Title: International trade and the developing countries
1International trade and the developing countries
2(No Transcript)
3Developing countries
4Extend of World Poverty
5I'm an economist. I've been taught to think in
terms of per capita income. But to many people,
that's not concrete enough. When you say
development, what is it all about? Therefore, by
telling the world that development is about
mothers not dying when they give birth, about
children surviving their first few years, about
getting every child into primary school, making
sure that people have access to clean water where
they live, you have concrete ways of framing the
objectives for development. When the Secretary
General nominated me and I got this job, I got
emails from students all over the world saying
It's great that you are going to work for the
Millennium Development Goals. I don't think I
would have gotten emails Please make sure per
capita income grows by four percent. You need a
vision to make it happen. UNDP Administrator
Kemal DervisThe 5th Annual Global Philanthropy
Forum Conference, Washington DC, 4 April 2006
6What are reasonable goals toward alleviating
poverty?
- Millennium Development Goals
- http//www.undp.org/mdg/basics.shtml
- Target number 1 http//www.undp.org/mdg/tracking_
targetlist.shtml
7UN Millennium Development Goalshttp//www.npr.org
/templates/story/story.php?storyId1893676
- Goal 1 Eradicate extreme poverty and hunger
- Goal 2 Achieve universal primary education
- Goal 3 Promote gender equality and empower women
- Goal 4 Reduce child mortality
- Goal 5 Improve maternal health
- Goal 6 Combat HIV/AIDS, malaria and other
diseases - Goal 7 Ensure environmental sustainability
- Goal 8 Develop a Global Partnership for
Development
8What is the relation between trade and
development?
- Not and end but a means to an end
- Four facts about international trade in the
least-developed countries that DO NOT necessarily
reflect current realities
9Trade/GDP ratios are low
- 43 for 97-98 data same as high-income countries
- Growth of share increased by 25 but it is slower
than in other regions - Imports had a 26 share
- Exports had a 17 share
10All LDC export primary commodities
- Out of 49 countries, about 18 exported
manufactures or services and 4 were oil exporters - Table 2
11Table 2
12Marginalization from global trade flows
- Marginalization was limited to non-fuel, primary
product exporters - Exporters of oil, manufactures, and services did
not experience the same loss of market share - Positive trends overshadow by the extremely small
portion of world trade accounted for by the least
developed countries.
13LDC have closed regimes
- Many countries have made substantial progress
toward opening their economies WITHOUT
experiencing significant poverty reduction - Declines in poverty occurred in the countries
that took a more moderate approach to
liberalization
14Potential trade issues facing developing countries
- Export instability
- Focus on export prices and its fluctuations
- High degree of openness brings more fluctuations
in income - Inelastic supply curve
- Inelastic demand curve
- Commodity concentration
15Country export dependence
16Potential trade issues facing developing countries
- Long-term deterioration of the terms of trade
- Prebisch-Singer hypothesis
17The terms of trade and the Prebisch-Singer thesis
- Total export earnings depend on
- total volume of exports sold AND
- price paid for exports
- Prebisch and Singer argue that export prices fall
over time, so LDCs lose revenue unless they can
continually increase export volumes - Prebisch and Singer think LDCs need to avoid a
dependence on primary exports
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19Policies for export instability
- Policies to stabilize fluctuating prices
- International buffer stock agreements
- International export quota agreements
- Compensatory financing
20Policies for declining terms of trade
- Export diversification
- Export cartels
- Import and export restrictions
- Regional integration
- Import-substitution industrialization (Changs
argument)