170 likes | 225 Views
Explore the nuances between economic growth and development, the wealth gap, and obstacles hindering economic progress. Learn how factors like natural resources, human resources, capital formation, technology, and sociocultural and institutional aspects impact development. Discover the connection between low per capita income, limited savings, and investment risks in less developed countries. This article delves into the importance of promoting growth in underdeveloped nations and presents strategies for more developed countries to contribute to global prosperity through trade, foreign aid, private capital flows, foreign direct investment, and technology transfer.
E N D
Economic Growth and Development The Ultimate End-Game of Economic Analysis
A Few Warm Up Questions • What is “Development?” • What is the difference between economic growth and development? • What does it mean for a country to be “developing?” • What factors (economic, political, cultural, social) are necessary for development to occur? • Is promoting the growth and development of LDCs in the best interest of more developed countries?
The Wealth (and Welfare) Gap • The 80/20 rule does apply … • The richest 20% of the world’s population receives more than 80% of the world’s income • At the other end of the spectrum … • The poorest 60% receives less than 6% of the world’s income
A Few Other Comparisons • The GDP of the U.S. is about 70% greater than the combined GDPs of all the developing countries in the world. • The U.S.(with only 5% of the world’s population) accounts for more than 30% of the world’s output.
Defining the Challenge • So, just how big is the global development challenge? • Let’s take a look …
Obstacles to (and Sources of) Economic Development • Natural resources • Human resources • Capital formation • Technology • Sociocultural and institutional factors
Natural Resources • Availability of natural resources varies widely among LDCs • If available, LDC natural resources are sometimes owned or controlled by foreign MNCs. • Commodity prices subject to price volatility • Without a strong resource base – a tougher road to development
Human Resources • Overpopulation • Extremely low per capita income • Relatively high population growth rates • Any increase in income tends to increase population growth rates • Un/underemployment • Low labor productivity (literacy, health care, technology, investment)
Capital Formation • Capital investment drives increases in labor productivity and per capita output. • If output rises faster than population growth, savings may enable additional capital formation. • But, generating savings is extremely difficult when income levels are so low.
Capital Formation • Relatively high level of investment risk in LDCs acts as a disincentive for investment • Political risk • Currency devaluation • Poor public infrastructure
Technology • Linked to capital investment • Helps drive increases in productivity • Ability to borrow technology from more advanced countries • Lack of skilled labor and existing capital base can limit application of new technology
Sociocultural Obstacles • Culture, tradition and custom • Tribal allegiances and animosity • Views regarding work and individual achievement
Institutional Obstacles • Corruption and bribery • Education systems • Land ownership (too concentrated or too fractured)
The Vicious Circle • Low per capita income … • Creates a low level of demand and low (or negative) savings rate … • Which limits new investment … • Which maintains low productivity … • And perpetuates low income, which is further reduced by population growth • And the cycle begins again …
How Can More Developed Nations Help? • Expanding trade • Foreign aid (worth a separate discussion) • Flows of private capital • Direct foreign investment • Technology often moves with capital • Selective regional focus