ECONOMIC GROWTH AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT: CONCEPTS AND MEASURES Emil E. Malizia* Early Work As Arndt (1981, 1987) demonstrates, the tenneco- nomic development, as a subject of scholarly work has rather recent origins. The tenn is closely affiliated with planned investments and intentional development efforts. Thus the verb, to develop, is used in its transitive sense: people make development happen. Arndt reviews the diversity of opinion about the process of economic development in relation to desired outcomes. Neoclassical theories and models focused on ways to mobilize resources to achieve economic growth. Most early writers considered increases in gross domestic product (GDP) per capita or in income per capita as adequate measures of good results. On the other hand, theories inspired by Marx or Schumpeter paid greater attentiontotheunderlyingstructureofthepoliticaleconomy. As criticisms of intentional development efforts in the Third World grew, scholars began to look more closely at the welfare implications of economic growth. Celso Furtado, while pointing out the accomplishments of the Brasil ian economy, noted that the Brasil ian people were doing rather badly. Dudley Seers (1969) captured the spirit of this criticism by defining development in human re- source tenns. Economic development occurs when pov- erty, unemployment and inequality are reduced while income per capita increases. Jan Drewnowski and others under UN auspices developed direct measures of consumption to substitute for income measures. In a similar vein, some U.S. scholars who were focused on regional development contrasted indicators of social well-being, for example, health and mortality indicators, to average income mea- sures. Although addressing the nonnative implications of economic development, the early work failed to resolve the central problem. In the absence of a consensus theory of economic development, consistent measurement was dif- ficult. During the 1970s, in fact, the neoclassical paradigm itself was called into question (Arndt 1987). Given the inconsistencies among theories used to explain economic development, the recent work by Amos *Professor of Real Estate and Economic Development, Department of City and Regional Planning, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. 30 (1990) and Flammang (1990 and 1979) is important. The authors synthesize alternative theories in order to pose new meta-theory or conceptual frameworks and, in so doing, advance our understanding of economic development. This author draws on their concepts and frameworks to define economic growth and economic development more clearly and to suggest face-valid measures of these con- cepts. With better measures of these basic concepts, alternative theories and models of economic development may be tested more rigorously. The Meanings of Growth and Development Amos (1990) combines growth pole, long wave and utility theory to propose a useful and interesting conceptual framework for understanding societal development He argues for the existence of approximately 100 year devel- opment cycles containing two equal long waves. The first is a polarizing cycle focused on a new growth pole producing innovations, and the second is a spreading cycle stimulated by innovation diffusion. As part of these development cycles, Amos considers the role of changing tastes, infra- structure investment and spatial growth and change. Amos describes innovations in production and trans- portation that generated growth through concentration from about 1880 to 1930 followed by spread from 1930 to 1980. U.S. corporations were the dominant poles of growth during this long wave. During the long wave that may have begun around 1980, the growth poles may be shifting to Japanese companies, and Pacific Rim countries may become the growth centers over the next 50 years. Flammang ( 1979) reviews a considerable amount of development literature. He discusses economic growth and development as related processes based on the struc- ture and functions of the political economy. He summa- rizes nine different approaches to economic growth and economic development including approaches that define neither tenn or use the tenns interchangably. He offers clarifications by drawing an analogy between biological growth and development. He notes the positive association between growth and development in most instances: When we refer to economic growth, are not most of us thinking in tenns of increase, in tenns of the quantity of something measurable? But when we