Title: Obstacles to Economic Development
1Obstacles toEconomic Development
2Objectives
- What are the obstacles to economic development?
- How is the population growth rate calculated?
- What is the dependency ratio?
- What is a criticism of the concept of the vicious
circle of poverty?
3Question
- What are some obstacles to economic development?
4Rapid Population Growth
Population Growth Rate
Death Rate
Birth Rate
-
Which has a higher population growth rate?
Higher Developed Countries
Less Developed Countries
0.5 to 1
2 to 3
5Why is the population growth rate larger in
less-developed countries?
(Population Growth Rate Birthrate Death Rate)
1. Higher Birthrate 2. Death Rate has declined
with medical advances
6Does a high population growth rate make a country
poor?
- No, we cannot say that population increases
always cause poverty. - A high population growth rate does lead to
- Lower per-capita statistics
- Population density
- But, these are not absolutes.
- Japan is more densely populated than India.
- Yet, Japan has a higher per-capita income.
7- Dependency Ratio
- Number of children (under age 15) plus the
elderly (age 65) divided by the total population
Children (under 15)
Elderly (65)
Dependency Ratio
Population
Rapid population growth can lead to a high
dependency ratio which over-burdens the
productive working-age population.
8Low Saving Rate
- Vicious Circle of Poverty
- The idea that countries are poor because they do
not save and buy capital goods, - but they cannot save and buy capital goods
because they are poor.
9Cultural Differences
- 1. Status Quo
- that which exists now
- the existing state of affairs (comfort)
- 2. Change is dangerous
- 3. Good or bad fortune relies on fate or
spirits - 4. Rigid social mobility
10Political Instability and Government Seizure of
Private Property
- People are not willing to invest their money in
places where the risk of losing it is high. - Fear of government officials being ousted
- Fear of government overtaking their business
11High Tax Rates
- Economist Alvin Rabushka
- Studied countries between 1960-1982
- Low tax rates average to high growth rate in
per-capita income (3.7) - High tax rates low growth rate in per-capita
income (0.7)
12Economic Reasoning
- Thomas Malthus (1766-1834)
- Population increased geometrically (1, 2, 4, 8,
16, 32, 64, 128) - Food supply increased arithmetically (1, 2, 3,
4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10). - Population will outgrow the food supply
- Evidence does not support Malthus.
- What is bad today will be worse tomorrow if
something is not done.
13- Malthus could not predict
- Major technological changes in agriculture
- Increased subsistence levels
- Urbanization
- Fewer children
14Correcting Malthus
- With an increase in population,
- Demand for oil, for example, increases
- Price increases
- People cut back on the purchase of oil
- Entrepreneurs look for additional supplies of oil
- Entrepreneurs look for substitutes for oil
(alternative energy sources)
15Assessment
- What are the obstacles to economic development?
- How is the population growth rate calculated?
- What is the dependency ratio?
- What is a criticism of the concept of the vicious
circle of poverty?