1st Edition

The Political Economy of Disaster Destitution, Plunder and Earthquake in Haiti

By Mats Lundahl Copyright 2013
464 Pages
by Routledge

464 Pages
by Routledge

464 Pages
by Routledge

Haiti, one of the least developed and most vulnerable nations in the Western Hemisphere, made the international headlines in January 2010 when an earthquake destroyed the capital, Port-au-Prince. More than a year later, little reconstruction has taken place, in spite of a strong international funding commitment. Mats Lundahl has written several seminal works on Haiti, and this volume... Read more

Preface  Prologue: The Dismal Past  Part I: Before the Quake  1. The Economic Consequences of 1809, or ‘Was Haiti Doomed to Fail?’ A Story of Factor Proportions, Labor Market Institutions and Politics - Appendix: A Capsule History of Haitian Exports  2. Towards the Abyss? The Political Economy of Emergency in Haiti  3. Economic Reform in Haiti: Past Failures and Future Successes?  4. Descent into Crisis: Politics and Economics from Aristide to the Earthquake  5. The Failure of Community-Based Entrepreneurship in Haiti  6. Reaching the Poor: Some Observations on Formal and Informal Credit in Haiti  7. Book Reviews: i. Some Recent Historical Works on Haiti  ii. Haitian Migration  iii. Jacques Roumain and Gouverneurs de la rosée  8. Economic Growth in Haiti: A Mere Illusion?  Part II: The Earthquake and After  9. 7.0 on the Richter Scale  10. The Controversial Death Toll  11. The Election Farce  12. Camps, Security and Rebuilding  13. The Interim Haiti Recovery Commission  14. Industrialization by Necessity  15. Micky at the Helm  Epilogue: Institutional Failure

Biography

Mats Lundahl is Professor of Development Economics, Stockholm School of Economics, Sweden.