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The form of state and development policy: case of selected Asian countries

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Authors

Kim, Kwang-Woong

Issue Date
1989
Publisher
Graduate School of Public Administration, Seoul National University
Citation
Korean Journal of Policy Studies, Vol.4, pp. 105-128
Abstract
Since World WarⅡ, many social scientists in the West have proposed numerous
theories to examine various issues of national development(Adelman and
Morris, 1973; Amsden, 1984; Evans, Rueschemeyer and Skocpol, 1984; Higgott
and Robinson, 1985; Zysman, 1983). These theories differ a great deal over the
exact role which political factor plays in the process of economic development
and industrialization. Pluralist theories, for example, argue that government plays
no major role. These theorists assume that society as a whole is organized by
interdependent institutional elements, and politics by competitive interest groups
which vie for each other for maximizing their own interests. According to them,
the polity and the economy are relatively autonomous so that the role of government
is not significant in economic change. However, since they are interdependent
in nature, certain associations are expected. On the other hand, the statists,
particularly those with marxist perspectives, view that politics is essentially a
matter of class politics where a hegemonic class rules over the state which in turn
facilitates economic change to the benefit of the hegemonic class.
ISSN
1225-5017
Language
English
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/70410
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