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Fabricating economic development

Author(s)
Brownlow, Graham  
Uri
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/2343
Date Issued
2009
Date Available
2010-08-11T14:20:58Z
Abstract
This paper is concerned with the institutions of Irish economics; it is structured around two arguments each of which links to the thesis presented in Garvin’s Preventing the future (2004). Overall it will be demonstrated that Irish economics was shaped by intellectual trends experienced within economic thought globally as well as the social considerations that were peculiar to Ireland. The evidence presented indicates that firstly while Economic Development mattered to the Irish economy it did not matter for the reasons that most writers have suggested it did. It is argued for instance that much of the literature, regardless of academic discipline, presents the publication of Economic Development in 1958 as analogous to a “big bang” event in the creation of modern Ireland. However, such a “big bang” perspective misrepresents the sophistication of economic debates prior to Whitaker’s report as well as distorting the interpretation of subsequent developments. The paper secondly, by drawing on the contents of contemporary academic journals, reappraises Irish economic thinking before and after the publication of Economic Development. It is argued that an economically “liberal” approach to Keynesianism, such as that favoured by TK Whitaker and George O’Brien, lost out in the 1960s to a more interventionist approach: only later did a more liberal approach to macroeconomic policy triumph. The rival approaches to academic economics were in turn linked to wider debates on the influence of religious authorities on Irish higher education. Academic economists were particularly concerned with preserving their intellectual independence and how a shift to planning would keep decisions on resource allocation out of the reach of conservative political and religious leaders.
Sponsorship
Not applicable
Type of Material
Working Paper
Publisher
University College Dublin. Institute for British-Irish Studies
Series
IBIS Working Papers
92
Copyright (Published Version)
The author, 2009
Subjects

Ireland

Economic

Development

Recession

Keynesianism

Subject – LCSH
Economics--Ireland
Economics literature--Ireland
Web versions
http://www.ucd.ie/ibis/filestore/wp2009/92_brownlow%20rev%201.pdf
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
Conference Details
Paper presented at the conference Politics, economy and society: Irish developmentism, 1958-2008. University College Dublin, March 12, 2009
ISSN
1649-0304
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/1.0/
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92_brownlow.pdf

Size

269.19 KB

Format

Adobe PDF

Checksum (MD5)

00e73c09a3a6be48d431fde54a282cb1

Owning collection
Institute for British-Irish Studies (IBIS) Working Papers and Policy Papers

Item descriptive metadata is released under a CC-0 (public domain) license: https://creativecommons.org/public-domain/cc0/.
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