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13 Economic Development and Regeneration © John Tribe © John Tribe Learning outcomes • By studying this section students will be able to: – – – – define and explain economic growth review critically the concept of economic growth understand the determinants of economic growth evaluate appropriate growth strategies for developed and developing countries – evaluate the role of the sector in regeneration strategies – evaluate the contribution of the sector to growth © John Tribe Meaning and measurement of economic growth • Economic growth is defined as the increase in real output per capita of a country. • The most commonly used measure of output is GNP. © John Tribe Growth Rates 1990 – 2001 (average % annual change in GNP) © John Tribe GNP per capita (1998, $) © John Tribe Problems of measurement • First there are the problems associated with collecting national income data. • Second some apparent changes in growth may in fact stem from currency movements against the dollar. • Third, over a period of time the labour force may work fewer hours in a week. • Fourth, GNP per capita figures are an average. They may disguise the fact that there are large differences in incomes of the population. • Finally, economic activity which contributes to GNP has some unwanted side-effects in the form of pollution. © John Tribe The causes of economic growth • Land • Labour – It is the quality of the labour force that is important in increasing productivity • Capital – Investment in new plant, machines and other capital enables labour productivity and GNP to rise. • Technology – Improved technology can increase growth by reducing production costs and creating new products for the market. © John Tribe Beijing, China, 1990 • Lack of capital combined with large population means that labour force has low productivity © John Tribe Promoting growth – Interventionists believe the government should play a key role in funding appropriate education and training, R&D and investing in projects and infrastructure. – Free marketeers advocate market liberalization and ‘supply side’ policies, e.g: • reducing government expenditure to release resources for the private sector • reducing taxes to increase incentives • reducing trade union power to encourage flexible labour markets • reducing welfare payments to encourage individual enterprise • encouraging risk and entrepreneurship and privatisation • encouraging competition through deregulation • reducing red tape © John Tribe Economic growth in developing countries • Stages of development – Advanced Economies – Countries in Transition – Developing Countries © John Tribe Advanced Economies • High income per head • Highly formalised markets • Eg souvenir shops: – Top picture in Capri, Italy – Bottom picture in Nepal © John Tribe Countries in Transition • Prague, Czech Republic in transition from communist to market economy • Considerable investment in increasing capacity at Prague airport • Importance of tourism to prosperity of Prague © John Tribe Developing Countries • Zimbabwe, 1998 • Subsistence agriculture • Low mechanisation © John Tribe Characteristics • The low standards of living enjoyed by developing countries (DCs) are characterized by low per capita GNP and by a range of other indicators. These include – high levels of mortality – low levels of literacy, medical care and food consumption. © John Tribe Barriers to Growth • high population growth • low incomes: This leads to low savings, leading to low investment, leading to low incomes (low rate of capital formation) • an undeveloped financial sector. • absence of welfare system: This can lead to over population where children are seen as a financial insurance for old age • low levels of training and education: • existence of a large subsistence sector: This can mean that taxation is difficult. • few resources • dependence on raw material exports • employment centred on the agricultural sector of economy • traditional (nonentrepreneurial) culture • foreign currency shortages • poor terms of trade (exports cheap, imports expensive) • international debt © John Tribe Main sources of investment funds • domestic savings (but these are often low because of low incomes) • government investment funded through taxes or borrowing (but governments often have a low tax base because of low incomes and subsistence economies and high foreign debt repayments • private foreign investment • overseas aid © John Tribe Strategies for development • import substitution (producing goods that are currently imported) • export-led growth (producing goods and services where a local cost or other advantage can be established) – leisure and tourism can be important elements in this strategy • population control • education and training projects • infrastructure projects © John Tribe Export-led growth • Tourist arrivals to Koh Phi Phi, Thailand © John Tribe International Tourism © John Tribe Regeneration • Regeneration is the term used to describe the process of economic redevelopment generally in an area that has suffered decline because of structural changes in the economy. – Urban Regeneration – Rural Regeneration © John Tribe Local Economic Decline © John Tribe Rural regeneration • Gites de France: Bringing tourism to rural areas of France suffering from depopulation • Rural Diversification in Finland: A farmer provides boat trips for tourists. © John Tribe Review of key terms 1 • Economic growth = – the increase in real output per capita. • Per capita = – per person. • Net investment = – gross investment – depreciation. • Productivity = – output per employee. © John Tribe Review of key terms 2 • DC = – developing country. • Import substitution = – producing goods that are currently imported. • Infrastructure = – social capital such as roads and railways. • Joint venture = – overseas and domestic investment partnership. © John Tribe 13 Economic Development and Regeneration: The End © John Tribe