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Why is Economic Development so Difficult? [2 – June 12 2003] Review Many conceptions of human development – Roosevelt: four freedoms – Sen: sustenance, self-esteem, freedom – Stiglitz: transformation of society – HDI: life expectancy, literacy, enrollment, GDP per capita (PPP$) Economic Growth correlates with human development, and in particular Growth helps the poor – 1% in overall GDP per capita = 1% in GDP per capita for poorest 20% Great Structural Diversity among Developing Economies Size and income level Historical background Physical and human resources Ethnic and religious composition Relative importance of public and private sectors Industrial structure External dependence Political structure, power, and interest groups But, they face Common Challenges: Extremely Low per capita GDP Low or negative GDP growth over time Growing disparity between richest and poorest countries Sructural Challenges: High dependence on agriculture and primary product exports Rapid rural-urban migration Low levels of productivity High rates of population growth and dependency burdens Basic Structure of Economies: Africa vs. Asia vs. U.S.: 100% 80% 60% 40% 20% 0% Africa agriculture Asia industry U.S. services / other Deeper Economic Challenges Macroeconomic: – High inflation – Black markets for foreign exchange – Trade barriers imposed by rich countries – External debt (?) Deeper Economic Challenges Microeconomic: imperfect or missing markets – Markets for borrowing, saving, and investing (credit and financial markets) – Markets for spreading risk (insurance markets) Deeper Economic Challenges: Imperfect Information Markets work well when buyers and sellers have good information Markets fail or don’t exist when buyers or sellers (or both) have poor information Poor information is not the same as “little information” (recall our auction) Markets can work poorly when buyers have information but sellers do not, or vice versa – asymmetric information Imperfect Information: Example Lenders do not know if farmer is good credit risk…… Farmers have no collateral (the developed countries solution to this problem) Hence, farmer cannot get loan to buy land, Hence, farmer must somehow rent the land….perhaps by sharecropping Which does not give farmer full marginal benefit of his labor – “inefficient” Without Credit and Insurance: People live “on the economic edge” A small shock can mean ruin: – Illness can’t work, no income – [no unemployment, no insurance] – Sell assets for medicine, food – [What assets???] – Future productivity drops Social Challenges: Missing Institutions A market economy needs: – Security, peace – Justice system to enforce contracts – Financial system: • To collect funds from savers • Allocate credit to borrowers • Stable currency – Transaction information (what am I buying?) – Effective, fair, government What about Science and Technology? We will see that technological progress is the only real source of long-run growth Technology is already here….. Why can’t LDCs take advantage of past (and current) discoveries? Sachs’ “Quadruple Bind” 1) Innovation responds to demand. Demand comes from rich countries 2) Innovation requires critical mass of science. Poor countries have no critical mass 3) Existing knowledge applies to temperate zones 4) climate change limits world growth (shakier argument) Looking Ahead: The Quest for Growth (in per capita GDP) Does Aid for Investment for Machines cause growth? Does Education for Skills cause growth? (Does controlling population cause growth?) Does reducing debt cause growth? What is a poverty trap? How can people escape from poverty traps? How can policy and institutions be improved to help people escape from poverty traps?