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Title: GEOG 2400 GEOGRAPHY OF WORLD DEVELOPMENT


1
GEOG 2400 - GEOGRAPHY OF WORLD DEVELOPMENT
  • The Measured Wealth of Nations and Income
    Inequality Issues Within and Between Nations

Spring 2002
2
The Wealth of a Nation
  • Over 200 years ago, Adam Smith wrote The annual
    labour of every nation is the fund which
    originally supplies it with all the necessities
    and conveniences of life which it annually
    consumes.
  • This concept underlies our notions of GDP and
    GNP, measures used by finance experts of each
    nation to quantify the wealth of that nation as
    determined by the sum of expenditures required to
    support this consumption of goods and services.
  • GDP Gross Domestic Product
  • GNP Gross National Product
  • GDP was pioneered by US (Simon Kuznets) during WW
    II to help track and manage our war effort
    production.

3
GDP or GNP?
  • Gross Domestic Product - the total value (amount
    spent) of the production of goods and services in
    an economy minus imports of goods and services.
  • Gross National Product - GDP plus the net income
    from abroad (profits or losses of overseas
    investments/assets accruing to the nations
    economy).
  • GDP and GNP use final (consumer) expenditures
    i.e. private final expenditure government final
    expenditure increase in stocks gross fixed
    capital formation exports of goods and
    services.
  • This prevents double counting e.g. price paid to
    farmer for milk by dairy, price paid dairy by
    supermarket, price paid supermarket by shopper.

4
General Rules of Thumb
  • From the point of view of assessing development,
    GNP is generally used when considering indices
    such as debt servicing or aid (e.g. External Debt
    as GNP) that involves international accounting.
  • GDP is generally used when assessing the wealth
    of individuals (e.g. GDP/capita) across nations.
  • Where national accounting is deficient and
    particularly where much of the economy does not
    take place in organized markets (i.e. the
    shadow or informal economy with barter systems,
    undeclared cash-in-hand payments, etc.), GDP/GNP
    values will be grossly underestimated.
  • OECD nation data will thus usually be more
    reliable than developing nation data.

5
GDP reliability
  • Since GDP/cap has both a numerator and a
    denominator, errors in calculating both can
    introduce over or underestimates in this
    indicator.
  • Clearly, national accounting procedures, income
    declaration patterns, population census counts,
    etc. will differ between nations and is generally
    less precise and/or complete in the poorer
    nations.
  • However, if both GDP and population are
    underestimated (or more rarely, over-estimated),
    errors will somewhat cancel out.
  • GDP figures, where available, are usually fairly
    good at capturing the overall visible economy.

6
GDP Diverging
  • Last year's HDR (UNDP 2000) graphed the income
    range of the richest and poorest five nations
    over 172 years - the divergence is astounding.
  • The ratio between the richest nations income and
    the poorest is now over 701, up from 31 in
    1820, 111 in 1913, 351 in 1950 and 441 in
    1973.
  • Growth in GDP does not always mean progress for
    all peoples - GDP/capita and GDP/capita growth
    figures mask internal wealth distribution
    patterns (e.g. in Brazil, GDP growth 1971-89 was
    3, but the GDP share of the poorest 20 grew
    only 0.8).

7
More Troubles with GDP
  • Doesnt distinguish between good and bad forms of
    expenditures in terms of actual economic well
    being e.g. expenditures on medical services to
    treat avoidable illnesses, the clean up of an
    environmental disaster, or on weapons used to
    fight a civil war.
  • Does not take into account the degradation and
    depletion of natural resources (e.g. forests,
    soils) and social capital (educational standards)
    which will be needed to sustain and increase
    future GDP.
  • Doesnt value leisure time or conservation -
    i.e. the value associated with not working or not
    consuming.
  • Thus GDP and GDP growth doesnt completely equate
    with level of well-being.
  • Many ecologically-minded economists believe we
    need a different index of welfare e.g. ISEW/GPI
    (see graphs).

8
Population Factors In
  • Why has the gap in GDP/cap been increasing?
    Multiple dimensions, one of which is population
    increase and demographic structure.
  • LDCs generally have higher population growth
    rates (r2-3) and consequently, increasingly
    youthful (economically unproductive)
    populations.
  • For GDP/cap to grow, the production of goods and
    services in an economy has to grow at a
    proportionately faster rate per annum than the
    increase in population. The bigger the
    difference, the faster/larger the GDP/cap
    increase.
  • The industrialized nations have seen total GDP
    consistently rise at a much faster rate than
    population whereas many LDCs have seen smaller
    relative increases and in several cases, GDP has
    risen more slowly than population causing GDP/cap
    to fall.

9
The Demographic Transition
  • As pointed out in an earlier class, the
    industrialized nations have gone through a
    demographic transition that has paralleled their
    economic transition from rural/agricultural to
    urban/industrial.
  • A drastic decline in death rates has been
    followed (with a lag) by a similar decline in
    their birth rates.
  • Declining death rates has resulted in significant
    increases in longevity, with average life
    expectancy at birth increasing to 77 in the most
    developed nations (Japan80) (note it is around
    50 in the least developed nations).
  • A large percentage of the population is
    economically active and it has been relatively
    easy to grow the total GDP faster than the
    population due to the employment of technology
    and rapid rises in per worker productivity and
    average value of goods and services produced.

10
Regional Demographic Progress
(source Wright Nebel, 2002)
11
The Population Trap
  • Many developing nations maintain very high crude
    birth rates/1000 (e.g. Asia 15-27, Africa 38)
    compared to the industrialized nations (e.g. USA
    14, European average 10).
  • However, their crude death rates/1000 may be as
    low, or lower than the industrialized nations
    (e.g. USA 9, France 9, Central America region 5,
    Asia region 8). Growth rates can thus be well
    over 2, even 3 per annum.
  • Developing nation populations are youthful with
    very high s of dependents under the age of 15 -
    for example, the proportion less than 15 in the
    USA 22, L.America 32, Africa 45
  • With population growth so high, total GDP needs
    to grow proportionally faster to register
    significant improvements in GDP/cap.
  • Without rapid increases in productivity and a
    switch to higher value products from raw
    materials, per capita wealth can stagnate and
    fall further behind.

12
Bursting populations outstrip economic growth
(source Wright Nebel, 2002)
13
Using GDP and GDP/cap
  • Convenient, tangible, seems to provide generally
    meaningful comparisons, for example, US 6.6 x
    better off than Mexico.
  • US GDP 1999 9.1 trillion or 32,400/cap
  • Mexico GDP 1990 484 billion or 4,900/cap
  • However, before making comparisons we need to
    make sure we have apples and apples.
  • Specifically, we need to account for exchange
    rate problems and purchasing power differences
    (i.e. artificially over-valued or undervalued
    currencies differential market price levels for
    identical/similar products) to get a sense of
    true wealth.
  • The International Comparison Project (ICP)
    establishes purchasing power parity in US for
    over 100 countries the other UNDP estimates are
    derived from US universities (U.Penn.).

14
Baskets of Goods
  • The PPP uses a similar survey as the Consumer
    Price Index, which tracks a basket of over 200
    goods and services purchased by an average
    citizen on a regular basis
  • FOOD AND BEVERAGES (breakfast cereal, milk,
    coffee, chicken, wine, full service meals and
    snacks)
  • HOUSING (rent of primary residence, owners'
    equivalent rent, fuel oil, bedroom furniture)
  • APPAREL (men's shirts and sweaters, women's
    dresses, jewelry)
  • TRANSPORTATION (new vehicles, airline fares,
    gasoline, vehicle insurance)
  • MEDICAL CARE (prescription drugs and medical
    supplies, physicians' services, eyeglasses and
    eye care, hospital services)
  • RECREATION (televisions, cable television, pets
    and pet products, sports equipment, admissions)
  • EDUCATION AND COMMUNICATION (college tuition,
    postage, telephone services, computer software
    and accessories)
  • OTHER GOODS AND SERVICES (tobacco and smoking
    products, haircuts and other personal services,
    funeral expenses).

15
UNDPs PPP
  • The PPP currency values reflect the number of
    units of a country's currency required to buy the
    same quantity of comparable goods and services in
    the local market as one U.S. dollar would buy in
    an average country.
  • The average country is based on a composite of
    all participating countries, so no single country
    acts as the base country.
  • US GDP 31,872/cap PPP and 32,400/cap
    unadjusted or 1.6.
  • Mexico GDP 8,297/cap PPP and 4,900/cap
    unadjusted or 69.
  • Each average American is thus only 4 x better off
    than each average Mexican in terms, not 6.6 x
    (and is this itself real?).
  • The Economist tried to provide a more pop-culture
    approach by developing its famous BigMac PPP
    index using the ubiquitous McDonalds hamburgers
    and published exchange rates (e.g. in 2000 - US
    2.43, Malaysia 1.19, Mexico 2.09, Switz.
    3.97).

16

INEQUALITY
  • Increasing inequality between and within nations
    has been one or the most fundamental and marked
    outcomes of world development patterns.
  • Simon Kuznets (1955) theorized that it was normal
    in the process of development, having observed
    the 19th century growth processes of the
    industrialized nations, for the development of a
    nations economy to be accompanied by an
    increased inequality in wealth distribution.
  • Kuznets further suggested that this inequality
    would lessen once a certain level of average per
    capita income had been reached.
  • Recent trends from the industrialized nations
    suggest that this may not be the case, since in
    many nations, inequality has been increasing (see
    Table 1.4 in your HDR 2001).
  • The issue of inequality is fiercely debated
    between conservatives and liberals, free-market
    proponents and advocates of social democracy.
  • Is it OK to have tremendous differences in wealth
    distribution if those with the least are
    nevertheless becoming better off?

17
Lorenz Curves
  • Within-nation inequality is generally measured
    with a Lorenz Curve, plotting of households or
    population on the X axis and share of household
    income or GDP on the Y axis, by quintiles (per
    20 of total X).
  • The greater the curve away from the 45 degree
    straight-line, the greater the degree of
    inequality.

18
Gini Extremes
100 80 60 40 20 0
100 80 60 40 20 0
0 20 40 60 80 100
0 20 40 60 80 100
Perfect equality
Extreme inequality
Gini 0.0 (min)
Gini 1.0 (max)
19
Y
100
Richest 20
80
47
60
Percentage Share of Household Income
40
27
20
13
9
Poorest 20
4
0
0
20
40
60
80
100
100
X
Percentage of Households
Gini (20406080100)-(4132653100) 104
.100 52
(5100) (20406080100)
200
20
Simple Gini Formula (as used in HDR to give value
of 0-100)
n
n
?
(xi)
-
?
(yi)
. 100
G
i1
i1
n
-
(n.100)
?
(xi)
i1
The bigger the G, the greater the inequality -
perfect equality 0, extreme inequality 100.
 
21
Gini Coefficients by Region
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