Arthur Lewis was an economist. He was born in 1915 on the Caribbean island of Saint Lucia, which was then a British colony. His parents were teachers who had moved there from Antigua. His father died when Lewis was seven, and his mother raised five sons alone. Lewis was a brilliant student. He won a scholarship to study in Britain at the London School of Economics. He had wanted to be an engineer, but as a Black man in the 1930s he believed no firm would hire him, so he turned to economics and business. He did extremely well. In 1948, at just 33, he became a professor at the University of Manchester. He was the first Black person to hold such a post at a British university. Lewis spent his career studying a single great question: why some countries are rich and others poor, and how poor countries can grow. He also worked in the real world. He advised the new governments of several countries that were becoming independent from colonial rule, including Ghana, and helped set up the Caribbean Development Bank. Later he taught at Princeton University in the United States. In 1979 he was awarded the Nobel Prize in Economics for his work on development. He remains the only Black person to win the prize in economics. He died in 1991 and is buried in Saint Lucia.
Lewis matters because he helped create a whole field: development economics, the study of how poor countries can become richer. Before Lewis, most economics was built around already-rich countries. He insisted that poor countries' economies worked differently and needed their own theory.
His most famous idea is the 'dual sector model'. He pictured a poor country as having two parts: a large traditional sector, such as small farming, where many people work but each adds very little, and a small modern sector, such as factories, where work is more productive. Growth, Lewis argued, happens as workers move from the first sector to the second. Because the traditional sector has so many spare workers, the modern sector can grow for a long time without wages rising sharply.
Lewis also wrote with unusual seriousness about colonialism and about the world economy as a system that could keep poor countries poor. He did not treat poverty as simply the fault of poor countries.
His influence is large but his model is debated, and critics say it fits some countries and eras better than others. Either way, Lewis put the economics of the poorer world on the map.
For a first introduction, reliable encyclopedia entries give clear, balanced overviews of Lewis's life, his Saint Lucian background, and his core ideas. The Nobel Prize website includes accessible biographical material and his prize lecture. For students, Lewis's life story is itself a strong way into his economics: the connection between his colonial Caribbean origins and his lifelong focus on poverty and growth is clear and motivating.
For deeper reading, 'The Theory of Economic Growth' (1955) is Lewis's major book and is more readable than many economics texts of its era, though parts are technical. His famous 1954 article introducing the dual sector model, often referred to by its discussion of 'unlimited supplies of labour', is the key original source. Robert Tignor's biography 'W. Arthur Lewis and the Birth of Development Economics' is a thorough and fair account of his life and work.
Lewis thought poor countries were poor mainly because of their own failures.
He did not. Lewis studied poor countries as part of a connected world economy shaped by history. He wrote seriously about how colonialism and global trade had left some regions specialised in low-value exports while richer countries kept high-value industry, a pattern that could trap poorer countries. Lewis took the internal workings of poor economies seriously, but he refused the simple story that poverty is just local failure. History, power, and the structure of world trade were part of his explanation.
The dual sector model is a proven description of how every country develops.
It is an influential model, not a universal law, and it is genuinely debated. The model fits some cases well, such as parts of East Asia's rapid industrial growth. It fits others poorly: in many countries, workers moved from farms into low-productivity city jobs rather than modern factories. The assumption that traditional-sector workers add almost nothing has also been questioned by careful research. The honest position is that Lewis's model is a powerful tool that fits some times and places far better than others.
Lewis won the Nobel Prize mainly as a symbolic gesture about race.
This is both inaccurate and unfair. Lewis won the 1979 Nobel Prize for genuine, foundational contributions to economics. He helped create the field of development economics and produced the dual sector model, ideas that shaped how economists study poverty and growth for decades. His being the first and still only Black winner is historically significant, but it is not the reason for the award. The prize recognised serious economic work that stands fully on its own merits.
Lewis was only a theorist who never dealt with the real world.
The opposite is true. Alongside his academic work, Lewis advised the new governments of countries gaining independence from colonial rule, including Ghana, helped design economic plans, and helped establish the Caribbean Development Bank. He moved between theory and practice throughout his career. This applied work was difficult and not always successful, since advice can be ignored or overtaken by politics, but it shows Lewis as an economist deeply engaged with the real problems of real countries.
For research-level engagement, the large literature testing the dual sector model against the actual experience of developing countries, especially in East Asia, Africa, and Latin America, is essential, and students should read both supportive and critical assessments. Lewis's later work, including 'The Evolution of the International Economic Order', sets out his views on the world economy and colonialism. Scholarship on the history of development economics traces how much of the field still rests on foundations Lewis laid.
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