Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Illustrations
- List of tables
- Preface
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Framework for the study of population, development and inequality
- 3 Growth and distribution in historical perspective
- 4 Income inequality and length of life
- 5 Wage policy, infant mortality and collective social action in São Paulo
- 6 Racial inequality and child mortality
- 7 The “baby bust”
- 8 Income distribution and population growth
- 9 Agrarian structure and the rural exodus
- 10 Colonization and frontier expansion in Amazônia
- 11 Development and persistent underemployment
- 12 The demography of inequality in Brazil: summary and conclusion
- Appendix: A note on method
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
- CAMBRIDGE LATIN AMERICAN STUDIES
12 - The demography of inequality in Brazil: summary and conclusion
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 August 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Illustrations
- List of tables
- Preface
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Framework for the study of population, development and inequality
- 3 Growth and distribution in historical perspective
- 4 Income inequality and length of life
- 5 Wage policy, infant mortality and collective social action in São Paulo
- 6 Racial inequality and child mortality
- 7 The “baby bust”
- 8 Income distribution and population growth
- 9 Agrarian structure and the rural exodus
- 10 Colonization and frontier expansion in Amazônia
- 11 Development and persistent underemployment
- 12 The demography of inequality in Brazil: summary and conclusion
- Appendix: A note on method
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
- CAMBRIDGE LATIN AMERICAN STUDIES
Summary
The ideas in this volume are put forth at a time when the discipline of development studies is in crisis. In a recent article, Hirschman (1981: 1) suggested that (mainstream) development economics is a field in decline. Although “articles and books are still being produced…the old liveliness is no longer there…and the field is not adequately reproducing itself.” This state of affairs, according to Weisskopf (1983), is linked to theoretical dilemmas internal to the discipline of economics, as well as to a more general shift in political discourse. Development economics, Weisskopf contends, drew its primary theoretical inspiration from Keynesian principles. This orientation meant, among other things, that economists readily endorsed the premise that a neutral and activist state could, through orchestrated development policies, overcome the structural barriers that could not be resolved by a free market alone.
Events in the last three decades have dashed Keynesian hopes. Stagflation afflicted the developed economies in 1970s, followed by recession in the 1980s. Some Third World nations showed impressive growth. Others did not. Nearly all failed to resolve the problems of inequality, unemployment and political tension. Such setbacks bolstered the position of conservative economists, especially their contention that an unhindered market could and would do the job. Moreover, for reasons having more to do with contemporary politics and ideology than strictly intellectual competition, the right has gained considerable ground.
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- Information
- The Demography of Inequality in Brazil , pp. 246 - 260Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1988