Until recently, the phenomenal economic development of the Asian tigers, Chile, and Malaysia, as well as the
sustained economic growth of the United States, painted a very desirable and optimistic picture of free markets,
fiscal responsibility, and, more generally, the entire dogma of neoclassical economics. As of the fall of 1998,
however, the economies of many tropical countries have contracted severely, and the enthusiasm of the developing
tropics for the free market and all of its ancillary policies is decidedly cooler. Have our traditional approaches
to economics been failing the developing world?
This interdisciplinary book covers the conditions of the developing tropics, the resistance of some of their problems
to earlier attempts at solutions, and the use of new tools to develop a much more comprehensive and empirical framework
for analysis and decision making. It also presents the development of cutting edge technology that links GIS and
modeling approaches with extensive databases on meteorology, soils, agricultural production, and land use. The
book discusses whether development is sustainable through a synthesis of demographic, economic, and resource-specific
considerations. Costa Rica is uniquely suited to this study because of its size, stage of development, democratic
institutions, and national databases.