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Ha-Joon Chang

작성자Statesman|작성시간08.11.24|조회수148 목록 댓글 0

 

 

Ha-Joon Chang

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This is a Korean name; the family name is Chang.

Ha-Joon Chang (b. South Korea in 1963) is one of the world's foremost heterodox economists specialising in development economics. Trained at the University of Cambridge, where he currently works as a Reader in the Political Economy of Development, Chang is the author of several influential policy books, including 2002's Kicking Away the Ladder: Development Strategy in Historical Perspective. [1][2][3]

He has served as a consultant to the World Bank, the Asian Development Bank and the European Investment Bank as well as to Oxfam[4] and various United Nations agencies.[5] He is also a fellow at the Center for Economic and Policy Research[6] in Washington, D.C.

Chang is also famous for being one of the crucial academic influences on the economist Rafael Correa, currently President of Ecuador.[7] [8]

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[edit] Background

Chang's contribution to heterodox economics started while studying under Robert Rowthorn, a leading British Marxist economist,[9] with whom he worked on the elaboration of the theory of industrial policy, a middle-way between central planning and the unrestrained free-market. His work in this area led to the elaboration of a broader approach to economics Chang calls institutionalist political economy which places economic history and socio-political factors at the centre of the evolution of economic practices.

[edit] Books

In his book Kicking Away the Ladder (which won the 2003 Gunnar Myrdal Prize), Chang argued that all major developed countries used interventionist economic policies in order to get rich and then tried to forbid other countries from doing similarly. The WTO, World Bank and IMF come in for strong criticism for this kind of ladder-kicking which is, according to Chang, the fundamental obstacle to poverty alleviation in the developing world. This and other work led to his being awarded the 2005 Wassily Leontief Prize for Advancing the Frontiers of Economic Thought from the Global Development and Environment Institute (previous prize-winners include Amartya Sen, John Kenneth Galbraith and Herman Daly).[1][2]

Following up on the ideas of Kicking Away the Ladder, Chang published Bad Samaritans: Rich Nations, Poor Policies and the Threat to the Developing World in December 2007.[10]. Chang argues that unregulated international trade (free markets) has very rarely succeeded in producing economic development, and has a far worse record compared to interventionist policies. He cites evidence that GDP growth in developing countries was higher prior to external pressures recommending deregulation and extends his analysis of the failures of free trade to induce growth through privatisation and anti-inflationary policies. The book is sometimes confused with an earlier book criticising unregulated free trade Bad Samaritans: First World Ethics and Third World Debt (1990) by the development activist Paul Vallely which is a political rather than economic critique. Chang's book won plaudits from Nobel prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz.

Bad Samaritans has been designated by South Korean Ministry of National Defence, as one of the 23 seditious books, that South Korean Soldiers do not read. This is because it is supposedly 'Anti American'.[11] In an interview about this with a Korean newspaper Chang said "I thought the concept of 'seditious books' has disappeared, and it saddens me that censorship has been revived". He also defended his books saying "I don't know why my book is regarded as anti-American. The (South Korean) government is democratically elected, it changes, so no one in a democracy can say having a different opinion from the government of the time is unpatriotic or anti-government in general. Indeed no democratic government can say that about criticism, only a despotic one can". [12]

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