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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 |
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creator | Dyster, Barrie |
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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