Exchange and Markets in Early Economic Development
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John D. Conroy
About this book
The idea of an informal economy emerged from, and is a critique of, the ideology of ‘economic development’. It originated from Keith Hart’s recognition of informal economic activity in 1960s Ghana. In the context of four colonialisms – German, British, Australian and Dutch – this book recounts Hart’s effort in 1972 to introduce the informal ‘sector’ into development planning in Papua New Guinea. This was problematic, because ‘the market’ was scarcely institutionalized, and traditional modes of exchange persisted stubbornly. Rather than conforming with post-colonial economic ideology, the subjected people pushed back against imposed bureaucracy to practice informal and hybrid modes of economic activity.
Author / Editor information
John D. Conroy has been an economist and student of 'development' since 1968. He has lived and worked in Papua New Guinea and Indonesia for lengthy periods and has also had field experience in South and East Asia, and in some of the small Pacific island nations. He is a visiting scholar at the Development Policy Centre, Crawford School of Public Policy, Australian National University.
Reviews
“It is a sound piece of scholarship, directed at an interesting question with important policy implications, which ranges over a broad field of largely historical data and relevant literature. It is well written and makes a significant contribution to the literature of Papua New Guinea and to that of comparative development economics.” • Ronald May, The Australian National University
Topics
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Frontmatter
i -
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Contents
vii -
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List of Maps
ix -
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Preface
x -
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Acknowledgements
xv -
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List of Acronyms
xvii -
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Introduction. An ‘Informal’ Economic History
1 - Part I. Economic Informality: An Idea and Its Relevance to Melanesia
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Chapter 1. Keith Hart and the Idea of Informality
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Chapter 2. Precursors of the Informal Economy
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Chapter 3. Melanesia in the Trade of the Malay Archipelago
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Chapter 4. Melanesian Singularity: Insights from Neoclassical Economics
34 -
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Chapter 5. Traditional Trade and Exchange in Papua New Guinea
42 -
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Chapter 6. National Capitalism in the Th ree New Guineas
51 - Part II. From Early Colonization to the Pacific War
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Chapter 7. German and Australian New Guinea before the Pacific War
59 -
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Chapter 8. Chinese in New Guinea before the Pacific War
70 -
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Chapter 9. Hubert Murray and the Contending Moralities
83 -
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Chapter 10. The Idea of a Town in Anglo-Papua
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Chapter 11. Papuans in Town before the Pacific War
101 -
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Chapter 12. Hidden Valleys: A New White Highlands?
113 - Part III. Informality in the Era of Economic Development
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Chapter 13. Economic Development: Ideology and Apologetics
121 -
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Chapter 14. Obsolescence and the Preconditions for Urbanism
124 -
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Chapter 15. Remaking Port Moresby: The Formal Town
137 -
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Chapter 16. An Informal Town: Villages and Settlements
145 -
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Chapter 17. Reconstruction in Rabaul and the Seeds of Post-war Growth
153 -
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Chapter 18. Informal Economy on the Gazelle at the End of the Colonial Era
162 -
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Chapter 19. Chinese Enterprise in Rabaul: Apotheosis and Decline
172 -
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Chapter 20. Bureaucracy and Market Economy on the Frontier
178 -
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Chapter 21. Gorokans and Coffee in the ‘Lucky Place’
193 -
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Chapter 22. Formality and Informality in the Coffee Economy
206 -
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Chapter 23. The Triumph of Capitalism?
215 - Part IV. Birth Pangs: All These Are the Beginning of Sorrows
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Chapter 24. The Preparatory Idea
225 -
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Chapter 25. Hart, Faber and the Informal Economy in Port Moresby
234 -
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Chapter 26. An Uneasy Trio of Formality, Informality and Hybridity
244 -
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Chapter 27. Dilemmas and Consequences of Urban Growth
255 -
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Conclusion
263 -
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References
267 -
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Index
282