Description
Book SynopsisMaking Poor Nations Rich illustrates the importance of institutions that support economic freedom and private property rights for promoting the form of productive entrepreneurship that leads to sustained increases in countries' standard of living.
Trade Review"The book concludes with encouraging success stories from nations in Asia (China, India), Europe (Ireland), and even Africa (Botswana), whose economic achievement illustrates Powell's belief that encouraging small-business entrepreneurs is the best way to achieve and maintain general affluence... The writing here is vivid and intelligent. Futurists will be particularly interested in the essays by James A. Dorn on China's key achievements and remaining economic needs, as well as the assessment of India's prospects for attaining world prominence in trade and culture by Parth J. Shah and Renuka Sane." --
The Futurist"
Making Poor Nations Rich is a serious attempt to further develop the theory of entrepreneurship. Fourteen chapters of the book cover the most important issues of our time: wealth and poverty of nations, the role of entrepreneurship in economic and human development, economic performance of transitional economies with the stories of both winners and losers." -- Yuri Maltsev * Carthage College *
"This book is a bold quarterback sneak directly into a line of argument in economic development studies that has long been ignored, trivialized or considered impossible to measure. It emphasizes the critical role of entrepreneurship vigorously undertaken in a friendly institutional setting, moving from theoretical analyses to individual and national case studies in countries and regions worldwide." -- William Ratliff, Hoover Institution * Stanford University *
"While previous literature on entrepreneurship focused on how to construct new government programs to promote entrepreneurship, this book turns that theory on its head. This book shows how policies that limit government's scope of action are necessary to promote entrepreneurship. It is a refreshing change, and much more in line with the new and upcoming theories in this area than any previous works on state entrepreneurship policy." -- Russell S. Sobel * West Virginia University *
Table of ContentsPART I Institutions and Entrepreneurship 2 Big Bills Left on the Sidewalk: Why Some Nations Are Rich, and Others Poor Mancur Olson Jr. 25 3 Entrepreneurship and Economic Growth Randall G. Holcombe 54 4 Entrepreneurship: Productive, Unproductive, and Destructive William J. Baumol 79 5 Economic Freedom and Property Rights: The Institutional Environment of Productive Entrepreneurship Robert A. Lawson 112 PART II Failures in Entrepreneurial Development 6 The African Development Conundrum George B. N. Ayittey 137 7 The Case of Latin America Alvaro Vargas Llosa 189 8 Entrepreneurship or Entremanureship? Digging Through Romania's Institutional Environment for Transition Lessons Peter J. Boettke, Christopher]. Coyne, and Peter T. Leeson 223 9 Sweden's Slowdown: The Impact of Interventionism on Entrepreneurship Dan Johansson 250 PART III Reform and Success in Entrepreneurial Development 10 China's March Toward the Market James A. Dorn 283 11 India: The Elephant in the Age of Liberation Parth J. Shah and Renuka Sane 309 12 Economic Freedom and Growth: The Case of the Celtic Tiger Benjamin Powell 342 13 Why Have Kiwis Not Become Tigers? Reforms, Entrepreneurship, and Economic Performance in New Zealand Frederic Sautet 364 14 Look, Botswana: No Hands! Why Botswana's Government Should Let the Economy Steer Itself Scott A. Beaulier 396