Ian W. McLean is currently a visiting research fellow in economics at the University of Adelaide, where he taught for many years. He is the coeditor of The Australian Economy in the Long Run .
"""[T]he first major economic history of Australia for 40 years ...""--Ross Gittins, Sydney Morning Herald ""[R]emarkable... Why Australia Prospered distills decades of research and teaching to present an account of Australia and its development that is solid, surprising and pertinent to the contemporary debate about the country's future... In his assembly of evidence and his judicious review of the debates of Australian development, McLean has made a profoundly important contribution to our understanding of where Australia has come from as a nation, where they country is now--and where it is going.""--Australian Financial Review ""In Why Australia Prospered, Ian McLean explores the fascinating mix of factors explaining this persistence of prosperity... [A] carefully researched book ...""--Times Higher Education Supplement ""McLean provides a comprehensive account of the factors contributing to Australia's remarkable economic growth.""--Choice ""In this impressive book McLean demonstrates the contribution economic history can make to scholarship on the past and the politics of the present... [T]he work of a manifestly fine scholar with many important points to make and ideas that need to be heard far beyond university economics departments, or what's left of them.""--Stephen Matchett, Australian ""[A]n outstanding piece of scholarship... Ian McLean has written a timely and masterful account of the long sweep of Australia's economic history, which will be relished by anyone interested in the unique circumstances of this country's remarkable economic development. Written for the non-specialist, the narrative is accessible, brisk and appropriately, if sparsely, illustrated with charts and tables.""--Ian Harper, EH.Net ""[T]his is a superb book. Anyone with even a superficial interest in Australian economic history should read it, and be educated by it.""--Tim Hatton, Australian Economic History Review"