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Topics Covered. Economics, Institutions and Development Human Capital: Education and Health Agricultural and Rural DevelopmentThe EnvironmentPolicymaking and the Roles of the Market, State and Civil SocietyTrade, Balance of Payments and External DebtFinancial Resources for Development. Economics, Institutions and Development .
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1. Economic Development Problems and Policies
Natalya Brown
2. Topics Covered Economics, Institutions and Development
Human Capital: Education and Health
Agricultural and Rural Development
The Environment
Policymaking and the Roles of the Market, State and Civil Society
Trade, Balance of Payments and External Debt
Financial Resources for Development
3. Economics, Institutions and Development Overview
Global Differences in Standard of Living
Purpose of Development Studies: Values and Objectives
The Meaning of Development
International Economic Integration
4. Economics, Institutions and Development Global Differences in Living Standards
The majority of the 6.4 billion people in the world live in relative poverty.
Differences in:
Household Size, Income and Property
Educational Attainment and Opportunities
Health and Nutrition
Access to basic necessities (e.g. clean water)
Life Expectancy
5. Economics, Institutions and Development Global Differences (Cont’d)
Employment Opportunities
Inequality within Countries/Cities
Interdependence: Economic and Environmental interdependence in an ever-shrinking world
6. Economics, Institutions and Development
11. Table 2.3
12. Economics, Institutions and Development The Purpose of Development Studies
Although development economics often draws on the principles and concepts of other branches of economics, it differs from traditional economics and political economy.
Traditional economics (neoclassical economics) is concerned with the efficient allocation of scarce productive resources and sustained optimal growth of production possibilities over time. This is appropriate for studying advanced capitalist economies
Perfect and Complete Markets
Purely Capitalist Incentives in Decision-making
Economic Rationality
13. Economics, Institutions and Development The Purpose of Development Studies (cont’d)
Political economy analyzes how politics and economics are related. It studies the social and institutional mechanisms through which decisions about the allocation of scarce productive resources are made.
Development economics has a broader scope.
The focus is not just on efficient allocation of scarce resources and sustained growth but also analyzing the role of economic, social, political and institutional mechanisms that exist in promoting/hindering the well being of the people in less developed countries.
14. Economics, Institutions and Development The Purpose of Development Studies (cont’d)
It is the economics of the contemporary poor, underdeveloped nations with varying ideological orientations, diverse cultural backgrounds, and very complex yet similar economic problems.
These problems demand a different approach than those of advanced capitalist and centrally planned economies.
15. Economics, Institutions and Development The Purpose of Development Studies (cont’d)
Additional Challenges
Market Imperfections
Informational Asymmetries
Structural Transitions
Multiple Equilibria and Disequilibrium
Political and Social Considerations
Attitudes toward life, work and authority, cultural traditions, integrity of government agencies, levels of political participation, bureaucratic, legal and administrative structures, level of political participation, systems of land tenure, flexibility/rigidity of economic and social classes.
Requires larger government role, wide scale planning and coordinated efforts
16. Economics, Institutions and Development Questions asked in Development Studies:
Can traditional, low-productivity, subsistence societies be transformed into modern, high-productivity, high-income nations?
To what extent are the development goals of developing countries thwarted by the economic activities of developed nations?
How is it that extreme inequality can exist not only across continents but within cities and countries?
17. Economics, Institutions and Development More Questions:
What lessons can developing countries learn from the historical record of economic progress of developed countries?
What are the primary causes of extreme poverty?
What strategies have been most successful in eradicating poverty?
18. Economics, Institutions and Development Even more questions:
What roles do population growth and migration play in the development process?
Do the educations systems in developing countries promote development and reduce inequality or do they help to sustain wealth and class structures?
Are deregulation and privatization the answer?
19. Economics, Institutions and Development Values in Development Economics
The goals of this discipline are derived from subjective value judgments about what is good and desirable.
Economic and Social Equality
Elimination of Poverty
Universal Education
Higher Living Standards
20. Economics, Institutions and Development Values (cont’d)
Political and Economic Freedom and Participation
Self-reliance
National Independence
Institutional Modernization
Personal Fulfillment
21. Economics, Institutions and Development Core Values of Development
Common goals sought by all individuals and societies
Sustenance: ability to meet basic needs – food, shelter, health and protection. “Absolute underdevelopment” describes the absence of these basic needs.
Self-Esteem: to achieve a sense of worth and self-respect (i.e. dignity)
Freedom from Servitude: emancipation from alienating material conditions of life, from social servitude to nature, ignorance, other people, misery, institutions, and dogmatic beliefs.
United Nations’ Millennium Development Goals
22. Economics, Institutions and Development Core Objectives of Development
The improvement in the access and distribution of basic necessities
The improvement of living standards
The expansion economic and social opportunities
23. Economics, Institutions and Development The Meaning of Development
Traditional Measures
The capacity of a once relatively stagnant national economy to generate and sustain significant economic growth
Annual increases of 5% or higher in gross national product. Alternative measures include income per capita and real income per capita (‘real’ – accounting for inflation).
Changes in the structure of production – shifts from agriculture towards manufacturing and services (i.e. industrialization)
Little attention paid to eradicating poverty, unemployment, inequality and discrimination.
24. Figure 2.2
25. Table 2.5
27. Economics, Institutions and Development Contemporary Measures
Broader definition of development to include the reduction of poverty, unemployment and inequality within the context of a growing economy.
The goal can no longer be just higher incomes. The objectives of development must also include better education, health and nutrition, equal opportunities, individual rights and freedoms, clean environment etc.
28. Economics, Institutions and Development Sen’s Capability Approach
“Economic growth cannot be sensibly treated as an end in itself. Development has to be more concerned with enhancing the lives we lead and the freedoms we enjoy.”
-Amartya Sen, Development as Freedom
1998 Nobel Laureate in Economics
29. Economics, Institutions and Development Sen’s Functionings and Capabilities
Functionings: what an individual does (or can do) with the commodities of given characteristics that are in his/her possession or control. This reflects the various things an individual may value doing or being.
Capabilities: the freedom an individual possesses with respect to choice of functionings, given his/her personal traits and his control over commodities.
30. Economics, Institutions and Development Sen points to the limitations of traditional measures of real income in defining well being. These measures fail to include:
Personal heterogeneities
Environmental diversities
Variations in social climate
Differences in relational perspectives
Distribution within households
Sen argues that changes in functions and capabilities are better measures of development
31. Figure 2.3
33. Table 2.9
34. Common Characteristics of Developing Nations Low levels of living
Low levels of productivity
High rates of population growth and dependency burdens
Substantial dependence on agricultural production and primary-product exports
Prevalence of imperfect markets
Dependence and vulnerability
35. How Developing Countries Today Differ from Developed Countries in Their Earlier Stages Physical and human resource endowments
Per Capita incomes and levels of GDP in relation to the rest of the world
Climate
Population size, distributions and growth
Historical role of international migration
International trade benefits
Basic R&D capabilities
Stability and flexibility of political-social institutions
Efficacy of domestic economic institutions
36. International Economic Integration Development and Globalization
Development in the Post-Industrial Age
Case Study: Indian Software Industry
37. Economic Globalization
38. Development and Globalization Expansion of opportunities for LDCs.
Improved resource allocation
Increased efficiency through competition
Learning and technology transfer
Shift to value-added activities
Marginalized economies
Increase in the number of countries whose GNP per capita falls in the lowest quintile.
Fewer middle income countries.
Slower upward mobility
Emphasizes differences in infrastructure and policymaking aptitude.
40. Development in the Post-Industrial Age Geographical boundaries losing meaning
Modern Era vs. Post-modern Era definition of development
Benefits to Globalization and the Information Revolution
Integration into the world market
Development of new industries
“Leap-frogging” into the digital age.
Source of economic security
41. Costs – increased inequality
The “digital divide”
A premium placed on infrastructure: education and access to computers and communication networks
New meaning for “geographical isolation”.
42. Case Study: Indian Software Industry Success story but also an example of dualism in development
History and Growth factors
Advantages and Disadvantages
43. Economics, Institutions and Development Next topic:
Human Capital: Health and Education