Abstract

The termination of the Japanese colonial tie, the new supply of American aid, and the peculiar domestic conditions, etc., acted, through multiple processes, as impeding as well as accelerating factors for the post‐war economic development of Taiwan. By tracing these processes, the author tries to suggest that there may be such general factors as will effectively be applicable to the other underdeveloped countries on the one hand, and such historical, social, and international factors which may preclude their ready applicability on the other.

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