Title: Development Economics
1Development Economics Globalization
- (Competing Perspectives)
- P 539
- January 10, 2006
2Development Economics
- Post WWII western economies focused on full
employment - Decolonialization
- Doctrinal competition (capitalism/communism)
- Institutions
- IMF, World Bank
- Top down extension of Keynesian principles to
3rd World development - Structuralist approach applied to specific
conditions, rather than universal science
applied to all economies - trade theory recall Lists Caveat
- inflation causation
- End of January 3, Lecture
3Development Economics, cont
- Trade
- Universal theory of comparative advantage
questioned - Center and periphery economies
- Benefits of technical advances favored the center
- Center markets imperfect competition
- Periphery markets eroding terms of trade
(commoditization) - Intervention
- Tariffs
- State supervision of industrialization
- Encourage foreign investment (another source of
capital)
4Development Economics, cont.
- Inflation
- Monetarist/Structuralist debate
- Decrease money supply, vs.
- Land reform, import substitution, education, etc.
- Structuralist Metrics
- Specific to characteristics of targeted economies
- Emergence of Hybrid Theories
5Development Economics, cont.
- Hybrid Theory Elements
- Dualistic development
- Mobilization of domestic resources (savings
rate/capital) - Mobilization of foreign resources
- Financial aid, loans, investment, knowledge
transfer - Industrialization and Agricultural strategies
- Self sufficiency (inward focused policy)
- Trade strategy (convergence/divergence issue)
- Human resource development
- Project appraisal (capital allocation)
- Development planning and policymaking
- State planning vs. Market forces
- Endogenous Factors
- population, technology, institutions,
entrepreneurship
6Development Economics, cont.
- Counterrevolution
- The pendulum swings back toward science
- Criticism of the Harrod/Domar models
concentration on fixed capital investment - Failure to account for technical progress
- The market forces/state planning debate reignites
just as - Conservative governments come to power in
influential western countries
7Neoliberalism
- Driving forces
- Chicago/IEA Schools
- Libertarian ideals
- Oil shocks and inflation
- Monoeconomics (universal theory) re-emerges
- Success of outward focused NICs
- The East Asian Miracle
- Industrialization ladder
- The Washington Consensus
8The Washington Consensus
- Policy recommendations
- Fiscal Discipline
- Public expenditure priorities
- Tax reform
- Financial liberalization (market driven interest
rates) - Exchange rates (market driven exchange)
- Trade liberalization
- Foreign direct investment
- Privatization
- Deregulation (including deunionizing)
- Property rights
- Sachs Shock Therapy
- Sachs caveat (safety net and public investment)
9Critique
- Alternative Perspectives
- Institutional Economics
- New institutionalism
- Extend neo-classical theory to broader issues
- Include transaction costs of institutions
- e.g. definition and enforcement of property
rights - Dynamic
- Radical institutionalism
- Cumulative change rich get richer divergence
- Individual rationality nurture vs. nature
- Power and status legitimize exploitive,
predatory practices - Equality is the ultimate stimulant
- Democratic participation
- Reject neo-classical economics as a cloak for
political ideology
10World Development Indicators
- Metrics focused on targeted outcomes
- Compare the introduction and 8 development goals
with Joseph Stiglitzs globalization critique (to
follow) - Compare tabular data (including US)
- Infant mortality
- Carbon Dioxide Emissions
11Optional Readings
- Links on the Washington and Post Washington
Consensus - Corporate Ownership Social Costs
- Coase links
- More technical treatment of Development Economics
and Harrod-Domar Model - Debraj Ray, Development Economics pages 7-53
12Current Events
- Gates Foundation Extends into Development
- http//seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/businesstech
nology/2003308397_gateshires17.html - Microfinancing innovator awarded the Nobel Peace
Prize - http//www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/business/july-dec06
/bangladesh_10-13.html -
13Globalization Competing Perspectives
- Joseph Stiglitz http//www2.gsb.columbia.edu/facul
ty/jstiglitz/bio.cfm - Raj Bhala
- http//www.law.ku.edu/faculty/bhala.shtml
- Suzanne Berger http//web.mit.edu/polisci/faculty/
S.Berger.html
14Globalizations DiscontentsStiglitz
- Globalization means different things in different
places - Autonomously developed policies beneficial
results - Following instructions less beneficial
- Top down policies from the center are self
serving - Beneficial Globalization East Asian Miracle
- Export based growth
- Closing technological and knowledge gaps
- Darker Side
- Risks created by liberalization of financial and
capital markets fickle taskmaster
15Globalizations Discontents, cont
- Lessons
- Capital Liberalization
- Volatility - small boats in a rough sea
- Risk premium
- Poor bear the brunt of downturns no safety nets
- Capital can flee taxes, most people cannot
- Trade liberalization
- Job destruction/creation cycle discriminates
against the poor - Governance
- Winners in first wave of globalization
- Regulated financial markets
- Educated, innovated, funded, and regulated
fledgling industries - Agriculture, aviation, communications
- Institutions charged with governing this wave
- Lack democratic accountability serve financial
community - Governance through ideology
16Globalizations Discontents, cont
- Unfair Trade Agenda
- Agenda set by industrial nations
- Non-reciprocal terms of trade
- Disingenuous approach to developing country
status - Self serving treatment in service segments
- Risk of overpricing through IPR
- Risk of biopiracy
17Globalisms Discontents, cont
- Geopolitical Implications
- Positions on global environmental issues and
financial institution transparency are self
serving - Positions on Govt stimulation inconsistent
- Global Social Justice
- Uneven distribution of benefits
- Need for global alliance for
- Reduction of poverty
- Environmental sustainability
18Globalization and TradeBhala
- The Anti-Third World Claim
- Distinguish between international trade law and
developed nation trade policy - Focus the debate on the fairness of the rules
- Especially the special and differential treatment
provisions - Evaluate critiques individually
- Consider intellectual origin
- Subject matter public health, democracy,
individual rights, environmental concerns - Assess specific criticisms critically
- Seek moderation
19Globalization and Trade, cont
- Consider
- the relationship between trade and growth
- the relationship between growth and development
- focusing on the strong arguments
- separating arguments from ideology
20Whos Afraid of Globalization?Berger
- Fear of globalization from the perspective of the
center. Belief that Globalization is - Good for standard of living, but
- Bad for employment and job security
- Mainstream economists focus on
- Comparative advantage
- Innovation
- MIT study extrapolates on observations from the
first wave of globalization - Driven by
- technological innovations
- Transport, information,
- Human response to changing conditions
- Migration
- Narrowed the gap in interest rates and wages
- Prompted regulation
- Immigration controls
- Capital controls
- Tarrifs
21Whos Afraid of Globalization? cont
- Regulatory controls were
- strengthened virtually overnight in response
to WWI. - Gradually relaxed post WWII
- Bretton Woods, IMF, World Bank
- But influential economists favored autonomous
regulation of capital markets - Capital Markets finally liberalized through
Washington Consensus - Liberalization of immigration controls remains an
issue today - This wave of Globalization driven by
- Erosion of political barriers
- Opening of China
- Fall of Berlin Wall
- Liberalization of trade terms, GATT, WTO, TRIPS
- Technology and innovation
22Whos Afraid of Globalization, cont
- Compare Berger and Stiglitz position on higher
cost of capital due to volatility - Berger focuses on outsourcing, focusing on the
Centers fear - Stiglitz focuses on employment shocks
- Both discuss the East Asian Miracle, but from
different perspectives - Stiglitz is concerned over shocks to less
powerful developing economies - Berger is concerned with implications more
powerful developing economies - Centers Concern Over Employment Must
- Focus on competitiveness
- Actors in the Center must adapt or perish
- Dynamic analysis Peet, page 35
23Neo-Mercantilism?
- Wikipedia definition of neo-mercantilism
- Control capital movements, discourage domestic
consumption to increase foreign reserves and
capital development. - 19th Century European US Colonialism was a form
of neo-mercantilism - Colonists under control of mother country, not
free market - 20th Century Neo-Mercantilism 1930s-1940s
- Trade barriers restored during global economic
depression - Late 20th Century Neo-Mercantilism Japan,
Korea, Taiwan, Singapore China? - Promote exports with low exchange rates, create
barriers to imports, use trade surplus to build
domestic industries - Why the reference to China?
- What would happen if RMB rose from US1/7.8 to
US1/4? Worlds largest reserves decline in
value, increasing unemployment and imports
24Next Week
- The Role of Governance and Institutions
- Prepare to discuss the readings