Why are some countries richer than others and why do some economies grow more rapidly? The Politics of Technological Progress answers these vital questions by highlighting the importance of technological progress for sustained economic development. The author also explains why some countries exhibit faster technological progress than others. Armed with a wealth of cross-national empirical evidence, Professor Simmons stresses the importance of properly constructed political parties for establishing an environment conducive to technological progress. 'Well-institutionalized' ruling parties are essential for technological progress, he argues, because only in such parties are time horizons long enough for governments to accept the deferred returns that are an inherent feature of government efforts to encourage innovation and technology adoption in the economy.
Liberal thinkers of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries were alert to the political costs and human cruelties involved in European colonialism, but they also thought that European expansion held...
In this satirical work, the author takes aim at western intellectuals who support socialist regimes despite evidence of their failures and atrocities. The author uses the allegory of John Bunyan's...
The Political Progress of Britain - An Impartial History of Abuses in the Government of the British Empire, in Europe, Asia and America. Third Edition is an unchanged, high-quality reprint of the...