Struggle, Reform, Boom and Bust
An Economic History of Papua New Guinea since Independence
Authored by: Stephen HowesPlease read Conditions of use before downloading the formats.
Description
Since Papua New Guinea’s independence in 1975, economic growth has been slow but volatile, with major changes in economic structure and policies, as well as in politics and governance.
This economic history, written to commemorate the fiftieth year of independence and the first to be produced in some 15 years, divides the half century since independence into four periods: the relative stability but also early struggles of the seventies and eighties; the crises and reforms of the nineties; the boom of the 2000s; and the quiet bust of the 2010s. Two chapters cover each period’s major economic, policy, institutional and political developments. The final three chapters provide an overall assessment of economic performance and policies since independence and link them with its politics and institutions.
The book combines painstaking documentation with original analysis to reveal both the strengths and weaknesses of the PNG economy, and theorises that the country’s hyper-politics and insecurity have combined to produce, and are reinforced by, a weak but stable state, and low and increasingly resource-dependent growth.
Data-driven, frank, insightful and engaging, Struggle, Reform, Boom and Bust is written by an expert team of economists from the University of Papua New Guinea and The Australian National University under the leadership of Professor Stephen Howes, Director of the ANU Development Policy Centre. It is an essential resource for anyone interested in the economy of Papua New Guinea, as well as an important contribution to the literature on the challenges and institutional determinants of post-colonial development.
Details
- ISBN (print):
- 9781760466992
- ISBN (online):
- 9781760467005
- Publication date:
- Jul 2025
- Imprint:
- ANU Press
- DOI:
- http://doi.org/10.22459/SRBB.2025
- Series:
- Pacific Series
- Disciplines:
- Arts & Humanities: History; Business & Economics
- Countries:
- Pacific: Papua New Guinea
PDF Chapters
Struggle, Reform, Boom and Bust »
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- Preliminary pages (PDF, 787 KB)
- List of illustrations (PDF, 72 KB)
- Authors (PDF, 54 KB)
- Preface and acknowledgements (PDF, 69 KB)
- Acronyms and disambiguation (PDF, 72 KB)
Part I: 1975–88: The seventies and eighties: Early struggles (PDF, 42 KB)
Part II: 1989–2003: The nineties: Volatility, crisis and reform (PDF, 44 KB)
Part III: 2004–13: The noughties: Boom time (PDF, 43 KB)
Part IV: 2014–22: The tens: The quiet bust (PDF, 50 KB)
- The bust and its macroeconomics (PDF, 408 KB) doi
- The turn to economic nationalism (PDF, 276 KB) doi
Part V: Overview and conclusion (PDF, 51 KB)
Reviews
‘ … a profound wake-up call to all those that aspire to economic leadership in our country.'
– PNG Treasurer Ian Ling-Stuckey
'Papua New Guinea’s half-century report card.'
'The book will quickly become the standard reference on PNG’s economic history. For scholars, it sets a new benchmark in combining rigorous data with political economy analysis. For policymakers, it provides lessons that have been learned painfully but too often ignored. For the general public, it provides a clear explanation of why, despite massive resource wealth, most promises since independence remain unfulfilled.'
– Kingtau Mambon, Economics Lecturer, University of Papua New Guinea
'This important new work provides a clear, readable, and indeed enjoyable overview of 50 years of economic policy and outcomes in Papua New Guinea, from 1975 to the present.
It fills a gap and it needs to be read by a wide audience.'
' … the most thorough and well-researched account yet of PNG’s economic path … essential reading for anyone trying to understand why development outcomes remain poor, despite decades of donor support and resource wealth.'
– Matthew Morris, former PNG prime-ministerial adviser
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