Abstract
The staple approach to the study of economic history is primarily a Canadian innovation; indeed, it is Canada's most distinctive contribution to political economy. It is undeveloped in any explicit form in most countries where the export sector of the economy is or was dominant. The specific terminology—staple or staples approach, or theory, or thesis—is Canadian, and the persistence with which the theory has been applied by Canadian social scientists and historians is unique.The leading innovator was the late Harold Innis in his brilliant pioneering historical studies, notably of the cod fisheries and the fur trade; others tilled the same vineyard3 but it is his work that has stamped the “school.” His concern was with the general impact on the economy and society of staple production. His method was to cast the net widely. The staple approach became a unifying theme of diffuse application rather than an analytic tool fashioned for specific uses. There was little attempt to limit its application by the use of an explicit framework. Methodologically, Innis' staple approach was more technological history writ large than a theory of economic growth in the conventional sense.
Topics

No keywords indexed for this article. Browse by subject →

References
68
[1]
Aitken (1959)
[2]
Stovel (1959)
[3]
Dehem The Economics of Stunted Growth (1962)
[5]
Nurkse (1959)
[6]
Linder (1961)
[7]
Plumptre The Nature of Economic Development in the British Dominions (1937)
[8]
"Agriculture and Regional Economic Growth" Journal of Farm Economics (1959)
[9]
Young (1957)
[10]
"Uncertainty and Economic Change" Journal of Economic History (1954)
[11]
(1930)
[12]
Lewis (1955)
[13]
Easterbrook "Trends in Canadian Economic Thought" South Atlantic Quarterly (1959)
[14]
Fay "The Toronto School of Economic History" Economic History (1934)
[15]
Perloff (1961)
[16]
Firestone (1958)
[17]
"A Note on Professor Rostow's ‘Take-off’ into Self-sustained Growth" Manchester School of Economic and Social Studies (1958)
[18]
Ingram "Growth and Canada's Balance of Payments" American Economic Review (1957)
[19]
"Recent Contributions to Economic History: Canada" Journal of Economic History (1959)
[20]
Young
[23]
Easterbrook (1956)
[24]
(1961)
[25]
Perloff (1960)
[26]
Bertram (1962)
[27]
Kindleberger (1958)
[28]
Economic Development with Unlimited Supplies of Labour

W. ARTHUR LEWIS

The Manchester School 10.1111/j.1467-9957.1954.tb00021.x
[29]
"Some Problems in the Pure Theory of International Trade" Economic Journal (1950)
[30]
(1962)
[31]
(1940)
[32]
Hirschman (1958)
[33]
"The Climate of Enterprise" American Economic Review (1949)
[34]
"The Role of Staple Industries in Canada's Economic Development" Journal of Economic History (1958)
[35]
Fowke (1957) 10.3138/9781487595449
[36]
English H. E. , “The Role of International Trade in Canadian Economic Development since the 1920's,” unpublished Ph.D. thesis, University of California, 1957
[37]
Rostow (1960)
[38]
Hartland
[39]
"Discussion" Journal of Economic History (1958)
[40]
"Economic Factors in Canadian History" Canadian Historical Review (1923)
[41]
Lewis
[42]
"International Capital Flows and the Development of the American West" Journal of Economic History (1956)
[44]
Singer "The Distribution of Gains between Investing and Borrowing Countries" American Economic Review (1950)
[45]
Levin (1960)
[46]
"Long Period Comparative Study: Some Historical Cases" Journal of Economic History (1957)
[47]
Firestone (1960)
[48]
Barber Canadian Tariff Policy (1955)
[49]
Callender (1909)

Showing 50 of 68 references

Cited By
328
The Extractive Industries and Socie...
Rural Sociology
Journal of Historical Geography
Metrics
328
Citations
68
References
Details
Published
May 01, 1963
Vol/Issue
29(2)
Pages
141-158
License
View
Cite This Article
Melville H. Watkins (1963). A Staple Theory of Economic Growth. Canadian Journal of Economics and Political Science, 29(2), 141-158. https://doi.org/10.2307/139461
Related

You May Also Like