Title: Economic Development
1Economic Development
2Measures of economic development
- GDP
- Total value of all goods and services produced in
a country in a year - GNP
- GDP plus income earned from investments abroad
- E.g., profits from foreign investment
- PPP
3Purchasing power parity
- Purchasing power parity (PPP)
- How much a common basket of goods and services
each currency can buy in that country
4GNP per capita
5Human Development Index
6PPP and China
- Economy
- Growth enormously over last 15 years
- How big?
- Depends on how you measure it
- GNP
- U.S. 12.5 trillion
- Japan 4.8 trillion
- Germany 2.7 trillion
- U.K. 2.2 trillion
- France 2.1 trillion
- China 1.8 trillion
7PPP and China
- PPP (purchasing power parity)
- i.e., how much does a bundle of goods cost
- PPP
- U.S. 12,410 trillion
- E.U. 12,180 trillion
- China 8.182 trillion
- If growth rates continue, may overtake U.S. in
PPP by 2015
On average U.S. person is 30 times richer
measured in
8PPP and China
2003 China consumes 40 of World Cement 1/3 of
growth in oil consumption, 90 of growth in world
steel, 100 increase in copper
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11Life Expectancy
12Basic Elements of Development
- Energy resources
- Geography of energy resources is very uneven
- Most developed countries (except Japan and some
European Countries) have reasonable amounts of
energy - Most peripheral countries are energy poor and
the cost of importing energy is expensive - Major exceptions Algeria, Ecuador, Gabon,
Indonesia, Libya, Nigeria, Venezuela, and the
Persian Gulf States
13Basic Elements of Development
- Land
- Over ½ of the Earths land surface is unsuitable
for farming - Good agricultural land is concentrated in
- W. Europe,
- West-central Russia,
- Eastern N. America,
- S.E. Australia,
- parts of Central and South America,
- India,
- E. China,
- and the Rift Valley in Africa
14Agricultural Land
15Basic Elements of Development
- Raw Mineral Resources
- Unevenly distributed
- 5 countries with large concentrations of mineral
resources - Russia, U.S., Canada, S. Africa, Australia
- Many countries have only one or two mineral
resources - Having all three (energy, land, and mineral
resources) - Makes development more likely
- But neither sufficient nor necessary for
development - e.g., Japan has neither lots of land, energy or
minerals Russia has all three
16Overall Economy
- Economy
- 2 dimensions
- Formal economic activity that takes place
within official channels - i.e., subject to formal rules, taxes, legal
structure - Informal Not officially recognized
- i.e., not reported as income
- Work done in the home
- Subsistence farming (growing crops for food)
- Barter
- Much street trading, informal services
- informal maybe as much as 1/3 of all economic
activity - Maybe as much as 2/3 in poor countries
17Formal Economy
- 4 major groupings
- Primary/extractive
- Agriculture, mining and forestry
- Secondary/industrial
- Manufactured goods
- Tertiary/service
- All those activities that are services to others
- Transportation, banking, office work, child care,
middle management - Quaternary
- Activities that use and manipulate high-end
information - Financial investment, specialized law, medicine,
communications, banking etc.
18Geography of economic sectors
- Primary
- Much of Africa, Asia.
- 50-75 of labor force (5-10) in West
- Secondary
- Most in West and some developing countries
- 75 in West but declining
- Rapidly expanding
- in China, Brazil, S. Korea, Mexico,
- Taiwan, India and Argentina
- Tertiary/Quaternary
- Mostly in core, e.g., U.S.
- 4 primary
- 22 secondary
- 50 tertiary
- 22 quaternary
- Profits greatest in the Quaternary sector
19Trade, Aid and Debt
- Trade is a key aspect of economic development
- Movement toward a global trading structure
- 4 major trading blocs
- European Union (and some former colonies)
- NAFTA (and some Central and South American
countries - The countries of the former Soviet Union
- Japan and other East Asian countries and S.
Arabia and Bahrain
20Trade, Aid and Debt
- Major changes in patterns of world trade
- Intensification of the trade patterns within and
between core regions - At the expense of trade with peripheral countries
(except for oil) - Innovations in transport, communications and
production technology have reduced the importance
of distance - Distance used to be key factor in defining
traditional trading blocks - Shift in global politics Toward open markets,
Free trade - Benefits core much more than periphery
- New Flows
- Changes in the global organization of production
are increasing some manufacturing flows from some
semi-peripheral countries
21Trade and development
- Can poorer countries trade their way out of
poverty? - Elasticity of demand
- Degree to which demand changes in response to
price changes - Peripheral countries depend upon primary activity
for their exports (raw materials, cash crops) - These exports have stable demand (low elasticity)
- ie., quantities consumed dont increase that much
- with either increased wealth of customers (i.e.,
dont buy that much more) - or with change in the price of the commodity
22Trade and development
- Core countries export high-tech goods and
services that have high demand (high elasticity) - Customers will buy more as they get wealthy
- Customers respond more to changing price signals
23Import Substitution
- Strategy replace imported manufactured goods
with goods produced in your country - Establish tariff barriers (import taxes) to help
manufacturing grow in your country - Internal contradiction/unintended consequences
- Need to remove tariff barriers at the appropriate
time but this is very difficult to achieve
because it dramatically increases uncertainty
once the tariffs are removed - May require large amounts of start-up capital
- Might work if beginning with simple products like
textiles
24Debt financing and the Debt trap
- Borrow money from the core to develop industries
- industrialize, generate growth and profits, pay
back debt - Problem
- if the project fails then stuck with the debt
- Borrow more money to service the original debt or
to finance new development projects - Over time debt accumulates and country ends up
simply trying to pay off the interestand never
gets to the capital - Global debt
- 1.5 trillion owed by low and middle income
countries to high-income countries (unlikely to
be ever paid back) - Interest flows 250B to Western banks
- 41B in new loans
25Debt financing and the Debt trap
26Pathways to regional development
- Development trajectories
- Historical in origin
- Cumulative in nature
- Initial Advantage
- Contingent (involving a degree of chance
variatione.g., computer industry and Silicon
Valleywhy Silicon Valley? - External Economies
- Generally, New growth will occur in places
offering external economies - Existing labor markets, infrastructure, business
milieu, social capital
27Pathways to regional development
- Localization economies
- External economies may evolve into localization
economies - Cost savings accruing to particular industries as
a result of those industries clustering at a
specific location - i.e., the existence of a cluster of like
industries leads to competitive advantage for
the industries of that region - Agglomeration Economies
- Interdependence between firms
- generates cost savings
- Spreads the success of growth throughout the
region
28Agglomeration Economies
- Backward Linkages
- inputs from supplier firms
- Forward Linkages
- Outputs to consumer firms
- Ancillary linkages
- Across firms via subcontracting
- Maintenance repair, security, recycling,
business services - Tertiary services
- Demand for housing, utilities, infrastructure,
retail, education, personal services - Government Structure
- Larger tax base, possibility of debt financing,
improved schools, environment etc., all of which
propel growth
29Cumulative Causation and Backwash effects
- Cumulative causation (Gunnar Myrdal)
- The build up of advantages that occurs in
specific geographic settings as a result of - external economies, agglomeration effects and
localization economies - Backwash effects
- The attractiveness of one place may draw
resources (labor, capital, talent) from other
places making it more difficult to achieve growth
in those places (e.g., Primate Cities in
semi-peripheral and peripheral countries)
30Cumulative Causation and Backwash effects
- Spread effects
- Growth in new regions
- If demand in the growing region is so high that
producers cant satisfy it - Investors in the other regions may be able to
develop a local capacity to meet that demand - Diseconomies of Agglomeration
- Negative effects of too much growth
- Higher prices for land, labor
- Congestion and pollution
- Waste disposal
- Exhausted infrastructure
- Narrowing of entrepreneurial risk
- lock-in to particular production technologies
and business strategies
31New Windows of Locational Opportunity
- When new growth sectors emerge
- e.g., high-tech in the 1950s
- Not tied down by enormous investments in
factories or industrial infrastructure - If diseconomies of agglomeration are occurring in
existing growth regions - e.g., US manufacturing belt in 50s-70s
- New windows of locational opportunity may emerge
- Causes growth to occur in new areas
- e.g., California and high tech
32New Windows of Locational Opportunity
- Deindustrialization
- Shifts of investment in new region may lead to
decline in growth in older regions - Creative Destruction
- Active withdrawal of investment
- from regions/places/economic sectors that yield
lower rates of profit - to regions/places/economic sectors that yield
higher rates of profit - Environmentally sustainable capitalism and
creative destruction?
33Government Intervention
- Grow poorer regions
- (via cumulative causation)
- Help declining regions stabilize
- Strategies and results vary
- Government investment in infrastructure
- EU development fund
- Tax breaks for location in poorer areas
- Local/State Gov. in U.S.
- Congestion Taxes
- London
- Growth Poles
- Difficult to select the right set of industries