PERIPHERY CAPITALIST DEVELOPMENT-A CASE STUDY OF THE TANZANIAN ECONOMY
Abstract
The causes of continuing poverty and persistent unemployment in the Third
World have occupied a large number of writers, among them Baran (1957),
Jalee (1968), Frank (1969) and Rodney (1972). Some have concentrated on
the flow of wealth from the underdeveloped countries to the metropole, others
on the devastating effect that this continuing exploitation has on the internal
development of the Third World. They all agree that the source of the problem
is not to be found within the Third World-such
supposed reasons being
culture, climate, population growth, leadership, etc.-but
with the interna-
tional capitalist system.
World have occupied a large number of writers, among them Baran (1957),
Jalee (1968), Frank (1969) and Rodney (1972). Some have concentrated on
the flow of wealth from the underdeveloped countries to the metropole, others
on the devastating effect that this continuing exploitation has on the internal
development of the Third World. They all agree that the source of the problem
is not to be found within the Third World-such
supposed reasons being
culture, climate, population growth, leadership, etc.-but
with the interna-
tional capitalist system.
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