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Transcript
Chapter 19
Developing Countries
 most people in the world live in developing countries
 They are countries that the average GNP is a fraction of
that of developed countries
 Most are in Africa, Asia, and Latin America
 Most have many problems including civil war and poverty
 Other countries around the world want these countries to
be successful
 Many believe it is their duty to help them
 Assistance to these countries help insure a stable supply of
raw materials
 Plus, the developing countries provide markets for products
of industrial nations
 Over 1.2 billion people in the world have an income of
less than $1 a day
 Most of them are in Africa and Asia
 The gap between industrialized countries and developing
countries is huge
 It is getting bigger every day
Obstacles to Development
 Obstacles:
 1) population growth
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Less developed countries population grows much quicker
Partly because of high birthrate
Partly because of longer life expectancy
 2) natural resources and geography

Many less developed countries have unproductive land and harsh
climates
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Have a shortage of natural and energy sources
Some can make up for this with international trade
However, if a country is landlocked, it is harder
Most all of the developed countries have a long coastline and
access to major trade routes
 3) education and technology
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Most developing countries do not have a high literacy rate
Do not have technical skills
Most don’t have money to train people
Most can’t provide free public education
Those that can, many kids have to work to help feed their families
 4) religion
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Some countries or people may not be interested in economic
growth because of religious beliefs
In India, many Hindus, and in China, many Buddhists try and
reject the material world
As a result, many are not interested in consumer goods or material
well-being
 5) External debt
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Many developing nations have huge debt
Borrowed from foreign banks and governments
May never be able to pay it back
Some have a larger debt than GNP
Bulgaria, Ethiopia, Jordan and Tanzania
Angola’s debt is THREE TIMES its GDP
Some can’t even pay the interest on their loans
They are on the verge of default
 6) capital flight
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The legal or illegal export of a country’s currency and foreign exchange
Happens because people lose faith in gov’t or economy
Then businesses and the gov’t face a cash shortage
Can’t invest in the economy
 7) corruption
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Sometimes on a small scale – bribing local officials
Sometimes on a massive scale – bribing or threatening federal officials
Scamming money from the nation’s treasury
 8) war and its aftermath
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Many developing nations experienced civil war in late 1900’s
Some are still in war
Devastating impact on lives, property, infrastructure and economy
Effects can last decades after the war is over
International Agencies
 Two agencies help developing nations solve their problems
 1) International Monetary Fund (IMF)
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Gives advice to all nations on monetary and fiscal policies
Helps support currency of countries by giving loans so they can compete & attract foreign
investors
 2) World Bank
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Makes loans and financial assistance and advice to developing countries
Owned by IMF member nations
Has funded projects to develop inland water transportation in Bangladesh
Financed desert locust control in East Africa
Stages of Economic Development
 There are several stages to economic development
 1) primitive equilibrium
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No formal economic organization
No money system
No investments
No countries like this today
 2) transition
 Break from primitive
 Doesn’t grow economically during this stage
 But old traditions begin to fall
 People begin to try new living patterns
 3) takeoff
 Not reached until barriers of primitive
equilibrium are broken
 People now want new and better way
to do things
 Have begun to do new things other
people have brought in
 An industrial nation may be providing
aid and education
 Country begins to save and invest more
 Industries begin to develop and grow
 4) semidevelopment
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National income grows faster than
population
This leads to higher per capita income
Core industries are firmly established
Technological advancements are made
Gov’t invests in economy
 5) high development
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Efforts to obtain food, shelter, and
clothing are MORE than successful
Most people have basic needs and
wants met
Attention is given to services and
consumer goods like TV, washing
machines, etc
No longer an emphasis on industrial
production
Nation increases is services and
provides more public goods
Priorities for Industrialized Nations
 World Bank has a list of recommendations for industrialized countries
 1) trade barriers need to be reduced or eliminated

this would generate c. $50 billion in exports for developing countries
 2) industrialized countries need to reduce budget deficits, lower interest rates and
stabilize inflation
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This would help their economy grow
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It also means they would trade more with developing nations
 3) they need to provide more financing to developing countries
 4) they need to support the economic development of developing countries

b/w ½ and 2/3 of all US foreign aid is used for military supplies or training
Development with Internal Funds
 For developing countries to build industries that have a
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comparative advantage, they need capital.
Also need capital to build roads and ports for trade
Money is hard to get unless a country is somewhat
financially stable
For a country to have money, they must produce more
than they consume
This is easier in a capitalist economy than in a command
economy
Development with External Funds
 Since it is hard for developing
country to have internal funds,
they must get external funds
 3 ways to do this:
 1)get capital from foreign
investors who may be
interested in the country’s
natural resources

This happened in several
countries in the Middle East
 2) borrowing from foreign
governments
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The US, Canada and some Western European countries give
foreign aid to some developing countries
 3) get a loan from an international agency
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World Bank
IMF
Countries that are particularly hard hit can get soft loans
 Loans that might never be paid back
Regional Cooperation
 Some countries have joined together to form free-trade areas = two or more
countries agree to reduce trade barriers and tariffs among themselves
 Others form customs unions = two or more countries abolish trade barriers
among them and adopt uniform tariffs for nonmember countries
 The European Union
 Most successful
regional cooperative
group in the world
 No tariffs between
countries
 Citizens of EU countries
have common passports
 Can vote in European
elections
 Can travel anywhere in
the EU to work, shop
and invest
 Have a single currency
– the Euro
 ASEAN
 Formed in 1967 – Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand
and the Philippines original members
 Now have 10 member countries
 Work to promote regional peace and stability and economic
growth
 Free trade area
 OPEC
 Some oil-producing nations have formed a cartel = group of
producers or sellers who agree to limit the production or
sale of a product to control prices.
 Formed in 1960
 They control oil prices
 Have made trillions from industrialized nations
 War and instability in the Middle East have hindered
economic growth