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Research on Immigration and Integration in the Metropolis

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Title: Research on Immigration and Integration in the Metropolis


1
  • Research on Immigration and Integration in the
    Metropolis
  • www.riim.metropolis.net

2
Lecture 4
  • Development Theories
  • A way to Organize our Ideas
  • or an Ideology ?

3
Questions for Theory to Answer
  • 1. What do you want a theory of development to
    explain ?
  • Income per capita, social stability,equality
  • 2. Why do some countries grow and then decline?
  • Theory must explain both directions
  • 3. Why do some poor countries 'take-off' and
    continue to grow?

4
More Questions to Ponder
  • 4. Why do some poor countries remain in a low
    level trap?
  • Trap defined as constant Yp
  • 5. What arguments should be included in
    development theory?

5
More Questions to Ponder
  • a. Population growth does it hinder or
    accelerate growth?
  • b. Capital accumulation
  • How do you accumulate when you are already poor?
  • c. Technical Change
  • i. Where do you access technical change if you
    are already poor?
  • Via trade or indigenous adaptation ?
  • ii. What does Canada's historical experience with
    the wheat and the reaper tell us about technical
    change and trade ?.

6
Questions for you to answer
  • 6. Find an example of a poor country which has
  • a. Taken off in last 20 years
  • b. Remained stagnant for last twenty
    years
  • c. Grew and then declined in last twenty
    years
  • 7. How did your country of choice do with respect
    to the categories a to c and why ?

7
Lecture 5 Theories
  • A. Linear-Stages Theory (1950s and early 1960s)
  • 1. It views economic development as a series of
    successive stages of economic growth through
    which every nation must go through.
  • 2. It emphasizes that more investment leads to
    more growth.
  • 3. It can be described by an economic mechanism
    known as the Harrod-Domar Growth model.

8
The Harrod -Domar Growth Model
  • 1. Rate of GNP growth is a function of
  • national savings ratio (s)
  • and rate of national capital-output ratio (k).
  • GNP growth is positively related to the savings
    ratio and negatively related to the
    capital-output ratio.
  • 2. It could explain the massive transfers of
    capital and technical assistance from developed
    to less developed nations.

9
More Harrod -Domar Growth Model
  • 3. Is investment a sufficient condition for
    economic growth?
  • No.
  • It is necessary but not sufficient condition for
    economic growth.
  • Necessary one of many ingredients
  • Sufficient minimum set required to grow

10
II. Structural- Change Theory
  • 1. It emphasizes on the mechanism by which
    underdeveloped economies alter their domestic
    economic structures from a traditional
    subsistence agriculture to a more urbanized,
    industrially diversufued economy.
  • 2. It employs tools of neoclassical price and
    resource allocation theory.

11
Lewis Two-Sector Model
  • i. It became the general theory of the
    development process in surplus-labor Third World
    nations during the 1960s and early 1970s.
  • ii. It focuses on the process of labor transfer
    from the traditional economy to the urbanized,
    industrial sector and the growth of output and
    employment in the high-productivity sector

12
Assumptions
  • i. Marginal product of labor is zero
    (surplus-labor).
  • This implies that labor can be removed from the
    agricultural sector without any loss of output in
    that sector.
  • ii. Rural supply of labor to industrial sector
    is perfectly elastic.
  • iii. Full employment in the urban sector.

13
More Assumptions
  • iv. Constant urban wage- premium over a fixed
    average subsistence wage.
  • v. Capitalists reinvest all profits.
  • vi. Rate of labor transfer and job creation is
    proportional to the rate of capital accumulation.

14
Agricultural Sector
15
Industrial Sector
16
Conclusions for Lewis Model
  • i. Employment growth and labor transfer is
    induced by output expansion in which the speed of
    expansion depends on the rate of industrial
    investment and capital accumulation in the
    industrial sector.
  • ii. The self-sustaining growth and employment
    expansion process continues until all surplus
    labor is exhausted.

17
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