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Development Economics

Subject: Economics
Topic: 7
Cambridge Code: 0455 / 2281


Measuring Development

Development - Improvement in living standards and quality of life

GDP Per Capita

GDP per capita = Total GDP / Population

Advantages:

  • Easy to calculate
  • International comparison
  • Shows output per person

Disadvantages:

  • Ignores distribution (inequality)
  • Doesn't measure quality of life
  • Environmental costs ignored
  • Informal economy excluded
  • Population differences

Human Development Index (HDI)

HDI - Composite measure of development

Components:

  1. Health: Life expectancy
  2. Education: School enrollment, literacy
  3. Income: GDP per capita (income)

Advantages:

  • More comprehensive than GDP
  • Captures human wellbeing
  • Internationally comparable

Still limitations:

  • Doesn't capture inequality
  • Doesn't include environmental factors
  • Political freedom not included

Characteristics of Developing Countries

Common features:

Economic:

  • Low GDP per capita
  • High unemployment
  • Dependence on agriculture, raw materials
  • Limited industrialization
  • Low savings rate

Social:

  • High poverty
  • Poor health and education
  • High population growth
  • High infant mortality
  • Low life expectancy

Infrastructure:

  • Poor roads, utilities
  • Limited technology
  • Limited internet/telecommunications

Political:

  • Weak institutions
  • Corruption
  • Political instability

Causes of Poverty and Underdevelopment

Structural Causes

Colonial legacy:

  • Extraction economies
  • Poor institutions
  • Border disputes

Geography:

  • Landlocked (expensive trade)
  • Poor climate (drought, disease)
  • Limited natural resources

Demographics:

  • High population growth
  • High dependency ratio
  • Migration of skilled workers

Systemic Causes

Low human capital:

  • Poor education
  • Bad health
  • Lack of skills

Low technological development:

  • Poor infrastructure
  • Limited R&D
  • Technology gap

Institutions:

  • Weak legal system
  • Corruption
  • Poor governance
  • Difficulty enforcing contracts

Inequality

Income inequality - Unequal distribution of income

Measuring Inequality

Gini Coefficient:

  • 0 = Perfect equality
  • 1 = Perfect inequality
  • Compares actual to perfect equality

Lorenz Curve:

  • Shows cumulative distribution
  • Diagonal = Equality
  • More curved = More inequality

Problems of Inequality

Economic:

  • Reduces consumer spending (poor have high MPC)
  • Reduces growth potential
  • Reduces productivity

Social:

  • Crime and violence
  • Health problems in unequal societies
  • Reduced social cohesion
  • Poor life satisfaction

Political:

  • Social unrest
  • Political instability
  • Reduces trust in institutions

Development Strategies

Import Substitution

Strategy: Develop domestic industry behind protection

Method:

  • High tariffs on imports
  • Subsidies to domestic industry
  • Selective government support

Advantages:

  • Develops local industry
  • Saves foreign currency
  • Reduces dependence

Disadvantages:

  • Inefficient industries
  • High-cost protected firms
  • Limited competition
  • Export sector neglected

Result: Worked in some countries (5-10 years), then liberalize

Export-Led Growth

Strategy: Develop export industries

Method:

  • Low tariffs
  • Improve competitiveness
  • Attract FDI
  • Invest in education

Advantages:

  • Access large markets
  • Get foreign exchange
  • Competitive firms
  • Technology transfer

Disadvantages:

  • Vulnerable to world prices
  • External competition
  • May need foreign capital
  • Inequality risk

Result: Successful for East Asia tigers (South Korea, Taiwan, Singapore)


Role of Aid

Bilateral aid - From one country to another Multilateral aid - Through organizations (UN, World Bank)

Types

Grant aid:

  • Free, no repayment
  • Typically for humanitarian

Concessional lending:

  • Loans at favorable terms
  • Below market rates
  • Long repayment periods

Advantages of Aid

  • Relieves immediate suffering
  • Funds infrastructure
  • Provides expertise
  • Builds goodwill

Problems with Aid

Dependency:

  • Country becomes dependent
  • Reduces self-reliance
  • Discourages local programs

Inefficiency:

  • Corruption diverts aid
  • Misuse of funds
  • Conditions may be ineffective

Conditionality:

  • Aid tied to political conditions
  • May enforce inappropriate policies
  • Donor priorities over recipient needs

Fair Trade

Fair trade - Ethical trading supporting producers

Principles:

  • Fair prices (above world prices)
  • Safe working conditions
  • Environmental standards
  • Direct relationships

Advantages:

  • Helps small farmers
  • Better income security
  • Sustainable practices

Limitations:

  • Higher prices for consumers
  • Limited scale
  • Doesn't address structural issues
  • Premium to middlemen sometimes

Sustainable Development

Sustainable development - Meet present needs without compromising future

Goals:

  1. Reduce poverty
  2. Improve health/education
  3. Environmental protection
  4. Gender equality
  5. Decent work
  6. Climate action

Environmental Sustainability

Challenges:

  • Polluted air and water (health)
  • Deforestation (carbon, biodiversity)
  • Climate change (droughts, flooding)
  • Resource depletion (fish, minerals)

Solutions:

  • Green technologies
  • Renewable energy
  • Environmental regulations
  • Reforestation

Technology and Development

Mobile Technology

Impact:

  • Financial inclusion (mobile money)
  • Information access
  • Business opportunities
  • Education access

Internet and E-commerce

Potential:

  • Access to markets
  • E-learning
  • Service delivery

Barriers:

  • Infrastructure cost
  • Affordability
  • Digital literacy

Key Points

  1. Development: Improvement in living standards
  2. GDP per capita: Simple but limited measure
  3. HDI: Better but still incomplete
  4. Poverty: Caused by structural and systemic factors
  5. Inequality: Economic, social, political problems
  6. Import substitution: Develop behind protection
  7. Export-led: Develop for world markets
  8. Aid: Helpful but can create dependency
  9. Fair trade: Ethical trading support
  10. Sustainable: Balance growth with environmental protection

Practice Questions

  1. Calculate and compare HDI
  2. Explain development indicators
  3. Analyze causes of underdevelopment
  4. Compare development strategies
  5. Analyze aid effectiveness
  6. Explain fair trade benefits/limits
  7. Discuss sustainable development

Revision Tips

  • Know development measures
  • Understand causes of poverty
  • Know development strategies
  • Understand trade-offs
  • Know aid issues
  • Understand sustainability
  • Practice case studies
  • Know country examples