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What is Development Economics

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Title: What is Development Economics


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What is Development Economics
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What is Development Economics
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What is Development Economics
  • During the past three centuries, three economists
    stand out as archetypes,
  • symbols of three distinct approaches to economic
    philosophy, guiding development throughout the
    world.
  • Adam Smith, a student of the Scottish
    Enlightenment, expounded a system of natural
    liberty, a liberal democratic order consisting
    of an unfettered market and limited government,
    and elucidated how a nation flourishes and
    advances the standard of living of its citizens.
  • In the nineteenth century, the German philosopher
    Karl Marx attracted and inspired workers and
    intellectuals who felt disenfranchised by
    industrial capitalism and sought radical
    solutions to inequality, alienation, and
    exploitation of the underprivileged.
  • Finally, in the twentieth century, the British
    economist John Maynard Keynes sought to stabilize
    a crisis-prone market system through activist
    fiscal and monetary government policies.

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What is Development Economics
  • What is development?
  • To understand Development, first we have to
    understand what development thinking . Hettene in
    his review of Development Theory and the Three
    Worlds (1995) suggested that Development involves
    three things.
  • Development Theory, Development Strategies and
    Development Strategies.

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What is Development Economics
  • Development Theory may be regarded as sets of
    ostensibly logical propositions, which aim to
    explain how development has occurred in the past,
    and/or how it should occur in the future.
  • Development Theories can either be normative or
    positive. Normative that they can generalize
    about what should happen or be the case in an
    ideal world. Positive, in the sense of dealing
    with what has generally been the case in the
    past.
  • According to Hettene, a study of Development is
    explicitly normative. Teachers, students,
    researchers and practitioners in the field want
    to change the world, not only analyse it.

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What is Development Economics
  • Development Strategies can be defined as the
    practical path to Development which may be
    pursued by international agencies, states in both
    the developing and developed worlds, NOGs,
    Community based organisations or individuals, in
    an attempt to stimulate change with particular
    nations, regions and continents.
  • Hettene provides a definition of development
    strategies as effort to change existing economic
    and social structures and institutions in order
    to find enduring solutions to the problems facing
    decision makers (state and other actors)

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What is Development Economics
  • Development Ideologies Different development
    agendas reflect different goals and objectives.
    These goals reflect social, economic, political,
    cultural, ethical, moral and even religious
    influences.
  • Development Ideology refers to set of political
    and economic, cultural and religious beliefs that
    finally shape up development strategies.

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Development
  • Development economic first appeared as distinct
    area of research in 1940s 50s, concurrently
    with decolonisation of Asia, Middle East and
    Africa.
  • The main object of the research was to uncover
    the causes of the underdevelopment.
  • As a result of this pursuit, 3 major approaches
    appeared
  • Capitalist theories of development.
  • Neo-Marxist/Dependency theories
  • Theories of Human Development
  • .

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Development
  • Neo classical free Market
  • Neoliberal policies of the capitalism draws
    inspiration from the classical political economy
    of 18th and 19th century represented by Adam
    Smith (1723-1790), Thomas Robert Malthus
    (1766-1834), David Ricardo (1772-1832)
  • Adam Smith (1723-1790)
  • Adam smiths Laissez-faire was based on three
    principles
  • Freedom Individuals have the right to produce
    and exchange production, labour, and capital as
    they see it.
  • Competition individual have the right to compete
    in the production and exchange of goods and
    services.
  • Justice the actions of individuals must be just
    and honest , according to the rules of the
    society.

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  • He underlined the critical role of the market
    mechanism.
  • The major thrust of his argument was that there
    may be producers who will try to sell inferior
    goods at high prices, but if the producers are
    competing they will all eventually be forced to
    deliver proper goods at reasonable prices.
  • Further, he says when market is free then demand
    would increase and production would grow as a
    result of that.

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Development
  • At the same time specialisation would also
    increase as a result of the competition.
  • Specialisation, for number of reasons, would lead
    to higher productivity per working hour.
  • The major condition for this was an increased
    accumulation of wealth which had to come form
    rich, especially industrialist and their profits
    for productive investment in new industries.
  • As a result, the newly emerging industrial sector
    would serve as a base of aggregate growth.
  • To Smith, accumulation and investment of profits
    were the most important determinant of economic
    growth and has played important role in the
    debated ever since.

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Development
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Development
  • David Ricardo he was the first one to elaborate
    on the Adam Smiths political economy, especially
    on Land-rent, distribution and the theory of
    comparative advantage.
  • In addition to capital, Ricardo found two other
    sources of growth - technical innovation and
    international trade.
  • Ricardo further argued that continued population
    growth and the corresponding increase in the
    demand for food would result in the conversion of
    all land for agricultural production.
  • Hence, the utilization of land would cause the
    land value/rent to go up, mainly due to the
    farmers competition for the better and more
    profitable land.

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Theories of Economic Development
  • According to David Ricardo, this process would
    result in a redistribution of national income to
    the benefit of landed aristocracy and to the
    detriment of industrialists.
  • Simultaneously marginal cost of agriculture
    production would then rise with increase in the
    cultivation of marginal land.
  • Food prices would then rise, leading to stronger
    pressure on wages which would in return, eat into
    the profits of industrialists from outside.
  • Final result would be the squeezing of the
    industrial profits to zero whereby the whole
    foundation of growth would disappear.

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Theories of Economic Development
  • According to Ricardo, only technical innovation
    and international trade could prevent this sad
    outcome.
  • The theory of comparative advantage.
  • According to which each country should
    concentrate its production in areas where it had
    comparative advantage in relation to other
    country keeping in view the productivity of its
    workers.

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Theories of Economic Development
  • In accordance with this basic thesis, Ricardo
    suggested that non-industrialised countries such
    as Portugal should refrain form trying to build
    up industries and instead concentrate on
    production of, for instance, wine. Industrialised
    countries like England on the other hand should
    produce and exchange products such as textile and
    clothing for Portuguese products.
  • Malthus
  • According to his theories, population increase
    faster than resources. So countries should
    concentrate their efforts on population control
    in order to achieve the target of growth.
  • In case no attempt is made on the part of the
    countries, then nature would intervene in the
    form of natural calamities in order to maintain
    balance between population and resources.

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Theories of Economic Development
  • John Maynard Keynes in his book on the General
    Theory of Employment, Interest and Money did not
    focus on growth and conditions in the colonies
    but rather discussed relationship between state
    and market.
  • To Keynes employment was key to growth.
    Therefore, he strongly focused in the dual role
    of state and market.
  • According to him, market imperfection could be
    overcome by state intervention.
  • Further to support state, he envisioned the
    institutional control of international trade and
    finance.

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Theories of Economic Development
  • It was in this context that the IMF and World
    Bank were formed in 1944 with the objective to
    help the development process in Europe and bring
    financial stability by controlling exchange
    control and providing liquidity to the members
    states facing problem of balance of payment.
  • By the time there was clear difference in stand
    of three main schools of thought
  • Neoclassical economist saw the economic
    development in terms of the utility maximisation
    on the part of the consumer, profit maximisation
    on the part of the producer and the central role
    of the market as determining factor.

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Theories of Economic Development
  • Developmental Economist saw the economic
    development in terms of the redistribution of the
    growth and more so in terms of the social
    development of the society.
  • Modernisation theorist saw the economic
    development as a process of the transformation of
    the society from traditionalism to modernism.
  • They are mainly concerned with how traditional
    values, attitudes, practices and traditional
    structures break down and replaced with more
    modern one.
  • What condition promotes and impedes such
    transformation was the main focus of the
    modernisation theorist.

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Theories of Economic Development
  • Capital Accumulation and Balanced Growth
  • Rosenstein Rodan and Nurkse.
  • He was polish born economics. According his
    theory of the development that only massive
    industrialisation way forward to growth and
    progress for back ward areas for Eastern Europe
    and rest of the world.

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Theories of Economic Development
  • He further expanded his argument into the theory
    of Big Push, according to which the backward
    areas were characterised by low income and little
    buying power.
  • Further they were characterised by high
    employment and under employment in agriculture.
  • To break out of this mould, it is necessary to
    industrialize.
  • However, private companies can not do this alone,
    partly due to the lack of the incentives to
    invest as long as market for their products
    remained small.

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Theories of Economic Development
  • To him , for example, one of the major impediment
    to the growth is the cost being incurred on the
    training of workers.
  • According to him barriers to growth could be
    overcome with the
  • state intervention
  • investment in education of the workforce
  • planning and organising of large scale investment
    in industrial sector.
  • Rosenstein Rodan compared big push with aeroplane
    which needs critical ground speed before becoming
    airborne.
  • A similar condition applied to the growth
    process. Launching country into the
    self-sustaining growth requires critical mass of
    simultaneous investment and other initiatives.

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Theories of Economic Development
  • Nurkse
  • He further developed many of Rodans points.
  • He asserted that the economically backward
    countries were caught in vicious circle of
    poverty.
  • The reason for this situation is that the demand
    in backward society is low as a consequence of
    the very low income.
  • When demand is low and market limited then there
    will not be much incentive to make private
    investment.
  • Therefore, capital formation and accumulation
    remain at very low.

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Theories of Economic Development
  • As a result, no productivity improvement occurs
    and income therefore remain low.
  • On the supply side, the low incomes result in a
    small capacity to save which, in turn, is
    reflected in lack of capital and low
    productivity. The final outcome is reproduction
    of mass poverty.
  • Nurkse added to this that whole problem with
    attaining the necessary savings and capital
    investment was compounded by rich peoples
    tendency to copy, in their own consumption, the
    consumption standards and patterns of
    industrially advanced countries. This propensity
    on the part of the rich finally leads to
    reduction in the saving rate.

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Theories of Economic Development
  • To break out of this these poverty circles,
    according to Nurkse, the creation of strong
    incentives to invest along with increased
    mobilisation of investible funds.
  • This requires significant expansion of the market
    through simultaneous massive and balanced capital
    investments in a number of industrial sectors.
  • This further depends on the active involvement of
    state.

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Theories of Economic Development
  • Demand side
  • low level of
  • capital
    formation
  • Little incentive to
    low productivity level
  • invest
  • limited market

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Theories of Economic Development
  • Supply side
  • Low income
  • Small capacity
    low
  • to save
    Productivity
  • Lack of
    capital

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Theories of Economic Development
  • Unbalance growth and income distribution.
  • Hirschman and Kuznets
  • Unlike Rosenstein Rodan and Nurkse, Hirschman
    rejected the notion that growth process could be
    initiated with balanced capital investment in
    several sectors.
  • He claimed that there was a need to maintain and
    accelerate imbalances and disequilibria in
    backward economies.
  • According to them there were other barriers to
    growth than limited market and the lack of
    capital investment. The major impediment to
    growth is lack of entrepreneur class and
    management.

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Theories of Economic Development
  • According to them if the country were ready to
    apply the doctrine of balanced growth then it
    would be underdeveloped.
  • Instead of spending resources thinly over several
    sector and manage badly, developing countries
    should invest in selected sectors which had many
    forward and backward linkages.
  • Again they suggest redistribution in favour of
    rich as they have tendency to save and invest and
    they could be major source of growth. After which
    there will be trickle down to the poor in such
    way that in the end everybody would be better
    off.
  • Simon Kuznets had the same views that growth
    would initially produce inequality but later
    inequality would be flatten out.

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Theories of Economic Development
  • Modernisation and stages of growth
  • Lewis and Rostow.
  • They considered development as modernisation
    process.
  • Developing courtiers have abundant labour force
    but due to the low income their saving rate is
    low.
  • They considered the existence of entrepreneur
    class necessary for the transition to
    modernisation.
  • Lewis divided economy into the capitalist and
    subsistence sector.
  • The capitalist sector employs wage earners, used
    reproducible capital and paid capitalists for the
    use of capital.

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Theories of Economic Development
  • Subsistence sector was characterised by being
    based primarily on family labour.
  • It was in the subsistence sector that the
    abundant labour reserves were fond not
    necessarily in the shape of many unemployed but
    rather in the shape of many underemployed.
  • These underemployed could be transferred to the
    capitalist sector with out bringing about a
    decline in the subsistence sectors total
    production, and a wage which was determined by
    the average in the subsistence sector.
  • The central problem in the in the theory of
    economic development was therefore to investigate
    under which circumstances it would be possible to
    increase the rate of saving and investment in a
    backward and stagnant economy.

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Theories of Economic Development
  • Lewiss answer to this central problem was that
    the poor in the subsistence sector and workers in
    the capitalist sector could not produce increased
    savings, because they were simply too poor to
    save a significant proportion of their income.
  • Same is for the rich in the subsistence sector,
    because they were mostly landowners, who used
    their rents and other income unproductively to
    existing assets rather than to create new ones.
  • Therefore capitalists have to produce the
    necessary increase in the saving rate.

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Theories of Economic Development
  • Rostow like Lewis, differentiated between the
    traditional sector and modern capitalist sector.
  • Further, he agreed with Lewis that a crucial
    precondition for lifting an economy out of low
    income stagnation into sustained growth is the
    significant increase in the share of saving and
    investment in national income.
  • But Rostow was more interested in describing the
    whole process through which society develops in
    different stages.

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Five stages of Growth -- Rostow
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What is Development Economics
  • Traditional Society characterized by primitive
    technology, hierarchical social structures,
    production and trade based on custom and barter,
    as in pre- seventh century Britain.
  • Precondition for take off With improved
    technology and transport and increased trade and
    investment, economically based elite and more
    centralized national state. Economic progress is
    assisted by education, entrepreneurship and
    institutions capable of mobilizing capital.
    Always traditional society exits side by side
    with modern economic activities as in Seventh and
    eighteenth century Britain.

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What is Development Economics
  • Take off It is characterized by rapid economic
    growth, more sophisticated technology and
    considerable investment, particulary in
    manufacturing industry. Share of net investment
    and saving in national income rise from 5 percent
    to 10 per cent or more, resulting in a process of
    industrialization. Agriculture becomes
    increasingly commercialized and more productive
    with increasing demand from growing urban
    centres.
  • A period of self-sustaining growth, with
    increasing investment of 10 and 20 per cent of
    national income. Technology becomes more
    sophisticated. There is greater diversification
    in the industrial and agricultural sectors .
  • Age of High mass consumption The final stage
    characterized by the increasing importance of
    consumer goods and services and the rise of
    welfare state.

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What is Development Economics
  • From dualism to basic needs
  • Earlier theories presented by Lewis, Hirschman,
    Myrdal, and Rostow failed to eliminate poverty
    and the so called trickle down effects of
    growth generally failed to benefit the poor.
  • Dudley Seers ---- Poverty, inequality and
    unemployment.
  • Basic need approach --- Food, Health Education.

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What is Development Economics
  • Basic approach gained momentum when ILO
    conference in 1976 on World Employment adopted a
    declaration of Principles and Programme of Action
    for Basic Needs Strategy of Development.
  • Poverty alleviation was the key objective in the
    period up to 2000.
  • It failed to achieve its goal due to top-down
    approach.

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What is Development Economics
  • Neoliberalism.
  • Neoliberalism, in theory, is essentially about
    making trade between nations easier. It is about
    freer movement of goods, resources and
    enterprises in a bid to always find cheaper
    resources, to maximize profits and efficiency.
  • To help accomplish this, neoliberalism requires
    the removal of various controls deemed as
    barriers to free trade, such as
  • Tariffs
  • Regulations
  • Certain standards, laws, legislation and
    regulatory measures
  • Restrictions on capital flows and investment

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What is Development Economics
  • Central tents of Neoliberalism are
  • The rule of the market freedom for capital,
    goods and services, where the market is
    self-regulating allowing the trickle down
    notion of wealth distribution. It also includes
    the deunionizing of labor forces and removals of
    any impediments to capital mobility, such as
    regulations. The freedom is from the state, or
    government.

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What is Development Economics
  • Reducing public expenditure for social services,
    such as health and education, by the government
  • Deregulation, to allow market forces to act as a
    self-regulating mechanism
  • Privatization of public enterprise (things from
    water to even the internet)
  • Changing perceptions of public and community good
    to individualism and individual responsibility.

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What is Development Economics
  • Effects
  • Some 3 billion people or half of humanity
    live on under 2 dollars a day
  • 86 percent of the worlds resources are consumed
    by the worlds wealthiest 20 
  •  
  • Background ---oil crises of 1973 and 1979
    triggered slowdown creating recession and
    precipitated Global Financial Crisis in the
    South 19881-82.
  • Brazil, Maxico and Poland failed to pay back
    their loans to Northern creditors.

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What is Development Economics
  • North realized if necessary measures were not
    taken, entire International financial system will
    be undermined and will collapse.
  • IMF assumed lead role
  • Introduction of SAPs
  • Removal of SAPs with PRSP

    .
  • Enhanced Structural Adjustment Facility (ESAF)
    with Poverty Reduction and Growth Facility (PRGF)

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Theories of Economic Development
Conclusion
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