Gerardo Serra
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W. Arthur Lewis and economic development
A Manchester story
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William Arthur Lewis’s intellectual legacy is inseparable from the concept of ‘economic development’. As one of the pioneers of development economics (a contribution that was honoured with the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences in 1979), Lewis’s ideas on trade, capital accumulation, labour and the institutional frameworks conducive to growth and ‘modernisation’ inspired social scientists and political leaders across the globe. However, this global history was grounded in a specific time and place: Manchester in the 1940s and 1950s. This chapter reconstructs Manchester’s role in shaping Lewis’s vision of economic development. It is argued that this role was threefold, as the city hosted the Pan-African Congress which marked Lewis’s evolution as an anti-colonial intellectual, the scientific community within which he formalised these ideas for an academic audience, and the welfare associations in which the economist refashioned himself as an activist and social reformer.

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