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Autor(in)
Datum
2008-10-29Typ
- Journal Article
ETH Bibliographie
yes
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Abstract
In the vast body of development theoretical knowledge one element has been of a considerable longevity: the abstraction of a Gross Domestic Product to represent a given economic entity. This paper suggests approaching the history of development thinking by traveling with the GDP through this discourse. The GDP has been contested as an indicator of economic development ever since it was first put to use in the 1940s. However, the specific mode of knowledge which is expressed in this abstraction has opened up a quite universally shared frame of reference in which a North-South-Divide became operational. The paper argues that GDP figures have become facts that travel easily across the globe because constant work is being undertaken to uphold the conditions for their mobility. Based on this observation the development endeavor can be located historically in a manifold constellation of the statistical acquisition of economic insight, political utopia, state intervention, the emerging prospect of economic planning in capitalist and non-capitalist systems and the quest for the international standardization of economic knowledge production. Mehr anzeigen
Publikationsstatus
publishedExterne Links
Zeitschrift / Serie
Working Papers on The Nature of Evidence: How Well Do Facts Travel?Band
Seiten / Artikelnummer
Verlag
London School of Economics and Political Science, Department of Economic HistoryThema
history of economic thought; development economics; history of macroeconomics; history of national accountingOrganisationseinheit
03486 - Gugerli, David / Gugerli, David
ETH Bibliographie
yes
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