CHAPTER 1 Introducing Economic Development: A Global Perspective
CHAPTER 1 Introducing Economic Development: A Global Perspective
Economies as Social Systems: The Need to Go                Indeed, the emphasis is often on increased output,
Beyond Simple Economics                                    measured by gross domestic product (GDP).
Values Principles, standards, or qualities that a          The view that income and wealth are not ends in
society or groups within it considers worthwhile or        themselves but instruments for other purposes goes
desirable.                                                 back at least as far as Aristotle. Amartya Sen, the
                                                           1998 Nobel laureate in economics, argues that the
Attitudes The states of mind or feelings of an             “capability to function” is what really matters for
individual, group, or society regarding issues such as
                                                           status as a poor or nonpoor person. As Sen puts it,
material gain, hard work, saving for the future, and
sharing wealth.                                            “the expansion of commodity productions...are
                                                           valued, ultimately, not for their own sake, but as
Institutions Norms, rules                                  means to human welfare and freedom.”
of conduct, and generally accepted ways of doing
Functionings What people do or can do with the             development economists have placed so much
commodities of given characteristics that they come        emphasis on health and education, and more recently
to possess or control.
                                                           on social inclu- sion and empowerment, and have
                                                           referred to countries with high levels of income but
To make any sense of the concept of human well-
                                                           poor health and education standards as cases of
being in general, and poverty in particular, we need to
                                                           “growth without development.”
think beyond the availability of commodities and
consider their use: to address what Sen calls
                                                           Clearly, happiness is part of human well-being, and
functionings, that is, what a person does (or can do)
                                                           greater happiness may in itself expand an individual’s
with the commodities of given characteristics that
                                                           capability to function. As Amartya Sen has argued, a
they come to possess or control. Freedom of choice,
                                                           person may well regard happiness as an important
or control of one’s own life, is itself a central aspect
                                                           functioning for her well-being.
of most understandings of well-being. A function- ing
is a valued “being or doing,” and in Sen’s view,           Sustenance The basic goods and services, such as
functionings that people have reason to value can          food, clothing, and shelter, that are necessary to
range from being healthy, being well-nourished, and        sustain an average human being at the bare mini-
well-clothed, to being mobile, having self-esteem, and     mum level of living.
“taking part in the life of the community.”                Self-esteem The feeling of worthiness that a society
                                                           enjoys when its social, political, and economic
. Sen goes on to note that functioning depends also on     systems and institu- tions promote human values such
(1) “social conventions in force in the society in         as respect, dignity, integ- rity, and self-determination.
which the person lives, (2) the position of the person
in the family and in the society, (3) the presence or      Freedom A situation in which a society has at its
absence of festivities such as marriages, seasonal         disposal a variety of alterna- tives from which to
                                                           satisfy its wants and individuals enjoy real choices
festivals and other occasions such as funerals, (4) the
                                                           according to their preferences.
physical distance from the homes of friends and
              11                                           Many opinion leaders in developing nations hope that
relatives...”
                                                           their societies can gain the benefits of development
Indeed, the capacity to maintain valued social             without losing traditional strengths such as moral
relationships and to network leads to what James           values and trust in others—sometimes called social
Foster and Christopher Handy have termed external          capital.
capabilities,
                                                           These core values—sustenance, self-esteem, and
 Capabilities The freedoms that people have, given         freedom—represent common goals sought by all
their personal features and their command over                                       19
                                                           individuals and societies. They relate to
commodities.
                                                           fundamental human needs that find their expression in
Principles and Concepts which are “abilities to            almost all societies and cultures at all times. Let us
function that are conferred by direct connection or        therefore examine each in turn.
relationship with another person.”
                                                           Rising per capita incomes, the elimination of absolute
Sen then defines capabilities as “the freedom that a       poverty, greater employment opportunities, and
person has in terms of the choice of functionings,         lessening income inequalities therefore constitute the
given his personal features (conversion of char-           necessary but not the sufficient conditions for
acteristics into functionings) and his command over        development.
commodities.” Sen’s perspective helps explain why
Self-esteem: to Be a Person A second universal            In September 2000, the 189 member countries of the
component of the good life is self-esteem—a sense of      United Nations at that time adopted eight Millennium
worth and self-respect, of not being used as a tool by    Development Goals (MDGs), committing
others for their own ends.                                themselves to making substantial progress toward the
                                                          eradication of poverty and achieving other human
Freedom from Servitude: to Be able to Choose A            development goals by 2015.
third and final universal value that we suggest should
constitute the meaning of development is the concept        1.      Eradicate extreme poverty and hunger
of human freedom.
                                                            2.      Achieve universal primary education
1. To increase the availability and widen the             • Ensure that all boys and girls complete a full course
distribution of basic life-sustaining goods such as       of primary schooling
food, shelter, health, and protection                     • Eliminate gender disparity in primary and secondary
                                                          education, preferably by 2005, and at all levels by
2. To raise levels of living, including, in addition to   2015
higher incomes, the provi- sion of more jobs, better
education, and greater attention to cultural and human    • Reduce by two-thirds the mortality rate among
values, all of which will serve not only to enhance       children under 5 • Reduce by three-quarters the
material well- being but also to generate greater         maternal mortality ratio
individual and national self-esteem                       • Halt and begin to reverse the spread of HIV/AIDS
                                                          • Halt and begin to reverse the incidence of malaria
3.                                                        and other major diseases
Toexpandtherangeofeconomicandsocialchoicesavaila
bletoindividualsand nations by freeing them from          • Integrate the principles of sustainable development
servitude and dependence, not only in rela- tion to       into country policies and programs; reverse the loss of
other people and nation-states, but also to the forces    environmental resources
of ignorance and human misery
• Reduce by half the proportion of people without          these dimensions among developing countries that are
sustainable access to safe drinking water                  important to appreciate and take into account in
                                                           development policy. These areas are the following:
• Achieve significant improvement in the lives of at
least 100 million slum dwellers by 2020
                                                             1.    Lowerlevelsoflivingandproductivity
• Develop further an open, rule-based, predictable,
                                                             2.    Lowerlevelsofhumancapital
nondiscriminatory trading and financial system;
includes a commitment to good governance,
                                                             3.    Higherlevelsofinequalityandabsolutepoverty
development, and poverty reduction—both nationally
and internationally
                                                             4.    Higherpopulationgrowthrates
• Address the special needs of the least developed
                                                             5.    Greatersocialfractionalization
countries; includes tariff and quota free access for
least developed countries' exports; enhanced program
                                                             6.    Largerruralpopulationsbutrapidrural-to-
of debt relief for heavily indebted poor countries
                                                                   urbanmigration
(HIPCs) and cancellation of official bilateral debt;
and more generous official development assistance
                                                             7.    Lowerlevelsofindustrialization
(ODA) for countries committed to poverty reduction
A subset (part) of an economy, with four usages in         The most common way to define the developing
economic development: technology (modern and               world is by per capita income. Several international
traditional sectors); activity (industry or product        agencies, including the Organization for Eco- nomic
sectors); trade (export sector); and sphere (private and   Cooperation and Development (OECD) and the
public sectors)
                                                           United Nations, offer classifications of countries by
                                                           their economic status, but the best-known system is
2 Comparative Economic                                     that of the International Bank for Reconstruction and
Development                                                Develop- ment (IBRD), more commonly known as
                                                           the World Bank. (The World Bank is examined in
In each case, we also discover that behind these
                                                           detail in Box 13.2). In the World Bank’s classification
averages are very substantial differences in all of
system, 213 economies with a population of at least        30, with 15 of them in Africa) and small island
30,000 are ranked by their levels of gross national        developing states (of which there are 38).
income (GNI) per capita. These economies are then
classified as low-income countries (LICs), lower-          Finally, the term emerging markets was introduced at
middle-income countries (LMCs), upper- middle-             the International Finance Corporation to suggest
income countries (UMCs), high-income OECD                  progress (avoiding the then-standard phrase Third
countries, and other high-income countries. (Often,        World that investors seemed to associate with
LMCs and UMCs are informally grouped as the                stagnation). While the term is appealing, we do not
middle-income countries.)                                  use it in this text for three reasons. First, emerging
                                                           market is widely used in the financial press to suggest
Newly industrializing countries (NICs) Countries at        the presence of active
a relatively advanced level of economic develop-
ment with a substantial and dynamic industrial sector
and with close links to the inter- national trade,
finance, and investment system.                            stock and bond markets; although financial deepening
                                                           is important, it is only one aspect of economic
Least developed countries
                                                           development. Second, referring to nations as markets
A UN designation of countries with low income, low         may lead to an underemphasis on some non-market
human capital, and high economic vulnerability.            priorities in development. Third, usage varies, and
                                                           there is no established or generally accepted designa-
Human capital Productive investments in people,
                                                           tion of which markets should be labeled as emerging
such as skills, values, and health resulting from
expenditures on education, on-the-job training             and which as yet to emerge (the latter now sometimes
programs, and medical care.                                dubbed frontier markets in the financial press).
advanced manufacturing sectors as newly                    2.2 Basic Indicators of Development: Real Income,
industrializing countries (NICs). Yet another way to
classify the nations of the developing world is            Health, and Education
through their degree of international indebtedness; the
                                                           Gross national income
World Bank has classified countries as severely            (GNI) The total domestic and foreign output claimed
indebted, moderately indebted, and less indebted. The      by residents of a country, consist- ing of gross
United Nations Development Programme (UNDP)                domestic product (GDP) plus factor incomes earned
classifies countries according to their level of human     by foreign residents, minus income earned in the
development, including health and education                domestic economy by non- residents.
attainments as low, medium, high, and very high. We
                                                           Value added The portion of a product’s final value
consider the traditional and new UNDP Human                that is added at each stage of production.
Development Indexes in detail later in the chapter.
                                                           Depreciation (of the capital stock) The wearing out
Another widely used classification is that of the least    of equipment, buildings, infra- structure, and other
developed countries, a UN designation that as of           forms of capital, reflected in write-offs to the value of
2012 included 49 countries, 34 of them in Africa, 9 in     the capital stock.
Asia, 5 among Pacific Islands, plus Haiti. For
                                                           Capital stock The total amount of physical goods
inclusion, a country has to meet each of three criteria:   existing at a particular time that have been produced
low income, low human capital, and high economic           for use in the production of other goods and services.
vulnerability. Other special UN classifications include
landlocked developing countries (of which there are        Gross domestic product (GDP) The total final
                                                           output of goods and services produced by the
country’s economy within the country’s territory by        healthy life as measured by life expectancy at birth;
residents and nonresidents, regardless of its allocation   knowledge as measured by a combination of average
between domestic and foreign claims.
                                                           schooling attained by adults and expected years of
Purchasing power parity (PPP) Calculation of GNI           schooling for school-age children; and a decent
using a common set of inter- national prices for all       standard of living as measured by real per capita
goods and services, to provide more accurate               gross domestic product adjusted for the differing
comparisons of living standards.                           purchasing power parity of each country’s currency to
                                                           reflect cost of living and for the assumption of
researchers have tried to compare relative GNIs and        diminishing marginal utility of income.
GDPs by using purchasing power parity (PPP)
instead of exchange rates as conversion factors. PPP       Diminishing marginal utility The concept that the
is calculated using a common set of international          subjective value of additional consump- tion lessens
prices for all goods and services. In a sim- ple           as total consump- tion becomes higher.
version, purchasing power parity is defined as the
number of units of a for- eign country’s currency          2.4 Characteristics of the Developing World:
required to purchase the identical quantity of goods
                                                           Diversity within Commonality
and services in the local developing country market as
$1 would buy in the United States.
                                                           Lower Levels of Living and Productivity
The New HDI, like its predecessor, ranks each              Facilities that enable economic activity and markets,
                                                           such as transportation, communication and
country on a scale of 0 (lowest human development)
                                                           distribution networks, utili- ties, water, sewer, and
to 1 (highest human development) based on three            energy supply systems
goals or end products of development: a long and
Some aspects of market underdevelopment are that              Lingering Colonial Impacts and Unequal
they often lack (1) a legal system that enforces              International Relations
contracts and validates property rights; (2) a sta- ble
and trustworthy currency; (3) an infrastructure of            Colonial Legacy Most developing countries were
roads and utilities that results in low transport and         once colonies of Europe or otherwise dominated by
communication costs so as to facilitate interre- gional       European or other foreign powers, and institutions
trade; (4) a well-developed and efficiently regulated         created during the colonial period often had
system of banking and insurance, with broad access            pernicious effects on development that in many cases
and with formal credit markets that select projects and       have persisted to the present day. Despite important
allocate loanable funds on the basis of relative              varia- tions that proved consequential, colonial era
economic profit- ability and enforce rules of                 institutions often favored extrac- tors of wealth rather
repayment; (5) substantial market information for             than creators of wealth, harming development then
consumers and producers about prices, quantities, and         and now. Both domestically and internationally,
qualities of products and resources as well as the            developing countries have more often lacked
creditworthiness of potential borrowers; and (6) social       institutions and formal organizations of the type that
norms that facilitate successful long-term business           have bene- fited the developed world: Domestically,
relationships.                                                on average, property rights have been less secure,
                                                              constraints on elites have been weak, and a smaller
Imperfect market A market in which the theoretical
                                                              segment of society has been able to gain access to and
assumptions of perfect com- petition are violated by
the existence of, for example, a small number of              take advantage of economic opportunities. Problems
buyers and sellers, barriers to entry, and incomplete         with governance and public administration (see
information.                                                  Chapter 11), as well as poorly performing markets,
                                                              often stem from poor institutions.
Incomplete information The absence of information
that producers and consumers need to make efficient           External Dependence Relatedly, developing
deci- sions resulting in underperforming markets.             countries have also been less well organized and
The acknowledged right to use and benefit from a              influential in international relations, with sometimes
tangible                                                      adverse consequences for development. For example,
                                                              agreements within the World Trade Organization
(e.g., land) or intangible (e.g., intellectual) entity that   (WTO) and its predecessors concerning matters such
may include owning, using, deriving income from,              as agricultural subsidies in rich countries that harm
selling, and disposing
                                                              developing-country farmers and one-sided regulation
The extent to which these                                     of intellectual property rights have often been
                             imperfect markets and            relatively unfavorable to the developing world. The
incomplete information systems justify a more                 “Doha Development Round”
active role for gov- ernment (which is also subject to
similar problems of incomplete and imperfect                  Thus the developing world endures what may be
information) is an issue that we will be dealing with         called environmental dependence, in which it must
in later chapters. But their existence remains a              rely on the developed world to cease aggravating the
common characteristic of many developing nations              problem and to develop solu- tions, including
and an important contributing factor to their state of        mitigation at home and assistance in developing
underdevelopment.                                             countries. This topic is explored further in Chapter
                                                              10.
2.5 How Low-Income Countries Today Differ from
The position of developing countries today is in many       Climatic Differences Almost all developing
important ways sig- nificantly different from that of
                                                            countries are situated in tropical or subtropical
the currently developed countries when they
                                                            climatic zones
embarked on their era of modern economic growth.
We can identify eight signifi- cant differences in
                                                            Population Size, Distribution, and Growth In
initial conditions that require a special analysis of the
                                                            Chapter 6, we will examine in detail some of the
growth prospects and requirements of modern
economic development:                                       development problems and issues associated with
                                                            rapid population growth.
1. Physicalandhumanresourceendowments
2. 2.PercapitaincomesandlevelsofGDPinrelationtoth           The Historical Role of International Migration
   erestoftheworld
3. 3. Climate                                               In the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, a
   4. Populationsize,distribution,andgrowth                 major outlet for rural populations was international
                                                            migration, which was both widespread and large-
PART ONE Principles and Concepts                            scale.
development processes and policy challenges;             The classic post–World War II literature on economic
                                                         development has been dominated by four major and
Economic Institutions                                    sometimes competing strands of thought: (1) the
“Humanly devised” con- straints that shape interac-      linear-stages-of-growth model, (2) theories and
tions (or “rules of the game”) in an economy,            patterns of structural change, (3) the international-
including formal rules embodied in constitutions,        dependence revolution, and (4) the neoclassical, free-
laws, contracts, and market regulations, plus informal   market counterrevolution. In recent years, an eclectic
rules reflected in norms of behavior and con- duct,      approach has emerged that draws on all of these
values, customs, and generally accepted ways of          classic theories.
doing things.
                                                         This linear-stages approach was largely replaced in
Precolonial comparative advantage may also have
                                                         the 1970s by two competing schools of thought. The
interacted with the timing of European development
                                                         first, which focused on theories and patterns of
in influencing institutions in that settlers in later-
                                                         structural change, used modern economic theory and
colonized temperate zones arrived with more
                                                         statistical analysis in an attempt to portray the internal
knowledge and more advanced technology. In
                                                         process of structural change that a “typical”
particular, Europeans brought better agricultural
                                                         developing country must undergo if it is to succeed in
techniques to the later-settled areas such as North
                                                         generating and sustaining rapid economic growth.
America
                                                         The second, the international-dependence revolution,
The type of regime had enormous influence on             was more radical and more political. It viewed
postco- lonial institutional quality, reflected by       underdevelopment in terms of international and
Arrow 10. For example, the depraved rule of              domestic power relationships, institutional and
structural economic rigidities, and the resulting         The most influential and outspoken advocate of the
proliferation of dual economies and dual societies        stages-of-growth model of development was the
both within and among the nations of the world.           American economic historian Walt W. Rostow.
Dependence theories tended to emphasize external          According to Rostow, the transition from
and internal institutional and political constraints on   underdevelopment to development can be described
economic development. Emphasis was placed on the          in terms of a series of steps or stages through which
need for major new policies to eradicate poverty, to      all countries must proceed. As Rostow wrote in the
provide more diversified employment opportunities,        opening chapter of The Stages of Economic Growth:
and to reduce income inequalities. These and other
egalitarian objectives were to be achieved within the     Stages-of-growth model
                                                          of development A theory of economic development,
context of a growing economy, but economic growth
                                                          associated with the American economic historian
per se was not given the exalted status accorded to it    Walt W. Rostow, according to which
by the linear-stages and structural-change models.        a country passes through sequential stages in
                                                          achieving development.
Throughout much of the 1980s and 1990s, a fourth
approach prevailed. This neoclassical (sometimes          Harrod-Domar growth model
called neoliberal) counterrevolution in economic
                                                          A functional economic relationship in which the
thought emphasized the beneficial role of free
                                                          growth rate of gross domestic product (g) depends
markets, open economies, and the privatization of         directly on the national net savings rate (s) and
inefficient public enterprises. Failure to develop,       inversely on the national capital-output ratio (c).
according to this theory, was not due to exploitive
external and internal forces as expounded by              Capital-output ratio A ratio that shows the units of
dependence theorists. Rather, it was primarily the        capital required to produce a unit of output over a
                                                          given period of time.
result of too much government intervention and
regulation of the economy. Today’s eclectic approach      Net savings ratio Savings expressed as a proportion
draws on all of these perspectives, and we will           of disposable income over some period of time
highlight the strengths and weaknesses of each.
                                                          Suppose that this relationship, known in economics as
                                                          the capital-output ratio, is roughly 3 to 1. If we
3.2 Development as Growth and the Linear-Stages
                                                          define the capital-output ratio as k and assume further
Theories                                                  that the national net savings ratio, s, is a fixed
                                                          proportion of national output (e.g., 6%) and that total
When interest in the poor nations of the world really     new investment is determined by the level of total
began to materialize following World War II,              savings, we can construct the following simple model
economists in the industrialized nations were caught      of economic growth:
In dependence theory, local elites who act as fronts      Implicit in structural-change theories and explicit in
for foreign investors.                                    international-dependence theories is the notion of a
                                                          world of dual societies, of rich nations and poor
Comprador group                                           nations and, in the developing countries, pockets of
                                                          wealth within broad areas of poverty. Dualism is the
In short, the neo-Marxist, neocolonial view of
                                                          existence and persistence of substantial and even
underdevelopment attributes a large part of the
                                                          increasing divergences between rich and poor nations
developing world’s continuing poverty to the
                                                          and rich and poor peoples on various levels.
existence and policies of the industrial capitalist
                                                          Specifically, although research continues, the
countries of the northern hemisphere and their
                                                          traditional concept of dualism embraces four key
extensions in the form of small but powerful elite or
                                                          arguments:
comprador groups in the less developed
countries.Underdevelopment is thus seen as an             1. Different sets of conditions, of which some are
externally induced phenomenon, in contrast to the         “superior” and others “inferior,” can coexist in a
linear-stages and structural-change theories’ stress on   given space. Examples of this element of dualism
internal constraints, such as insufficient savings and
investment or lack of education and skills.               possible with the developed countries and instead
                                                          pursue a policy of autarky, or inwardly directed
False-paradigm model The proposition that                 development, or at most trade only with other
developing countries have failed to develop because
                                                          developing countries. But large countries that
their devel- opment strategies (usually given to them
by Western economists) have been based on an              embarked on autarkic policies, such as China and, to a
incorrect model of development, one that, for             significant extent, I
example, overstresses capital accumulation or market
liber- alization without giving due consideration to      A closed economy that attempts to be completely
needed social and institutional change.                   self-reliant.
                                                          Public-choice theory (new political economy
3.5 The Neoclassical Counterrevolution: Market            approach) The theory that self-interest guides all
Fundamentalism                                            individual behavior and that governments are
                                                          inefficient and corrupt because people use gov-
                                                          ernment to pursue their own agendas.
Challenging the Statist Model: Free Markets,
Public Choice, and Market-Friendly Approaches             Market-friendly approach
In the 1980s, the political ascendancy of conservative    The notion historically pro- mulgated by the World
governments in the United States, Canada, Britain,        Bank that successful development policy requires
                                                          governments to create an environment in which
and West Germany came with a neoclassical
                                                          markets can operate efficiently and to intervene only
counterrevolution in economic theory and policy. In       selectively in the economy in areas where the market
developed nations, this counterrevolution favored         is inefficient.
supply-side macroeconomic policies, rational expec-
tations theories, and the privatization of public         Market failure A market’s inability to deliver its
corporations. In developing a closed economy that         theo- retical benefits due to the exis- tence of market
                                                          imperfections such as monopoly power, lack of factor
attempts to be completely self-reliant.
                                                          mobility, sig- nificant externalities, or lack of
Autarky                                                   knowledge. Market failure often provides the
                                                          justification for government intervention to alter the
Neoclassical counterrevolution                            working of the free market.
The 1980s resurgence of neoclassical free-market ori-     Capital-labor ratio The number of units of capital
entation toward development problems and policies,        per unit of labor.
counter to the interventionist depen- dence revolution
of the 1970s.                                             Solow neoclassical growth model Growth model in
                                                          which there are diminishing returns to each factor of
FREE MARKET                                               pro- duction but constant returns to scale. Exogenous
                                                          techno- logical change generates long- term economic
The system whereby prices of commodities or               growth.
services freely rise or fall when the buyer’s demand
for them rises or falls or the seller’s supply of them    Solow neoclassical growth model in particular
decreases or increases.                                   represented the seminal contribution to the
                                                          neoclassical theory of growth and later earned Robert
Free-market analysis argues that markets alone are        Solow the Nobel Prize in economics. It differed from
efficient—product markets provide the best signals        the Harrod-Domar formulation by adding a second
for investments in new activities; labor markets          factor, labor, and introducing a third independent
respond to these new industries in appropriate ways;      variable, technology, to the growth equation. Unlike
producers know best what to produce and how to            the fixed-coefficient, constant- returns-to-scale
produce it efficiently; and product and factor prices     assumption of the Harrod-Domar model, Solow’s
reflect accurate scarcity values of goods and resources   neoclassical growth model exhibited diminishing
now and in the future.                                    returns to labor and capital separately and constant
                                                          returns to both factors jointly. Technological progress
Free-market analysis
                                                          became the residual factor explaining long-term
Theoretical analysis of the properties of an economic     growth, and its level was assumed by Solow and other
system operating with free markets, often under the       neoclassical growth theorists to be determined
assumption that an unregulated market performs            exogenously, that is, independently of all other factors
better than one with government regulation.               in the model.
More formally, the standard exposition of the Solow      pattern of insights and under- standings, reflecting in
neoclassical growth model uses an aggregate              part improved data and emergence of new technol-
production function in which                             ogies and new institutions, that together provide the
                                                         basis for examining the possibilities of contemporary
     α     1-α                                           development of the diverse nations of Africa, Asia,
Y = K 1AL2
                                                         and Latin America.
governments, according to neoclassical growth
theory, will retard growth
the Differences