Theories of Development
| English | Chinese | Pinyin |
|---|---|---|
| Rostow's stages of growth | 罗斯托发展阶段 | luó sī tuō fā zhǎn jiē duàn |
| Wallerstein's world-systems theory | 沃勒斯坦世界体系理论 | wò lēi sī tǎn shì jiè tǐ xì lǐ lùn |
| core | 核心 | hé xīn |
| periphery | 边缘 | biān yuán |
| semi-periphery | 半边缘 | bàn biān yuán |
| dependency | 依附 | yī fù |
Two big theories
- Two famous theories explain why some regions are rich and others poor.
- Rostow's stages of growth 罗斯托发展阶段 is optimistic: every country can climb.
- Wallerstein's world-systems theory 沃勒斯坦世界体系理论 is critical: the system keeps some poor.
Rostow's ladder
- Rostow says every country climbs five stages to mass consumption.
- Traditional → preconditions → take-off → drive to maturity → mass consumption.
- Critics say it ignores global inequalities and assumes one path fits all.
Which theory divides the world into core, periphery, and semi-periphery?
Wallerstein's world-systems theory uses core/periphery/semi-periphery.
Rostow says every country climbs ____ stages to mass consumption.
Rostow's model has five stages of growth.
Order Rostow's stages of growth.
Rostow: traditional → preconditions → take-off → maturity → mass consumption.
Wallerstein's world-system
- Wallerstein divides the world into core 核心, periphery 边缘, and semi-periphery 半边缘.
- The wealthy core stays rich by using the periphery's cheap labour and resources.
- This dependency 依附 view challenges Rostow's optimism.
Rostow or Wallerstein?
Sort each idea by which development theory it belongs to.
Wallerstein's theory argues the global system keeps the periphery poor.
It is a dependency view: the core stays rich by exploiting the periphery.
Match each region to its role in Wallerstein's theory.
Core = rich; periphery = poor; semi-periphery = middle.
Rostow and Wallerstein disagree fundamentally. Rostow says any country can climb the ladder with the right steps; Wallerstein says the global system is structured to keep the core rich and the periphery poor. Know both — the exam often asks you to contrast them.
A poor country exports cheap raw materials (periphery) to a rich country that turns them into expensive goods (core). Rostow would say the poor country just needs to take off; Wallerstein would say the system is designed to keep it dependent — the same facts, two opposite readings.
Rostow's stages (optimistic): every country climbs five stages to mass consumption. Wallerstein's world-systems theory (critical): a wealthy core stays rich by exploiting the periphery and semi-periphery — a dependency view that challenges Rostow.