This important volume brings together seventeen major essays written by A.P. Thirlwall over the last twenty five years in the field of growth and development.

Many of these papers make pioneering contributions, such as the author's formalization of Kaldor's two-sector growth model, his models of growth constrained by the balance of payments, his testing of the IMF's supply side approach to devaluation, and his development of models of inflation, population and economic growth.

Other essays are more reflective and eclectic, such as papers on Keynes and economic development, on the terms of trade and international debt, as well as an essay in praise of development economics. The volume also includes an extensive introductory essay in which Professor Thirlwall explains how he became a development economist.

The Economics of Growth and Development will be welcomed by economists and policy makers for presenting an authoritative volume of Professor Thirlwall's most important essays and papers in development economics, some of which are in foreign journals and not readily available in many university libraries.


This important volume brings together 22 major essays written by A.P. Thirlwall over the last 30 years in the field of macroeconomics, and in particular on multiplier analysis, unemployment, inflation, growth and the balance of payments.

These outstanding essays make pioneering contributions, such as the input-output formulation of the foreign trade multiplier; the derivation and use of the dynamic Harrod foreign trade multiplier; the measurements of types of unemployment; the estimation of regional Phillips curves, and the formalization of Kaldor's model of regional growth rate differences.

Many of the essays are written from a Keynesian perspective, and the recent revival of interest in Keynesian economics means that the essays are as relevant today as when they were written, especially those on the nature of unemployment, the causes of inflation, and the link between the balance of payments and economic growth.

Macroeconomic Issues from a Keynesian Perspective will be of interest not only to professional economists but also to policymakers in developed and developing countries for the insights it provides into the functioning of the macroeconomy.