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ECON 390 ISSUES AND PROBLEMS IN DEVELOPING ECONOMIES

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Title: ECON 390 ISSUES AND PROBLEMS IN DEVELOPING ECONOMIES


1
ECON 390 ISSUES AND PROBLEMS IN DEVELOPING
ECONOMIES
  • Lecture 15 Rural development Urbanization and
    Rural-Urban migration

2
Goals for today
  • Class update?
  • Rural Development
  • Lewis model effect of technology
  • Urbanization and Rural-urban income gap

3
Lewis model (Chp. 3, pg. 108-113)
  • Economic development transformation of economy
    from traditional one, reliant on subsistence
    agriculture, to a modern industrialized economy
  • Underdeveloped economy consists of 2 sectors
  • Traditional and overpopulated rural subsistence
    sector
  • High-productivity modern urban industrial sector
  • Competitive modern-sector labor market that
    guarantees constant real urban wages until labor
    surplus is exhausted
  • Assumes diminishing returns in modern industrial
    sector

4
Traditional sector
  • Low productivity assume zero marginal product
    of labor
  • Overpopulated gt surplus of labor, which can be
    withdrawn without any loss of output
  • Production function

5
Modern sector
  • Gradually receives excess labor from traditional
    sector
  • Capital stock increases over time as profits are
    re-invested.
  • Production function

6
Criticisms of Lewis model
  • Four key assumptions do not fit realities of most
    contemporary developing countries
  • Rate of labor transfer and job opportunity
    creation in the modern sector is proportional to
    the rate of modern sector capital accumulation
  • Surplus labor exists only in rural areas, and
    there is full employment in urban areas

7
Role of agriculture in economic development (Chp.
9)
  • Characteristics of agriculture
  • During initial development, employs majority of
    population. Later, may serve as source of labor
    supply to modern sector.
  • May be tradition-bound
  • Crucial importance of land as a factor of
    production

8
Structure of developing economy
  • Non-agricultural sector
  • Formal sector firms operating under umbrella of
    rules and regulations imposed by the government
  • Informal sector loose amalgam of small-scale
    organizations, that do not receive access to
    privileged facilities, escape cover of
    regulations
  • Agriculture is often primarily an informal sector
    itself

9
Agricultural growth
10
Role of agriculture in development
  • Size gt predominant role in the provision of
    factor inputs to industry and services
  • Comparative advantage of countries in early
    stages of development usually lies with natural
    resources and/or agricultural products
  • Important market for output of the modern urban
    sector in some cases

11
Patterns of land ownership/use
Latifundios/minifundios in Latin America
  • Four types of land holdings
  • Latifundio farm large enough to provide
    employment for more than 12 people
  • Medium-size farms (provide work for 4-12 people)
  • Family farms (provide work for 2-4 people)
  • Minifundio farm too small to provide employment
    for a single family of 2 workers

12
Table 9.4
13
Effect of farm size on productivity
  • Survey in North-East Brazil
  • 0-10 hectares (0 25 acres) had production of
    85 per hectare (33 per acre)
  • Over 500 hectares (over 1200 acres) had
    production of only 2 per hectare (0.81 per
    acre)
  • Survey in India
  • 0-5 acres had output of 737 rupees (16) per acre
  • Over 25 acres, only 346 rupees (7.83) per acre

14
Structure of land ownership
  • Large scale farming
  • Large-scale modern farming/ranching
  • Plantations
  • Latifundios
  • Communal farming
  • Collectivized agriculture
  • Small-scale farming
  • Family farms
  • Tenancy/sharecropping

15
Tenure and productivity
  • Sharecropping
  • a rise in output may cause landlord to threaten
    eviction
  • Tenants may lack incentive to maintain/improve
    irrigation systems
  • Large-scale farming
  • Workers paid hourly wages lack of incentive
  • Possible solution pay on a piece-rate basis
  • Problems in incentives under communal farming?

16
Land reform
  • Taiwan in 1950s 3 stages
  • Stage 1 Land rentals reduced from 50 to 37.5
    in 1949
  • Stage 2 Sale of Public Land
  • Stage 3 Land to the Tiller (began 1953)

17
Land ownership in Zimbabwe
  • 1960s
  • Zimbabwean whites, made up less than 1 of
    population, owned more than 70 of arable land
  • Communal lands characterized by slash and burn
    agriculture

18
Zimbabwe land reforms
  • Elections won by Mugabe in 1980
  • 1985 Land Acquisition Act
  • Spirit of willing seller, willing buyer
  • Government had first right to purchase excess
    land for redistribution to the landless
  • But, limited funds gt limited effect
  • 1992 land reform process sped up by removing
    willing seller, willing buyer clause
  • Land Reform and Resettlement Programme Phase
  • Compulsory purchase over 5 years of 45 of land
    owned by commercial farmers, multi-national
    companies, churches and NGOs

19
The end of land reforms in Zimbabwe
  • 1999 new constitution drafted, clause included
    to compulsorily acquire land for redistribution
  • Feb. 2000 defeat of referendum on the new
    constitution
  • 2 weeks later pro-Mugabe War Veterans
    Association organized people of like mind to
    march on white-owned farm lands. 110,000 km2 of
    land seized.
  • 2005 constitutional amendment, nationalized
    farmland

20
Agricultural progress and technical innovation
stage 1 subsistence farming
  • Output primarily designated for family
    consumption, consists mostly of a few staple
    foods
  • Low productivity, minimal capital investment
  • Tractors per 100 hectares
  • Ecuador 1
  • South Korea 11
  • Often resistant to technological innovation or
    the use of different cash crops

21
How do we explain resistance to technological
improvements?
  • Standard theory farms maximize profits gt
    traditional methods are less costly for a given
    output level.
  • Small-scale farmers lack access to knowledge
  • Technology
  • Price uncertainty

22
Figure 9.3
23
Transition to diversified/mixed farming
  • Staple crop no longer dominates farm output
  • New cash crops fruits, vegetables, coffee, tea,
    etc. Simple animal husbandry
  • Simple labor-saving devices
  • Jab seeder (developed in Thailand in 1980s), cost
    20
  • Manual water pumps

24
Transition to Modern Commercial Farming
25
Different approaches to modern farming
  • Mechanical package
  • Tractors, combines, etc. substitute for labor
  • Limitations substantial investment in capital,
    less adaptable to small-scale farming
  • Biological package (Green Revolution)
  • Use of improved plant varieties, combined with
    adequate, timely water supplies, increased
    amounts of chemical fertilizer.
  • Successfully transplanted to LDCs, beginning with
    2 institutes in Mexico and the Philippines
  • Limitations dependent on availability of
    water/fertilizer

26
Role of government policies
  • Correction of market imperfections
  • Lack of access to credit, agricultural extension
    services, etc.
  • Excessively low agricultural prices
  • Elimination of inefficient government policies
    public agricultural marketing boards
  • Protection of property rights

27
Rural Public Works Projects
  • Mobilization of labor to create rural capital
  • Roads
  • Irrigation systems
  • Essential problem Lack of connection between
    effort and reward

28
What do we mean by rural development?
  • Rural industrialization
  • Increased provision of education and health
    services
  • Lessening of rural-urban imbalances
  • Increasing capacity of rural areas
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