products or inevitable areas of adaptive research such as plant breeding. Even more critical was the low priority given to higher education in general and higher technical education in particular."
He adds: "For poor countries seeking to catch up economically, innovation-led growth provided a more intuitive path. The policies recommended for them, however, were tedious, hobbling and demoralizing." Asian nations such as South Korea and Singapore that ignored the pessimists successfully adopted innovation-driven economic strategies.
Today, he notes, "researchers and policymakers are now reshaping development policies in the context of innovation."
"Schumpeter laid out the foundations for understanding how economies change over time," says Prof. Juma. "That was a century ago. Several enduring themes of his theory remain valid today and should be part of the core of the policies of emerging nations."
Prof. Juma recommends developing nations and development institutions today:
Give priority to the role of innovation, not only in transforming economic systems to new levels of performance in all sectors, but also in spreading prosperity
Invest in transformative infrastructure projects that lay the foundations for economic transformation
Build the technical capacity, especially in engineering fields, that is needed to drive growth through the translation of knowledge into goods and services
Emphasize the role of entrepreneurs and risk-taking in the private and public sectors as critical agents of innovation
Prof. Juma's paper is drawn from a book with the tentative title, How Economies Succeed: Innovation and the Wealth of Nations, publication of which is anticipated in 2016. His next book, Innovation and Its Enemies: Resistance to New Technology, is expected in 2015.
He is also preparing for release in 2015 an updated edition of his influential book, The New Harvest in which he proposes a route by which Africa could feed itself within a generation -- a clear prescription of innovative approaches for placing agriculture at the center of sub-Saharan Africa's economic transformation.
The strategy calls on governments to make African agricultural expansion central to decision making about infrastructure (energy, transportation, irrigation and telecommunications), technical education, entrepreneurship and regional economic integration. (See also http://bit.ly/134nNyN)
INFORMATION:
Kenya-born Dr. Juma is Professor of the Practice of International Development and Faculty Chair of the Innovation for Economic Development Executive Program at Harvard Kennedy School. He and recently co-chaired the High-Level Panel on Science, Technology and Innovation of the African Union (http://bit.ly/PNOXcG).
He has been elected to the Royal Society of London, the U.S. National Academy of Sciences, the World Academy of Sciences (TWAS), the UK Royal Academy of Engineering and the African Academy of Sciences. He serves on the selection juries of the Queen Elizabeth Prize for Engineering and the newly-launched Africa Prize for Engineering Innovation.
(Wikipedia: http://bit.ly/Zkvx2i; on Twitter: @calestous)
Pessimism of early global policy architects stunted developing nations' economies: Harvard study
Harvard professor calls on developing world, development institutions to revisit, apply proven economic formula stressing innovation, entrepreneurialism
2014-03-26
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Knowing true age of your heart key to curbing lifetime heart disease risk
2014-03-26
The Joint British Societies' consensus recommendations for the prevention of cardiovascular disease (JBS3), which have been drawn up by *11 UK professional societies and charitable organisations, are based on the latest available scientific evidence.
They emphasise the importance of putting patients in the driving seat and starting preventive action early on, using a new method of risk assessment - the JBS3 risk calculator.
Heart disease deaths have almost halved over the past 40-50 years, particularly in high income countries, thanks largely to the identification of ...
Doctors raise blood pressure in patients
2014-03-26
Doctors routinely record blood pressure levels that are significantly higher than levels recorded by nurses, the first thorough analysis of scientific data has revealed.
A systematic review led by the University of Exeter Medical School, and supported by the National Institute for Health Research Collaboration for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care in the South West Peninsula (NIHR PenCLAHRC), has discovered that recordings taken by doctors are significantly higher (by 7/4mmHg) than when the same patients are tested by nurses.
Dr Christopher Clark, of the ...
Penicillin prescriptions risk under-dosing children, say experts at King's College London
2014-03-26
VIDEO:
Millions of children in the UK are potentially receiving penicillin prescriptions below the recommended dose for common infections, according to new research led jointly by researchers at King's College London,...
Click here for more information.
Millions of children in the UK are potentially receiving penicillin prescriptions below the recommended dose for common infections, according to new research led jointly by researchers at King's College London, St George's, ...
Million suns shed light on fossilized plant
2014-03-26
Scientists have used one of the brightest lights in the Universe to expose the biochemical structure of a 50 million-year-old fossil plant to stunning visual effect.
The team of palaeontologists, geochemists and physicists investigated the chemistry of exceptionally preserved fossil leaves from the Eocene-aged 'Green River Formation' of the western United States by bombarding the fossils with X-rays brighter than a million suns produced by synchrotron particle accelerators.
Researchers from Britain's University of Manchester and Diamond Light Source and the Stanford ...
Male Eurasian jays know that their female partners' desires can differ from their own
2014-03-26
Knowing what another person wants is not a trivial issue, particularly when the other's desires are different from our own. The ability to disengage from our own desire to cater to someone else's wishes is thought to be a unique feature of human cognition.
New research challenges this assumption. Despite wanting something different to eat, male Eurasian jays can disengage from their own current desire in order to feed the female what she wants even when her desires are different to his. The study, which was funded by the BBSRC, is published today in the Royal Society ...
Study is first to provide direct evidence that response of unborn children to glucose is associated with mother's insulin sensitivity
2014-03-26
A study published in Diabetologia (the journal of the European Association for the Study of Diabetes) is the first to provide direct evidence that fetal brain response to a dose of sugar given orally to its mother is associated with the mother's insulin sensitivity. This may indicate that the risk of subsequent obesity and diabetes may be pre-programmed in the womb. The study is by Dr Hubert Preissl and Dr Andreas Fritsche, University of Tübingen, Germany and German Center for Diabetes Research (DZD), Neuherberg, Germany, and colleagues.
Diabetes or obesity in the mother ...
Clean cooking fuel and improved kitchen ventilation linked to less lung disease
2014-03-25
Improving cooking fuels and kitchen ventilation is associated with better lung function and reduced chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), according to research published in this week's PLOS Medicine. The study, led by Pixin Ran from the Guanzhou Medical University, China, followed 996 villagers from southern China for 9 years to examine the effects of cleaner fuels and better kitchen ventilation on lung function and disease.
An estimated 3 billion people worldwide heat their homes and cook by burning biomass such as wood or animal dung. The resulting indoor air ...
X-rays film inside live flying insects -- in 3D
2014-03-25
VIDEO:
This video shows the insect thorax reconstructed from
tomograms and highlights the external movements of the thorax
and the location of the indirect power and steering muscles.
Click here for more information.
Scientists have used a particle accelerator to obtain high-speed 3D X-ray visualizations of the flight muscles of flies. The team from Oxford University, Imperial College, and the Paul Scherrer Institute (PSI) developed a groundbreaking new CT scanning technique ...
A way to end recurrent urinary tract infections? Study with mice gives hope
2014-03-25
(SALT LAKE CITY)—Millions of people worldwide – mostly women – suffer from recurrent urinary tract infections (UTIs) that seriously degrade their health and quality of life. Antibiotics treat individual infections, but preventing recurrent ones largely has been unattainable because of the way bacteria lodge in the inner layers of the bladder and quietly hide from drugs that can kill them.
In new studies with mice, however, researchers led by University of Utah microbiologists have shown that when chitosan, an FDA-approved compound for pharmaceutical, agricultural and ...
EEG study shows how brain infers structure, rules when learning
2014-03-25
PROVIDENCE, R.I. [Brown University] — In life, many tasks have a context that dictates the right actions, so when people learn to do something new, they'll often infer cues of context and rules. In a new study, Brown University brain scientists took advantage of that tendency to track the emergence of such rule structures in the frontal cortex — even when such structure was not necessary or even helpful to learn — and to predict from EEG readings how people would apply them to learn new tasks speedily.
Context and rule structures are everywhere. They allow an iPhone user ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Are we ready for the ethical challenges of AI and robots?
Nanotechnology: Light enables an "impossibile" molecular fit
Estimated vaccine effectiveness for pediatric patients with severe influenza
Changes to the US preventive services task force screening guidelines and incidence of breast cancer
Urgent action needed to protect the Parma wallaby
Societal inequality linked to reduced brain health in aging and dementia
Singles differ in personality traits and life satisfaction compared to partnered people
President Biden signs bipartisan HEARTS Act into law
Advanced DNA storage: Cheng Zhang and Long Qian’s team introduce epi-bit method in Nature
New hope for male infertility: PKU researchers discover key mechanism in Klinefelter syndrome
Room-temperature non-volatile optical manipulation of polar order in a charge density wave
Coupled decline in ocean pH and carbonate saturation during the Palaeocene–Eocene Thermal Maximum
Unlocking the Future of Superconductors in non-van-der Waals 2D Polymers
Starlight to sight: Breakthrough in short-wave infrared detection
Land use changes and China’s carbon sequestration potential
PKU scientists reveals phenological divergence between plants and animals under climate change
Aerobic exercise and weight loss in adults
Persistent short sleep duration from pregnancy to 2 to 7 years after delivery and metabolic health
Kidney function decline after COVID-19 infection
Investigation uncovers poor quality of dental coverage under Medicare Advantage
Cooking sulfur-containing vegetables can promote the formation of trans-fatty acids
How do monkeys recognize snakes so fast?
Revolutionizing stent surgery for cardiovascular diseases with laser patterning technology
Fish-friendly dentistry: New method makes oral research non-lethal
Call for papers: 14th Asia-Pacific Conference on Transportation and the Environment (APTE 2025)
A novel disturbance rejection optimal guidance method for enhancing precision landing performance of reusable rockets
New scan method unveils lung function secrets
Searching for hidden medieval stories from the island of the Sagas
Breakthrough study reveals bumetanide treatment restores early social communication in fragile X syndrome mouse model
Neuroscience leader reveals oxytocin's crucial role beyond the 'love hormone' label
[Press-News.org] Pessimism of early global policy architects stunted developing nations' economies: Harvard studyHarvard professor calls on developing world, development institutions to revisit, apply proven economic formula stressing innovation, entrepreneurialism