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Theories of Economic Development. The Liberal Paradigm. Today’s Agenda. Review: Neo-Liberalism, Casino Capitalism, demise of the welfare state, the Transformation of International Institutions Is the World Developing or Underdeveloped?
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Theories of Economic Development The Liberal Paradigm
Today’s Agenda • Review: Neo-Liberalism, Casino Capitalism, demise of the welfare state, the Transformation of International Institutions • Is the World Developing or Underdeveloped? • The good news: Growth and aggregate improvement in human welfare indicators • The bad news: inequality and a growing gap between rich and poor • Liberal views on development and explanations for the growing gap • A. Rostow and Stages • B. Liberalism and integration into the international economy: • Staples Theory (Trade) • Product cycle (MNC), • Institutions (Washington Consensus) • C. Internal Requirements for Development • Move from a traditionsl to a modern society • Democracy • D. Summary of the Liberal position
Review: The rise of a “casino” economy • End of hegemony removes international “safety net” • Need to compete in the global economy for economic growth and to remove BoP deficits • Requirement for competitiveness: End of the welfare state • International institutions that promote and protect a neo-liberal international economy
New Role for the IMF: spread liberalism to developing countries • Balance of payments lending in exchange for liberal reforms: structural adjustment • Washington Consensus: stabilize, privatize, liberalize: put on the “golden straightjacket” • No chance for the welfare state • Contributes to freedom of finance capital to roam the earth • Contributes to freedom of multinational corporations to roam the earth
New Role for the World Bank: focus on fostering neo-liberal policies as condition of lending • Moved from the task of financing reconstruction projects for Europe after WWII • To the task of financing development projects in poor countries • Imposed the same conditions on lending as the IMF
GATT becomes the WTO • WTO is a binding treaty • Becomes the LAW in its member states • An arena for negotiating the conditions for trade liberalization • Overseas implementation of multilateral free trade agreements and punishment for non-compliance • Goodbye embedded liberalism: members not permitted to protect their populations • Goodbye child labor protections • Goodbye environmental protections • Goodbye health and safety protections • Hello Private actors: banks, multinational corporations • Hello Private Actors: banks, multinational corporations
This institutional framework permits The rise of Multinational corporations • Given these new “global guardians” of the market, private actors have new powers • Corporations sit on advisory boards of WTO, IMF, and World Bank • Global FDI grew from $50 billion to $2.5 trillion in 30 years
…and the growth of unregulated global finance • International movements of money – both volume and speed • cross-border bank lending has grown about 10% annually. • daily foreign exchange trades now exceed by a wide margin the combined reserves of all central banks.
The result: Increasing privatization • Some say international institutions governing the global economy have been weakened • Only those who prefer embedded liberalism say that • The institutions have simply changed (and strengthened) to govern an international neo-liberal economy • Privatization is the goal of neo-liberalism
So….. If the U.S. pursued economic nationalism after hegemony, how did we get a neo-liberal global economy? • U.S. hegemony supported embedded liberalism • Without a hegemon and with IFIs and WTO transformed to protect neo-liberalism, Private forces are unleashed and unregulated • Many governments were then free to pursue economic nationalism • Why didn’t the world devolve into the fragmentation of the 1930s?
Because of the U.S. market and the $ • First of all, freedom, not stability, is the goal • The U.S. market still stimulates exports abroad because • Americans consume wildly • Demand met by imports • The U.S. is also a magnet for foreign capital • Strong dollar • Low inflation rate • But Financial crisis suggests instability
Maybe fragementation will yet occur. Without embedded liberalism, economic nationalism can rear its head: indicators are PTAs and Subsidies • What are PTAs? • Two or more parties with preferential access • Viviolates MFN obligation • End of 2004: 300 PTAs • 50% of global trade • Rich countries give mammoth agricultural subsidies
The WTO: A Distributive Justice Critique: neoliberalism creates growing inequality • The rich get richer, the poor get poorer • A “race to the bottom” • “non-commercial values” cannot play a part in trade rules • Property rights preferred to health and human lives: “right to profit” over “right to life”
And Institutions of economic neo-liberalism undermine democracy • Are these organizations a new source of global dominance, surveillance, and manipulation of the nation-state? • Conditions of IMF and world bank loans not subject to domestic debate in borrowing countries • WTO rules supersede domestic laws
The Economic Nationalist Critique • Organizations undermine state sovereignty and make private actors more powerful than states
A Liberal rebuttal: Global Growth without a hegemon and with neo-liberalism
Is the world developing or underdeveloped….”emerging markets” or just poor countries?
Who is North and Who is South? • North = World’s Rich • South = World’s poor, or developing nations, or emerging markets (more complicated) • Used to be called the Third World • We can no longer lump together the countries of the “south” • Some are growing and “emerging” and some are not.
The Good News • 20th century economic output off the charts! • South Korea and China doubled productive output in 10 years • Humans are, on the whole more healthy now than 100 years ago.
Health and income have improved • World Health Chart.lnk
Health and well-being GapminderFlash_MDG4_07jan09.exe
The Bad News: From Local to Global Inequality • The Pre-modern world: inequality within societies • Today: inequality between societies • What determines whether you will be rich or poor? • Where is the “class struggle” now?
Income distribution movie.swf
Who consumes the most? Global Consumption, 2004(in billion US dollars)
Liberal explanations for global growth with global inequality? • Walt Rostow: the intellectual context • No previous conceptual apparatus • But experience with Marshall Plan • But there were historical patterns of development • Winning the cold war meant: Helping the “Third world” develop Within the liberal capitalist model
Liberal Economic Development: “Modernization” • From an agrarian to an industrial society through absorbtion of “western” liberal models, i.e. But this requires a “jump start” in the cold war environment: help from the rich liberal countries The Stages of growth are…….
Stage 1: Traditional society • Why no growth?
Stage 2: Preconditions for Growth • Population growth will outpace economic growth in traditional society • Stimulus needed to mobilize capital and resources • Revolution and institutional restructuring • Technological innovation • Favorable international environment • External Injection of capital
Stage 3: The Takeoff • Productive investment must rise to 10 per cent of national income • Needed: rapid accumulation of capital and productive investment • Taxes • Finance • Stock market • Trade • Foreign investment • aid
4. The Drive to Maturity • Employment growth • Growth in national income • Rise of consumer demands • Strong domestic markets
The Importance of Capital Accumulation • Capital accumulation is the name of the game • So how does it happen?
Economic development and the International Economy • International interdependence will lead to economic development of ALL countries in a liberal system • Trade serves as an engine of growth
The Staples Theory • Staples are field crops or minerals • Earnings finance industrial growth • Canada and Australia developed this way • This justifies the theory of comparative advantage • Export-led growth is the way to develop
Trade and the product cycle • Corporations maximize their own growth and the growth of the countries in which they operate • Three stages of corporate expansion and growth
the introductory or innovative phase • Located in advanced countries • Comparative advantage in product development because of large home market • And lots of resources • Corporation enjoys monopolistic position • Foreign demand grows • Corporation exports
The maturing phase of the product cycle • Technology diffuses • Innovative firm loses competitive edge as technology becomes available • Advantage shifts to foreign production to replace exports and hold market share • Innovative firm establishes foreign branches
The Standardized Phase • Production fully routine • Comparative advantage shifts to the developing country • Export platforms develop
So….is there a symbiotic relationship between the MNC product cycle and global economic development?
Role of International Institutions: Washington Consensus on conditions for loans and aid • Internal liberalization of Markets • Integration into the world Economy • Reduction of extensive government programs because they……. • Tend of allocate funds to non-productive activities • Entrepreneurs can’t find funding • Create wrong incentives • Stimulate pressure for trade protection
So why do many countries stagnate and show little or no economic growth? • External connections like trade and investment are important, but that’s not all….. • There are internal requirements for developmet as well…. • Traditional culture must give way to modern culture….