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Argentine and Australian Development Compared

The development of Australia in the eighteenth & nineteenth centuries is compared with that of Argentina in the context of the two countries' structural relation to the world capitalist economy. Although sharing fundamental characteristics of settlement & resources, the two countries ar...

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Published in:Past & present 1979-08 (84), p.91-110
Main Author: Dyster, Barrie
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Language:English
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description The development of Australia in the eighteenth & nineteenth centuries is compared with that of Argentina in the context of the two countries' structural relation to the world capitalist economy. Although sharing fundamental characteristics of settlement & resources, the two countries are generally acknowledged to have developed differently. Yet the differentiating tendencies are claimed to have existed much earlier than a review of the literature suggests. It is argued that Argentina suffered much more from wars, against both natives & other countries, & from underdevelopment of key regions; also, Argentina's export-oriented economy encouraged low wages & land prices & guaranteed a weak currency. Australia's economic strength can be attributed in part to its consistently high level of domestic consumption. J. Anderson
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source Oxford University Press:Jisc Collections:Oxford Journal Archive: Access period 2024-2025; Sociological Abstracts; JSTOR
subjects Argentina
Australia
Capitalism
Comparative Analysis
Consumer economics
Economic Development
Eighteenth Century
Freight
Imports
International economics
Merchants
Nineteenth Century
Pastoralism
Political economy
Trade
World Economy
title Argentine and Australian Development Compared
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