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H-NET BOOK REVIEW
Published by [log in to unmask] (January, 1997)
Angus Maddison, _Monitoring the World Economy, 1820-1992_.
Washington, D.C.: Organization for Economic Cooperation and
Development, 1995. 255 pp. Tables and bibliographical references.
$30.00 (paper), ISBN 9-26414-549-4.
Reviewed for EH.Net by John R. Hanson II, Department of Economics,
Texas A&M University <[log in to unmask]>
The heightened interest in economic globalism in recent times makes this a
timely book. At the behest of the OECD Angus Maddison, arguably the dean
of scholars on the history of the world economy, summarizes the available
data and research on trends in the global economy during most of the
modern era, defined as the period since the Industrial Revolution. The
OECD's offer also affords Maddison an opportunity to synthesize and
summarize his views on world economic integration after a long career
studying the subject. This volume, therefore, will be widely welcomed and
perhaps accepted in some quarters as a definitive treatment, especially
since a standard of "Maddison reliability" for historical international
economic data seems to have replaced the former "Kuznets standard" among
academics. Currently only Alan Heston and Robert Summers, leaders of the
International Comparison Project, have similar stature. Yet their work,
which Maddison utilizes extensively, lacks Maddison's breadth.
The book's main contribution consists of consistent estimates of GDP,
population, and GDP per capita for the period 1820 to 1992 for fifty-six
countries accounting in 1992 for over 90 percent of world product. Other,
less complete, series are presented for related magnitudes, including
employment, exports, capital stocks, and several measures of productivity.
Maddison relies on a wide range of sources, corrects for discontinuities
in series, and makes adjustments in data provided in the various sources
to achieve comparability and continuity. The appendices contain most of
this information and are the heart and soul of the volume. The data are
accompanied by a concise, general analysis of the major forces accounting
for the long-run economic growth and development of countries within the
framework of a growing world economy. The analysis is non-Marxist.
Maddison's prestige as an economist and the OECD's imprimatur make the new
data set a seductive one. It should be labor-saving, thereby raising
scholarly productivity in both teaching and research. It will stimulate
research in world economic history, which, though growing, remains
peripheral to the larger academic agenda. It is informative about the
thoughts, conjectures, and conclusions of a distinguished senior scholar
in the later stages of a remarkable career. Still, several words of
caution are in order.
The book's title, first of all, is misleading. There is little useful
content for the years before roughly 1870, especially with respect to the
non-Western world. Some income estimates and other economic data going as
far back as 1820 are offered, but Maddison's tone in presenting these is
insufficiently tentative. Early per capita income estimates sometimes are
proferred only for it to be revealed in other tables that important
concomitant or supporting data are not available, raising many obvious
questions. Maddison's determined and persistent efforts to push income
estimates for poor countries back in time are laudable, but the results
still must be taken with many grains of salt.
Maddison's presuppositions in this area, incidentally, were formed during
the mid-twentieth century, when Western scholars habitually underestimated
Third World incomes. Until recently Maddison has been a critic of the
Heston-Summers upward revisions, although this volume suggests that he has
finally joined the mainstream. Nonetheless, it is well to remember that
Maddison long has lowballed historical income estimates for the less
developed world. One of his students, Pierre Van der Eng, recently raised
Maddison's historical estimates for Indonesia. Although Maddison himself
deserves great credit for his adaptability and intellectual integrity,
many of his historical estimates for poor countries must be regarded as
provisional and his judgments tentative even when, as is common, he omits
caveats.
Finally, users of this volume should be aware that during his long career
Maddison has been fortunate in escaping the minute scrutiny and evaluation
to which Heston and Summers and other scholars in this general area have
been subjected. Maddison's enviable reputation is well deserved, yet as
Van der Eng and some of my own work have shown, the natural tendency to
accept Maddison uncritically must be resisted. His historical income
estimates for LDCs, for example, are less consistent with general trends
in the world economy than some I derived from the work of other scholars.
These are arcane matters, to be sure, but users of this volume should
understand that much more work will be required before historical income
estimates for most of the world can be confidently accepted. With respect
to developed countries, however, historical estimates, especially after
1900, are more reliable. On these, Maddison stands on firmer ground.
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