This study attempts to explain the economic development of Puerto Rico, particularly the nature and causal relations of the rapid rate of economic growth which was experienced from 1950 to 1973 and the slowdown that has been observed since then.An examination of the factors which have shaped that growth was undertaken with an hypothesis that the results were determined principally by the nature of the development strategy: industrial specialization for export markets and integration with the U.S. economy. This hypothesis was subjected to empirical testing by an econometric model consisting of a multiple regression equation in which the dependent variable was real annual growth rates of GDP and the explanatory variables were the production f...
This paper discusses the vulnerability of the island countries in the Caribbean Region. It will show...
The Dominican economy registered an average growth close to 5 % in the last fifty years. (UNDP, 2005...
In spite of Latin Americas dismal economic performance between the 1950s and 1980s, the region exper...
The main purpose of this article is to account for the difference between the GDP and GNP growth pat...
The transformation of Puerto Rico from a sugar-monoculture began in the early 1950\u27s and by 1963 ...
LIKE most less developed capitalist economies, Puerto Rico has relied heavily on external capital. T...
The rapid development of the Puerto Rican economy following the Second World War provides a unique m...
The hypothesis of this work is that the housing construction industry contributed significantly to t...
The basic argument of this paper is that the Puerto Rican experience of economic development, both q...
This is a review essay that discuss the behavior of the Economy of Puerto Rico. It centered in the t...
Directly following World War II, Latin America experienced higher growth rates than other parts of t...
This study compares the GDP growth rates of twenty-two Caribbean countries and territories between 1...
ABSTRACT: Neither orthodox development theory nor dependency theory, which emerged as a reaction to ...
Puerto Rico is a formidable exporter on a per-capita basis, but Puerto Rican capitalists are absent ...
139 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1971.U of I OnlyRestricted to the ...
This paper discusses the vulnerability of the island countries in the Caribbean Region. It will show...
The Dominican economy registered an average growth close to 5 % in the last fifty years. (UNDP, 2005...
In spite of Latin Americas dismal economic performance between the 1950s and 1980s, the region exper...
The main purpose of this article is to account for the difference between the GDP and GNP growth pat...
The transformation of Puerto Rico from a sugar-monoculture began in the early 1950\u27s and by 1963 ...
LIKE most less developed capitalist economies, Puerto Rico has relied heavily on external capital. T...
The rapid development of the Puerto Rican economy following the Second World War provides a unique m...
The hypothesis of this work is that the housing construction industry contributed significantly to t...
The basic argument of this paper is that the Puerto Rican experience of economic development, both q...
This is a review essay that discuss the behavior of the Economy of Puerto Rico. It centered in the t...
Directly following World War II, Latin America experienced higher growth rates than other parts of t...
This study compares the GDP growth rates of twenty-two Caribbean countries and territories between 1...
ABSTRACT: Neither orthodox development theory nor dependency theory, which emerged as a reaction to ...
Puerto Rico is a formidable exporter on a per-capita basis, but Puerto Rican capitalists are absent ...
139 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1971.U of I OnlyRestricted to the ...
This paper discusses the vulnerability of the island countries in the Caribbean Region. It will show...
The Dominican economy registered an average growth close to 5 % in the last fifty years. (UNDP, 2005...
In spite of Latin Americas dismal economic performance between the 1950s and 1980s, the region exper...