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Title: 5.4 Growth and development strategies


1
5.4 Growth and development strategies
  • INTERNATIONAL BACCALAUREATE

2
5.4 Growth and development strategies
  • As a general rule, growth models describe how
    growth has occurred and so suggest that this may
    be replicated. Growth strategies are economic
    policies and measures designed to gain growth,
    and development strategies are economic policies
    and measures designed to achieve human
    development.

3
Harrod-Domar growth model
  • In the 1940's Roy Harrod (1948) and Evsey Domar
    (1946) separately developed a macro-dynamic model
    through an extension of Keyns's theory. The
    model's original intent was to identify the
    source of instability in the growth of developed
    economies where effective demand is normally
    exceeded by supply capacity. In the 1950's and
    1960's this model was applied to economic
    planning in developed economies.

4
Harrod-Domar growth model
  • The model states that the rate of growth of GDP
    is determined by the national savings ratio and
    the ratio of capital to output in the economy.
  • Rate of growth of GDP savings ratio/ Capital
    output ratio
  • So if the savings ratio in the country is 5 and
    the capital/output ratio is 2.5, then the country
    can grow at a rate of 2 per annum.

5
Harrod-Domar growth model
  • If the model is correct then we can say that the
    rate of growth of an economy may be increased by
    one of two things.
  • Increasing the level of saving in the economy
  • Reducing the capital/output ratio in the economy
    (capital use becomes more efficient)

6
Harrod-Domar growth model
7
Harrod-Domar growth model
  • The main criticism of the model is the level of
    assumption, one being that there is no reason for
    growth to be sufficient to maintain full
    employment this is based on the belief that the
    relative price of labor and capital is fixed, and
    that they are used in equal proportions. The
    model explains economic boom and bust by the
    assumption that investors are only influenced by
    output (known as the accelerator principle) this
    is now widely believed to be false.

8
Harrod-Domar growth model
  • In terms of development, critics claim that the
    model sees economic growth and development as the
    same in reality, economic growth is only a
    subset of development.
  • Another criticism is that the model implies poor
    countries should borrow to finance investment in
    capital to trigger economic growth however,
    history has shown that this often causes
    repayment problems later.

9
Harrod-Domar growth model
  • Perhaps the most important parameter in the
    HarrodDomar model is the rate of savings. Can it
    be treated as a parameter that can be manipulated
    easily by policy? That depends on how much
    control the policy maker has over the economy. In
    fact, there are several reasons to believe that
    the rate of savings may itself be influenced by
    the overall lever of per capita income in the
    society , not to mention the distribution of that
    income among the population.
  • LDCs savings rates are low due to poverty, poor
    financial infrastructure, and capital flight.

10
Harrod-Domar growth model
  • growth rate in the Harrod-Domar model is given by
    the ratio between the savings (S) ratio and the
    capital-output (K) ratio G S/K
  • on the very basic assumptions of no foreign
    sector and no government sector the Harrod-Domar
    model states that the rate of economic growth G
    is positively dependent on the savings ratio S
    and negatively dependent on the capital output
    ratio K where k is the productivity of capital
    in the economy

11
dual sector model
  • Lewis's Dual Sector Model of Development The
    theory of trickle down
  • Lewis proposed his dual sector development model
    in 1954. It was based on the assumption that many
    LDCs had dual economies with both a traditional
    agricultural sector and a modern industrial
    sector.
  • The traditional agricultural sector was assumed
    to be of a subsistence nature characterized by
    low productivity, low incomes, low savings and
    considerable underemployment.
  • The industrial sector was assumed to be
    technologically advanced with high levels of
    investment operating in an urban environment.

12
dual sector model
  • Lewis suggested that the modern industrial sector
    would attract workers from the rural areas.
    Industrial firms, whether private or publicly
    owned could offer wages that would guarantee a
    higher quality of life than remaining in the
    rural areas could provide.
  • Furthermore, as the level of labor productivity
    was so low in traditional agricultural areas
    people leaving the rural areas would have
    virtually no impact on output. Indeed, the amount
    of food available to the remaining villagers
    would increase as the same amount of food could
    be shared amongst fewer people. This might
    generate a surplus which could them be sold
    generating income.

13
dual sector model
  • Those people that moved away from the villages to
    the towns would earn increased incomes and this
    crucially according to Lewis generates more
    savings. The lack of development was due to a
    lack of savings and investment. The key to
    development was to increase savings and
    investment. Lewis saw the existence of the modern
    industrial sector as essential if this was to
    happen. Urban migration from the poor rural areas
    to the relatively richer industrial urban areas
    gave workers the opportunities to earn higher
    incomes and crucially save more providing funds
    for entrepreneurs to investment.

14
dual sector model
  • A growing industrial sector requiring labor
    provided the incomes that could be spent and
    saved. This would in itself generate demand and
    also provide funds for investment. Income
    generated by the industrial sector was trickling
    down throughout the economy.

15
Problems of the Lewis Model
  • The idea that the productivity of labor in rural
    areas is almost zero may be true for certain
    times of the year however during planting and
    harvesting the need for labor is critical to the
    needs of the village.
  • The assumption of a constant demand for labor
    from the industrial sector is questionable.
    Increasing technology may be labor saving
    reducing the need for labor. In addition if the
    industry concerned declines again the demand for
    labor will fall.

16
Problems of the Lewis Model
  • The idea of trickle down has been criticized.
    Will higher incomes earned in the industrial
    sector be saved? If the entrepreneurs and labor
    spend their new found gains rather than save it,
    funds for investment and growth will not be made
    available.
  • The rural urban migration has for many LDCs been
    far larger that the industrial sector can provide
    jobs for. Urban poverty has replaced rural
    poverty.

17
Structural change model Fisher Clark's Theory of
Structural Change
  • Two economists, Fisher and Clark, put forward the
    idea that an economy would have three stages of
    production
  • Primary production is concerned with the
    extraction of raw materials through agriculture,
    mining, fishing, and forestry. Low-income
    countries are assumed to be predominantly
    dominated by primary production.
  • Secondary production concerned with industrial
    production through manufacturing and
    construction. Middle income countries are often
    dominated by their secondary sector.
  • Tertiary production concerned with the provision
    of services such as education and tourism. In
    high-income countries the tertiary sector
    dominates. Indeed having a large tertiary sector
    is seen as a sign of economic maturity in the
    development process.

18
Structural change model Fisher Clark's Theory of
Structural Change
  • Countries are assumed to first pass through the
    primary production stage then the secondary stage
    and finally the tertiary stage. As economies
    develop and incomes rise then the demand for
    agricultural goods will increase but due to their
    low income elasticity of demand at a
    proportionally lower rate than income. However,
    the demand for manufactured goods will have a
    higher income elasticity of demand. So as incomes
    grow further the demand for these goods will grow
    at a proportionately higher rate. Hence the
    secondary industry will grow. As incomes continue
    to grow then people will start to consume more
    services as these have an even higher income
    elasticity of demand. Thus the tertiary sector
    will then grow and develop.

19
Structural change model Fisher Clark's Theory of
Structural Change
  • However, this may be misleading. Some LDCs may
    have a large tertiary sector due to a large
    tourist industry without having developed a
    secondary industry. Economists argue that this
    could be somewhat risky. If the economic base is
    dominated by an economic activity such as tourism
    that has a high income elasticity of demand then
    a recession in the consuming nations will have a
    disproportionately large impact on the export
    earnings. A fall income will bring about a
    proportionately greater reduction in demand for
    the service and this will have severe impact on
    the economy. If it does not have a primary or
    secondary production to fall back on then
    borrowing and debt might be the only prospect.

20
Structural change model Fisher Clark's Theory of
Structural Change
21
Types of aid
  • Aid Assistance given to an individual, firm,
    region or government. Usually used in the context
    of overseas aid where governments give assistance
    to other countries.
  • Bilateral aid Official development assistance
    that takes place between a donor country and a
    recipient country.
  • Multilateral aid Aid channeled through
    international organizations.

22
Types of aid
  • Grant A form of foreign aid that involves a
    direct transfer payment from one country to
    another.
  • Soft loan A loan made to a country on a
    concessionary basis such as a lower rate of
    interest.
  • Official Development Assistance (ODA)
    Disbursements of loans and grants at
    concessionary rates by governments

23
Types of aid
  • Tied aid Assistance given on condition that it
    is spent on items produced by the donor country.
  • Foreign Aid The international transfer of public
    and private funds in the form of loans or grants
    from donor countries to recipient countries.

24
The Benefits of Receiving Aid
  • Economic ReasonsClearly the most important
    reason why countries seek and accept aid is for
    the purpose of economic development.
  • To improve the investment climate, develop human
    capital, promote entrepreneurship, as well as
    provide direct support in fostering trade
  • To enable payment of interest on foreign debt
  • To supplement the lack of domestic resources such
    as foreign exchange
  • To enable infrastructure changes to be made to
    the economy such as dams and roads

25
The Benefits of Receiving Aid
  • Political reasonsIn some cases foreign aid is
    seen as being necessary in order to maintain
    power. Often foreign aid in the form of military
    goods provides the power base that suppresses
    opposition and maintains the existing government
    in power. The ending of the Cold War between NATO
    and the Soviet Union has contributed to the fall
    in Official Development Assistance (ODA) to the
    continent of Africa, while Israel and Egypt, for
    example, were the two major recipients of ODA in
    2003.

26
The Benefits of Receiving Aid
  • Moral reasonsMany people within the Less
    Developed Countries (LDCs) and the More Developed
    Countries (MDCs) consider that the MDCs have a
    moral responsibility to provide development
    assistance for the poorer countries. This may be
    because of basic humanitarian reasons or a
    feeling that the colonial powers such as the UK
    that occupied countries such as Zambia have a
    responsibility to redistribute resources, having
    exploited so many of the resources of the LDCs
    during colonization.

27
The Arguments Against Foreign Aid
  • Foreign aid often falls into the hands of corrupt
    officials who affect the projects that are chosen
    to be financed.
  • Aid money is often misspent, even when handled
    honestly. By imposing solutions from outside, it
    may be used for projects that generate large
    numbers of jobs and are beneficial to the
    government in the short run while providing few
    long-term benefits. Their creation and
    maintenance draw scarce local resources and
    entrepreneurial initiative from other uses,
    crowding out private investment and initiative.
  • Transfers of low interest concessionary finance
    or grants to fill the savings or foreign exchange
    gaps will interfere in the market determination
    of interest rates and exchange rates.

28
The Arguments Against Foreign Aid
  • Aid can create an impression amongst receiving
    countries that More Developed Countries (MDCs)
    are wealthy, free-handed donors which provide
    what seem like huge sums of money by local
    standards. The impression can also be that this
    is given without moral judgment, since many of
    the people who administer aid may be seen as
    authoritarian and corrupt. As well as leading to
    a sense that there is some sort of right to aid,
    it can also distort values of openness, self-help
    and honesty. It encourages many people in
    recipient countries to consider migrating to the
    source of this wealth, since they assume that it
    must be a rich place where all can prosper.

29
The Arguments Against Foreign Aid
  • The flow of aid is not always dependable, both
    because it is manipulated for political reasons
    and also because in times of recession in
    developed countries, the aid budget makes an easy
    target for a reduction in spending.
  • Aid is often seen, like most forms of charity, as
    quite a patronizing concept, one party
    acknowledging its own superiority and aiding the
    other party not on merit but out of a sense of
    wanting to help. Dependency theory argues that
    aid ensures the continuation of the Less
    Developed Countries (LDCs) on the periphery and
    the dominance of the MDCs in the core.

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31
Types of Foreign Aid
  • To be considered foreign aid a flow of funds
    should meet two simple criteria
  • It should be non-commercial from the donors point
    of view
  • It should be concessional so that the interest
    and repayment is less stringent or softer than
    commercial terms

32
Types of Foreign Aid
  • Foreign aid can be divided into
  • Public Development Assistance and
  • Private Development Assistance
  • Public or Official Development Assistance
  • Individual government assistance, known as
    bilateral aid
  • Multilateral donor agencies such as the IMF and
    World Banks offering multilateral aid
  • Private Development Assistance
  • Private non-governmental organizations (NGOs)
    such as the Red Cross, Oxfam

33
Types of Foreign Aid
  • A considerable amount of foreign aid is tied aid.
    Here the grants or concessionary loans have
    conditions laid down by the donor country about
    how the money should be used. Tied aid by source
    means that the recipient country receiving the
    aid must spend it on the exports of the donor
    country. Tied aid by project means that the donor
    country requires the recipient country to spend
    it on a specific project such a road or a dam.
    Often this might be to the commercial or economic
    benefit of the firms in the donor country. For
    example their engineers might be the designers of
    the project.

34
Export-led growth/outward-oriented strategies
  • Export-led growth is an economic strategy used by
    some developing countries. This strategy seeks to
    find a niche in the world economy for a certain
    type of export. Industries producing this export
    may receive governmental subsidies and better
    access to the local markets. By implementing this
    strategy, countries hope to gain enough hard
    currency to import commodities manufactured more
    cheaply somewhere else.

35
Export-led growth/outward-oriented strategies
  • Tariffs are reduced or eliminated, and imports
    rise
  • Domestic production is displaced and unemployment
    rises in domestic industries that compete with
    imports
  • Costs for intermediate goods fall leading to an
    increase in exports and a fall in unemployment in
    the external sector
  • Countries specialize in the sectors in which they
    have a comparative advantage

36
Export-led growth/outward-oriented strategies
  • Export promotion benefits
  • There is more rapid growth in both GDP and GDP
    per capita
  • Technology transfer takes place through imports
    of capital goods
  • Exports of manufactured goods rise compared to
    primary sector exports
  • Gains from trade lead to a higher standard of
    living
  • Specialization allows economies of scale and
    rapid learning by doing
  • Even if growth is more uneven, the huge increase
    in productive capacity will lead to rapid
    investment and linkage adjustment in other
    sectors (backward and forward integration)

37
Export-led growth/outward-oriented strategies
  • Export promotion costs
  • MDC tariffs and quotas block imports of labor
    intense manufacturing goods where LDCs have a
    comparative advantage
  • Growth is more uneven
  • Vertical integration is lost, workers may be
    confined to assembly and some fabrication
  • There is a risk that new technology may render a
    sector obsolete
  • There may be an overemphasis on natural resource
    exports which could lead to deteriorating terms
    of trade

38
Import substitution/inward-oriented
strategies/protectionism
  • Import substitution industrialization (also
    called ISI) is a trade and economic policy based
    on the premise that a country should attempt to
    reduce its foreign dependency through the local
    production of industrialized products. The term
    primarily refers to 20th century development
    economics policies, though it was advocated since
    the 18th century United States.

39
Import substitution/inward-oriented
strategies/protectionism
  • Tariffs are imposed and imports fall
  • The first to be protected are final stage
    assembly and simple consumer goods
  • Over time, parts fabrication and more
    sophisticated manufacturing is protected
  • Domestic production increases and unemployment
    falls
  • Capital and intermediate goods become more
    expensive, otherwise why would tariff barriers be
    needed to promote sales of domestic equivalents?
  • Costs rise for exports, exports fall, and
    unemployment rises in the export sector

40
Import substitution/inward-oriented
strategies/protectionism
  • Benefits from import substitution
  • There is greater vertical integration within
    industries (both upstream and downstream)
  • Research, development, engineering, design,
    fabrication, assembly, marketing, and financing
    provide a richer variety of jobs
  • There is greater integration amongst industries
    (both backward and forward linkages)
  • Learning by doing takes place
  • There is less dependence on other countries,
    therefore less specialization and more evenly
    distributed development in the economy

41
Import substitution/inward-oriented
strategies/protectionism
  • Costs of import substitution
  • Infant industries never grow up because the lack
    of international competition leads to higher
    costs
  • With few imports of capital goods, there is
    virtually no technology transfer
  • The export sector collapses so there are no gains
    from trade
  • Economies of scale cannot be achieved because the
    market is too small
  • Balance of payments problems lead to a reduction
    in imported capital which is often needed for
    industrialization to proceed
  • Producers are cut off from new technology in
    international markets.

42
Import substitution/inward-oriented
strategies/protectionism
  • Costs of import substitution
  • The poor gain little, the major beneficiaries are
    the wealthy and the MNCs operating behind tariff
    walls
  • Government tends to subsidize capital, and
    currencies are held artificially high to
    encourage the use of imported capital and
    intermediate goods
  • Industry becomes less labor intense, leading to
    unemployment.
  • Exporters of primary goods (the poor) are hurt
    because LDCs face perfectly elastic demand, they
    have to lower their prices to compensate for the
    higher currency value.
  • The elite benefit from importing luxury goods
    more cheaply.

43
Commercial Loans
  • As the government draws its income from much of
    the population, government debt is an indirect
    debt of the taxpayers. Government debt can be
    categorized as internal debt, owed to lenders
    within the country, and external debt, owed to
    foreign lenders. Governments usually borrow by
    issuing securities, government bonds and bills.
    Less creditworthy countries sometimes borrow
    directly from supranational institutions. Some
    consider all government liabilities, including
    future pension payments and payments for goods
    and services the government has contracted but
    not yet paid, as government debt.

44
Fair trade organizations
  • Fair Trade is an organized social movement and
    market-based approach that aims to help producers
    in developing countries obtain better trading
    conditions and promote sustainability. The
    movement advocates the payment of a higher price
    to producers as well as social and environmental
    standards. It focuses in particular on exports
    from developing countries to developed countries,
    most notably handicrafts, coffee, cocoa, sugar,
    tea, bananas, honey, cotton, wine, fresh fruit,
    chocolate and flowers.

45
Fair trade organizations
  • Fair Trade is a trading partnership, based on
    dialogue, transparency and respect, that seeks
    greater equity in international trade. It
    contributes to sustainable development by
    offering better trading conditions to, and
    securing the rights of, marginalized producers
    and workers especially in the South. Fair Trade
    Organizations, backed by consumers, are engaged
    actively in supporting producers, awareness
    raising and in campaigning for changes in the
    rules and practice of conventional international
    trade.

46
The commodity crisis
  • Fair trade advocate also often point out that
    unregulated competition in global commodity
    markets ever since the 1970s and 1980s has
    encouraged a price "race to the bottom". During
    the 1970-2000 period, prices for many of the main
    agricultural exports of developing countries,
    such as sugar, cotton, cocoa, and coffee, fell by
    30 to 60 percent. According to the European
    Commission, the abandonment of international
    intervention policies at the end of the 1980s and
    the commodity market reforms of the 1990s in the
    developing countries left the commodity sectors,
    and in particular small producers, largely to
    themselves in their struggle with the demands of
    the markets. Today, producers live an
    unpredictable existence because the prices for a
    wide range of commodities are very volatile and
    in addition follow a declining long-term trend.
    The total loss for developing countries due to
    falling commodity prices has been estimated by
    the Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO) to
    total almost 250 billion during the 1980-2002
    period.

47
The commodity crisis
  • Millions of poor farmers are dependent on
    commodities and on the price they receive for
    their harvest. In about 50 developing countries,
    three or fewer primary commodity exports
    constitute the bulk of export revenue.
  • Many farmers, often without other means of
    subsistence, are obliged to produce more and
    more, no matter how low the prices are. Research
    has shown that those who suffer most from
    declines in commodity prices are the rural poor
    i.e. the majority of people living in developing
    countries. Basic agriculture employs over 50 of
    the people in developing countries, and accounts
    for 33 of their GDP.
  • Fair trade supporters believe current market
    prices do not properly reflect the true costs
    associated with production they believe only a
    well-managed stable minimum price system can
    cover environmental and social production costs.

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49
Micro-credit schemes
  • Micro-credit is the extension of very small loans
    (micro-loans) to those in poverty designed to
    spur entrepreneurship. These individuals lack
    collateral, steady employment and a verifiable
    credit history and therefore cannot meet even the
    most minimal qualifications to gain access to
    traditional credit. Micro-credit is a part of
    microfinance, which is the provision of a wider
    range of financial services to the very poor.

50
Micro-credit schemes
  • Micro-credit is a financial innovation that is
    generally considered to have originated with the
    Grameen Bank in Bangladesh. In that country, it
    has successfully enabled extremely impoverished
    people to engage in self-employment projects that
    allow them to generate an income and, in many
    cases, begin to build wealth and exit poverty.
    Due to the success of micro-credit, many in the
    traditional banking industry have begun to
    realize that these micro-credit borrowers should
    more correctly be categorized as pre-bankable
    thus, micro-credit is increasingly gaining
    credibility in the mainstream finance industry,
    and many traditional large finance organizations
    are contemplating micro-credit projects as a
    source of future growth.

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52
Foreign direct investment
  • Foreign direct investment (FDI) refers to long
    term participation by country A into country B.
    It usually involves participation in management,
    joint-venture, transfer of technology and
    "know-how". There are two types of FDI inward
    foreign direct investment and outward foreign
    direct investment, resulting in a net FDI inflow
    (positive or negative).

53
Foreign direct investment
  • FDI by MNC/TNCs usually comes in a bundle
    including equity and debt financing, management
    expertise, technology transfer, technical skills
    training, and access to overseas markets

54
Foreign direct investment
  • LEDC governments are attracted by the FDI bundle
  • Learning by doing is accelerated which can
    enable the country to cope with a technologically
    advanced future
  • Technology transfer while embodied in a process,
    also includes information and the technical
    skills needed to adapt, install, operate and
    maintain capital equipment systems
  • Managerial shortage LEDC govts understand the
    acute shortage of local managers capable of
    organizing and operating large scale industrial
    projects
  • Intra firm exclusion LEDC govts realize that
    access to international markets is severely
    limited because markets are dominated by intra
    and inter firm transactions (50 of Canada's
    imports and exports are intra firm sales),
    MNC/TNCs are needed to gain access to this system

55
Foreign direct investment
  • Marketing expertise MNC/TNCs have preferential
    agreements with customers due to volume, length
    of time in the business, the use of standardized
    contracts and standardized products, it may take
    years for LDC producers to understand let alone
    break into international markets
  • Supply side bottlenecks can be reduced through
    FDI by MNC/TNCs
  • National gaps in savings, foreign exchange,
    taxes, technology and human skills can all be
    filled by MNCs
  • Labor they can create jobs, develop managerial
    skills, and provide technical education of labor,
  • Capital they can transfer technology and provide
    much needed physical capital
  • Tax revenue can be earned on the exports of
    natural resources which can be used to fund
    construction of much needed infrastructure
  • Foreign currency flows in from the MNC/TNC
    investments, and from the private earnings on the
    exports

56
transfer pricing
  • Transfer pricing refers to the pricing of
    contributions (assets, tangible and intangible,
    services, and funds) transferred within an
    organization. For example, goods from the
    production division may be sold to the marketing
    division, or goods from a parent company may be
    sold to a foreign subsidiary. Since the prices
    are set within an organization (i.e.,
    controlled), the typical market mechanisms that
    establish prices for such transactions between
    third parties may not apply. The choice of the
    transfer price will affect the allocation of the
    total profit among the parts of the company.
  • This is a major concern for fiscal authorities
    who worry that multi-national entities may set
    transfer prices on cross-border transactions to
    reduce taxable profits in their jurisdiction.
    This has led to the rise of transfer pricing
    regulations and enforcement, making transfer
    pricing a major tax compliance issue for
    multi-national companies.

57
Sustainable development
  • The process which maximizes the net benefits of
    economic development while maintaining the
    services and quality of environmental and natural
    resources forever
  • This involves
  • Using natural resources at rates less than or
    equal to the natural rate of regeneration
  • Using non-renewable resources in a manner which
    permits recycling of materials and
    substitutability between natural resources and
    technological change
  • Economic development and resource usage are
    complementary but after a certain point
    development will reduce one or more of the
    functions of certain resources resulting in a
    tradeoff

58
Sustainable development
  • We need to develop environmentally friendly
    technologies and ensure they are made available
    to developing countries.
  • Top priority must be given to
  • Adequate sewage disposal and safe water
  • The elimination of burning fires for cooking
    they cause smoke pollution both within buildings
    and around urban areas and contribute to
    deforestation
  • We must remove subsidies that encourage excessive
    use of forests, fossil fuels, irrigation water,
    and chemical sprays
  • Clarify rights to own resources
  • Help local communities to take ownership of their
    common resources
  • Local participation in setting and implementing
    environmental policies
  • Teach them how to make long term decisions and
    investments

59
Sustainable development
  • Develop realistic policies and strategies which
  • Permit low cost monitoring and enforcement for
    developing countries
  • Use market systems of punishments and rewards
    rather than regulation
  • Restrict the power of rich resource owners and
    large institutions
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