Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1317
Title: THE POVERTY OF NEW INSTITUTIONAL ECONOMICS
Other Titles: Sharecropping in Ghana, and the Problems with Economic Theories of Agrarian Institutions
Authors: deGrassi, Aaron
Issue Date: 2004
Abstract: Since the early 1990s at least, development theories and policies have increasingly come to emphasize the importance of institutions. One significant approach is the New Institutional Economics (NIE), which emphasizes how institutions can reduce the costs and uncertainty involved in transactions, and thereby enable trade, growth and poverty alleviation. NIE, however, is rooted in social science paradigms of evolutionism and functionalism. These paradigms suffer from a number of methodological, theoretical and empirical problems, and, as a result, contain inaccurate assumptions of bounded, homogenous and inertial communities. Consequently much NIE also rests upon these assumptions. These assumptions are illustrated in one particular application of NlE-the analysis of sharecropping, with a case study of Ghana. www.udsspace.uds.edu.gh
Description: Masters of Philosophy in Development Studies
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1317
Appears in Collections:School of Applied Economics and Management Sciences

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