00919nam0-22003251i-450-990001029840403321000102984FED01000102984(Aleph)000102984FED0100010298420000920d1969----km-y0itay50------baengLattice DynamicsA.A. Maradudin, I.M. Lifshitz, A.M. KosevichNew York [etc.]Benjamin1969Progress in Physics. A Reprint SeriesEccitazioneSolidi530.4Maradudin,A.A.346519Cochran,William<1922-2003>Kosevich,Arnold MarkovichLifshits,Il'ia MikhailovichITUNINARICAUNIMARCBK99000102984040332132C-00114807FI1FI1Lattice Dynamics339230UNINAING0105307oam 2200637I 450 991067987530332120230421043339.01-134-80119-X1-280-33393-60-203-29085-20-203-01286-010.4324/9780203012864 (CKB)1000000000249418(EBL)180037(OCoLC)252804020(SSID)ssj0000079408(PQKBManifestationID)11107398(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000079408(PQKBWorkID)10075381(PQKB)10355185(MiAaPQ)EBC180037(OCoLC)1000432312(EXLCZ)99100000000024941820180331d1995 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrEconomic development in the Middle East /Rodney WilsonLondon ;New York :Routledge,1995.1 online resource (229 p.)Routledge Studies in Development Economics ;v.No.1Description based upon print version of record.0-415-12553-7 Includes bibliographical references (p. 212-214) and index.Book Cover; Title; Contents; List of figures; INTRODUCTION; Geographical coverage; The period under review; Issues and themes; Style and readership; MODELS OF MIDDLE EAST ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT; The stages of economic growth in the Middle East; The theory of dependency and the 'flying geese' metaphor; Pre-conditions for self-sustaining development; Middle East markets as bazaar economies; Theories of the role of the state; Theorising on Middle Eastern development; GROWTH AND STRUCTURAL CHANGE; Gross national and gross domestic product; Nominal and real income; The wealth of nationsInvestment in transport and infrastructureThe state of land and agriculture; Industrialisation and development; Trade's contribution to the economy; Economic structure and development; Leading sectors and unbalanced growth; Modernisation and structural transformation; POPULATION GROWTH AND EMPLOYMENT; Education and human capital formation; Manpower planning and career choice; Labour surplus models; Unemployment and underemployment; Urbanisation and population distribution; Emigration and migration; The economic effects of international labour mobilitySocial costs and benefits of migration for the host countryCAPITAL MARKETS, SAVINGS AND INVESTMENT; Domestic savings ratios; Financial intermediation and development; Investment and the development process; Currency standards and exchange; Money and investment; The economic impact of banking development; International borrowing and government debt; detail banking growth and the financing gap; The spread of indigenous banks; Nationalisation of banking; Banking regulation; Offshore banking; Stock market development and equity finance; AN ISLAMIC MODEL FOR ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENTThe position of Islamic economistsThe methodology of western and Islamic economics; Sources of Islamic economic philosophy; Islamic views on trade and commercial activity; Just rewards in an Islamic economy; Incentives and aspirations in Muslim society; The prohibition of riba; Charity versus lending; Islamic profit-sharing; Islamic financing; Islamic banking development; Islamic taxation; An Islamic future?; OIL AND DEVELOPMENT; Quality, price and demand; The politics of oil supply; OPEC control over supplies; OPEC as the price-maker; OPEC as a cartelLimit pricing with OPEC as the residual supplierOptimal depletion and time preferences; Predicted and actual oil prices; Spot, future and options oil pricing; Oil products and refining; Downstream diversification into petrochemicals; Oil and development; INTERNATIONAL AND INTRA-REGIONAL TRADE; Trade and development; Pro-trade and anti-trade growth; Trade deficit problems; The terms of trade; Export diversification; Euro-Arab trading relations; Europe and Arab-lsraeli differences; Oil and petrochemical trade; Arab economic integration; The extent of regional trade; ConclusionsTHE ROLE OF THE STATEDespite its oil resources,the Middle East is falling behind other regions of the developing world, notably the countries of East and South East Asia. Rodney Wilson examines the economic prospects for the region considering: *the consequences of rapid population growth, including the implications for education and employment; *low savings levels; *the absence of significant inflows of private capital and foreign investment; *fragmentation of the banking system; *the basic ecomomic infrastructure and the problems caused by excessive military expenditure; *falling oil priRoutledge Studies in Development EconomicsEconomic developmentReligious aspectsIslamMiddle EastEconomic conditions1979-Economic developmentReligious aspectsIslam.338.956Wilson Rodney116171MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910679875303321Economic development in the Middle East626006UNINA