Title: What Causes Growth Some Conjectures
1What Causes Growth? Some Conjectures
2Outline
- What are the sources of growth over the long-run?
And why do countries differ in their growth
rates? - Conjectures
- Natural resources and endowment
- Population
- Openness, globalization and policy reform
- Institutions (democracy and property rights)
- Civil conflict
- Poverty traps the extreme poor cases
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4Growth Theory The Basics (I)
- GDP as output (think of a factory or farm) what
will make it grow? - Investment takes place in more--and/or
better--physical capital (plant and equipment,
machines) - The quantity of hours worked increases (through
labor force growth or participation)
5Growth Theory The Basics (II)
- The quality of the labor improves (through
investment in education and training or
experience) - Innovation or technological change takes place
we discover new processes/techniques for making
existing products, and develop altogether new
ones
6Growth Theory the Puzzle
- But why does investment in physical and human
capital and innovation vary across countries? - Not just an economic question
- Tests
- explain levels of economic development (ie.,
differences in GDP per capita) or growth rates
(the dependent variable) - In terms of some independent variables
- Controlling for possible confounding effects
through multiple regression method (holding
other things constant)
7Conjecture I Resource Endowments and Geography
- Natural resource abundance leads to higher growth
- Natural for Americans to think
- Sachs and Warner (1995) test idea
- indicator is share of natural resources
exports/GDP - they find negatively correlated with growth
- Resource curse examples--and counterexamples
- Richly endowed Nigeria, Ghana, Iran, Burma,
Argentina, Venezuela - Poorly endowed small European economies, Korea,
Taiwan, Hong Kong, Singapore
8Resource Endowments II
- Why?
- Natural resource exports can be more prone to
volatility and adverse movements in prices - The discovery of natural resources can create
booms that distort patterns of investment (the
Dutch disease) - Natural resource rich countries have lower tax
bases, governments are therefore less accountable
and more corrupt
9Resource Endowments III Geography
- But the issue might not be resource abundance but
underlying geography - Landlocked countries face particular problems
- Mountainous countries and also those with few
navigable rivers or natural harbors - From equator to 30 degrees latitude incomes are
lower than North of 40 degrees latitude
10Gray arid. Red and orange are very high and high
vulnerability
11Conjecture II Population
- Malthus economics as the dismal science
- As GDP growth occurs, population also rises
pushing income per capita back down toward
subsistence - Famines and constraints on resources ultimately
reduce population - Examples World Watch Institute, Population
Action International, UN Center for Population
and Development - Prescription Family planning and contraception
12Population II
- If true, there should be a negative relationship
between population growth and economic growth - Ie., countries in which population grows more
rapidly should see lower economic growth - Widely studied no relationship one way or the
other.
13Population III
- Complex dynamics between economic growth and
population growth - contra Malthus, as GDP increases (over some
threshold) family size goes down - the so-called demographic transition (see next
slide) - Population growth might be good
- as an input, if population can be absorbed into
productive employment - Large concentrations of population--for example
in cities and urban civilizations--appear to be
associated with innovation (the genius principle)
and a more elaborated division of labor
14The Demographic Transition
15Population IV
- If population is not associated with growth one
way or the other, family size may still affect
poverty - Low income households have larger average family
sizes, which can - Place burdens on parents
- Reduce resources available for children
- Create localized environmental stress, for
example on commons (land, water, fisheries) - Perhaps population growth is adversely related to
growth in certain types of economies such as
those dependent on agriculture
16Population V
- Policy conclusion family planning may increase
choice, but -
- Not clear it influences overall growth
- Demand for children may be more important than
availability of contraception - Although perhaps we should be more concerned
about population growth in Malthusian
economies those heavily dependent on
agriculture or fragile natural resource base
17Conjecture III Policy Reform and Globalization
- In the immediate postwar period, many developing
countries pursued inward-oriented development
strategies that involved - Protection (tariffs and non-tariff barriers),
which limited trade - Restrictions on foreign direct investment
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23Policy Reform and Globalization
- Inward-looking or autarchic strategies had the
effect of - Limiting export opportunities
- Limiting access to capital and technology from
abroad - Limiting competition in the domestic market that
was important for innovation
24The Washington Consensus
- Advanced industrial states and multilateral
development institutions emphasize policy reforms
that would increase economic openness - Trade and foreign direct investment should be
liberalized - Government-owned enterprises should be
privatized, including to foreigners - Encourage competition through deregulation
- (from John Williamson, Latin American Adjustment
How Much Has Happened?, 1990).
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26Openness and Growth What Relationship?
- More open economies--ie., those which trade more
--do appear to grow more rapidly - But the causal relationship runs both
ways--countries that grow more rapidly export
more - What about direct measures of trade barriers
ie., tariffs? - Era of more closed economies saw high growth, era
of globalization has seen a mixed record of
growth
27Openness and Economic Growth
- Policy implications
- Extreme distortions and closure almost certainly
lower growth - Moderate protection may not, but
- rapidity of technological change may make it
more costly to be closed in the future - On the other hand, following the washington
consensus can have high social costs
(unemployment, cuts in social services, etc.)
28Conjecture IVInstitutions and Governance
- Good governance the problem of circularity
- Countries that do well are well-governed
- Two possibilities
- property and contracting rights
- democracy
29Property Rights and Growth
- Property rights the ability of individuals to
use, transfer and reap returns on property - Contracting rights ability to enforce enforce
contracts - Violations of property rights from
- Expropriation by governments (nationalization,
confiscatory taxation) the predatory state - Crime and extortion
- Weak legal protections
- Growth will be higher if individuals can reap the
gains from investments and risks that they take - Incentives matter
30Property Rights II
- How to measure property rights?
- Mostly investor perceptions of legal environment,
ease of doing business and corruption - Countries that protect property rights do appear
to experience higher growth - but with interesting exceptions China
- and why do some countries have better property
rights protection than others? Some speculations
about growth in the very long run.
31Democracy and Growth I
- Does democracy lead to higher growth?
- Better able to protect property rights
- Better investment in human capital and social
service - Better social capital and higher levels of
participation
32Democracy and Growth II
- Przeworski et. al. test systematically no
relationship - On average, democracies and authoritarian regimes
perform the same - But the range of performance is wider in
authoritarian regimes - miracles such as China, Korea, Taiwan, Chile
- But also the worst disasters, such as Haiti,
Romania, Zaire, Cambodia, North Korea
33Conjecture V the Importance of Security
- The Long Peace among the major powers since
1945 provided foundation for continued expansion
among advanced industrial states - But absence of war among major powers was
associated with - Interstate wars and interventions in developing
countries and - extensive civil conflict
- Massive displacement of peoples
34War and Growth
- War can act as a stimulusand
- May increase subsequent growth positively once
finished, because of reconstruction (so-called
phoenix effects Germany and Japan) - But wars are obviously destructive of
infrastructure, capital and people where and when
they are being fought.
35Interstate Wars Since 1945, including wars of
independence (WI)
Africa Algeria WI, 1954-1962 Angola WI
1961-1975 Cameroon WI 1955-1960
Eritrea-Ethiopia 1998-2002 Guinea-Bissau WI
1962-1974 Kenya WI, 1952-1963 Madagascar WI
1947-48 Mozambique WI 1965-1975 Tunisia
1952-54 Asia Afghan-Soviet War 1979-1988
Cambodia 1970-1979 India-China, 1962
India-Pakistan 1971 Indonesia WI, 1945-49
Korean War 1950-53 Laos 1960-73 Vietnam WI,
Vietnam War and wars with Cambodia and China,
1946-1975, 1978-79, 1987 Latin
America Argentina-Britain (Falklands/Malvinas),
1982, plus US intervention in Dominican Republic
1965 El Salvador civil war 1979-90 Guatamala
1954 Haiti 1991-94 Nicaraguan civil war
1981-88 Panama 1989 Middle East Iran-Iraq
1980-1988 First and Second Gulf Wars 1991
2003-present Israel and its neighbors 1948-49,
1956, 1967-70, 1973, 1982-present
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37Civil Wars Ongoing or Ended in Last 10 Years
Africa Angola, 1995-1997, 1998-2002 Burundi,
1988-1991, 1993-2001 First Congo War, Zaire etc,
1996-1997 Second Congo War, DRC, 1998-present
Republic of the Congo, 1997, 1998 Côte d'Ivoire,
1999-2000, 2002-present Liberia, 1989-1996,
1999-present Rwanda, 1990-1997 Sierra Leone,
1991-2002 Somalian Civil War, 1991-present
Sudanese Civil War, Sudan, 1955-1972,
1983-present Uganda, 1987-present Asia Cambodia,
1978-1993, 1997-1998 East Timor/Indonesia,
1975-1999 Nepalese People's War, Nepal,
1996-present Philippines (Mindanao), 1972-1996
Sri Lanka (Tamil succession), 1983-2001 Latin
America Colombia, 1964-present Guatemala,
1960-1996 Chiapas, Mexico, 1994-present Middle
East Afghanistan, 1992-2002 Kurdistan, Iraq,
Kurdish Democratic Party, Patriotic Union of
Kurdistan, 1961-1970, 1988-2003 Israel,
1967-present Yemen, 1979-1989, 1994,
2000s Former Socialist Countries First Chechen
War (1994-1996) Second Chechen War
(1999-present), Chechnya, Russia Georgian Civil
War, Abkhazia, South Ossetia in Georgia Yugoslav
wars, Yugoslavia, 1991-1995, 1996-1999, 2001
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41Number of Conflicts by Type, 1946-2002 (at least
25 battle deaths)
42Conjecture VI Poverty Traps
- Is there something distinctive about countries
characterized by extreme poverty - in which conditions of poverty themselves
contribute to the perpetuation of poverty? - The problems of the least developed countries
(LDCs)
43Least Developed Countries, 2005 Approximately 11
of world population, 0.6 of GDP
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45Poverty Traps
- Policy conclusion we have to think differently
about the problems facing extremely poor
countries with generalized poverty than others - Aid is likely to be extremely important
46Summary I
- Growth is important in alleviating poverty in any
given economy - And differences in growth rates over time are an
important determinant of the distribution of
income across countries (divergence or
inter-country income inequality)
47Summary Five Conjectures on Growth
48Summary II
- Note the foregoing is a summary of the
relationship between these variables and growth - and we are therefore only examining their
effects on poverty and inequality indirectly - For example, civil wargtlow growthgtincrease in
poverty - But perhaps they have direct effects
- Ie., democracygtpoverty reduction