
Published online:
22 August 2013
Published in print:
07 January 2011
Online ISBN:
9780262295727
Print ISBN:
9780262015158
Contents
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5.1 Introduction 5.1 Introduction
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5.2 Using Textile Manufacturing to Gauge Third World De-industrialization 5.2 Using Textile Manufacturing to Gauge Third World De-industrialization
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5.3 A Comparative Quantitative Assessment 5.3 A Comparative Quantitative Assessment
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5.4 A Comparative Qualitative Assessment 5.4 A Comparative Qualitative Assessment
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De-industrialization and Dutch Disease in Egypt De-industrialization and Dutch Disease in Egypt
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De-industrialization and Dutch Disease in Indonesia De-industrialization and Dutch Disease in Indonesia
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Forced to Go Open: Industrialization and Dutch Disease in Japan Forced to Go Open: Industrialization and Dutch Disease in Japan
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Weak De-industrialization and Modest Dutch Disease Effects in China Weak De-industrialization and Modest Dutch Disease Effects in China
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5.5 De-industrialization and Dutch Disease in the Periphery 5.5 De-industrialization and Dutch Disease in the Periphery
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Chapter
5 Measuring Third World De-industrialization and Dutch Disease
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Published:January 2011
Cite
Williamson, Jeffrey G., 'Measuring Third World De-industrialization and Dutch Disease', Trade and Poverty: When the Third World Fell Behind (Cambridge, MA , 2011; online edn, MIT Press Scholarship Online, 22 Aug. 2013), https://doi.org/10.7551/mitpress/9780262015158.003.0069, accessed 24 Apr. 2025.
Abstract
This chapter shows that de-industrialization and Dutch disease pervaded the poor periphery throughout most of the long nineteenth century up to World War I. For some, such as the Ottoman empire, Egypt, India, and Dutch Indonesia, the domestic industrial wreckage was spectacular; for others, such as China and Mexico the damage was more limited; and for at least one — Japan — the effect was to foster industrialization, not de-industrialization. This regional variety can be attributed to the size of the terms of trade shock, to domestic factor endowments, and to domestic supply side resistance.
Keywords:
third world, Ottoman empire, Egypt, India, Dutch Indonesia, Japan, China, Mexico, economic growth, trade shock
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