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Chapter 9 “Part 2 - Development” There is a correlation between Development and Gender Inequality •Remember GDI and GEM from Part 1 of the Development slide show. •GDI is similar to HDI, but for women. •Eg. Iran and Mexico have a similar HDI (Mexico is a little higher) and have the same amount of youth in school but Mexico has a much higher GDI because both boys and girls have equal access to education. •Norway has the highest GDI at .941 – Canada is just below this at .938 •High GDI – Both men and women have achieved a high level of development •Low GDI – women have a low level of development compared to men •Average income of women is lower than males everywhere in the world – Economic Indicator •60 women to every 100 men attend secondary school in LDCs – Social Indicator •99 women to every 100 men in MDCs – Social Indicator •Demographic Indicators are different – Females live longer than males in MDCs. It is about the same in LDCs •In both MDCs and LDCs fewer women than men hold positions of economic and political power – GEM •Northern Europe is high in women with high incomes and professional jobs •North America is high in women in managerial and elected jobs •Population Growth is directly related to the status of women Let’s analyze some slides Gender Empowerment Measure (GEM) The GEM combines two measures of economic power and two of political power by women. (Little data are available for LDCs.) Gender-Related Development Index (GDI) The GDI combines four measures of development, reduced by the degree of disparity between males and females. Stages of Development Countries go through economic and social stages of development. For example if a country’s economy is enhanced, the population’s standard of living is also enhanced, education and income will also rise and according to the Demographic Transition (Chapter 2 on Population) their birth rates should decrease and so on. The Industrial Revolution created a huge transformation, but only in countries in Europe and North America. Their economies moved towards ‘Industrialization’. Not only did Europe and North America go through social and economic change, so did other parts of the world, the parts that had the resources to fuel this industrialization. The countries that could not fuel industrialization were left behind. From this point on Rich and Poor countries began to emerge. When we think of Developed (MDC) we think of: • Manufacturing of products • High levels of consumerism – buying goods and services. • An advanced infrastructure, that has a strong transportation and communication network - global. • Higher education – University and College. • Ownership of land and capital (money). • The existence of Multi-National (Transnational) companies. • Centers of political power. •Today there is a large gap between LDCs and MDCs •Close this gap by improving the economic, social and demographic indicators that we discussed •1/5 of the world lives in MDCs but consume 4/5 of the resources – Ecological Footprint •Eg. Europeans spend $11 billion on ice cream each year. It costs $9 billion to supply 2 billion people with toilets that they need – make sense? The poorer countries are designated; Developing or less developed or LDCs (Less Developed Countries). These terms suggest that in order to reach the Developed stage they have to pass through other stages in order to be like Europe or North America. There are a number of theories that try to illustrate the road to development: The Modernization Theory (the stages to economic growth) by W.W. Rostow Stage 1, the traditional society: This stage is characterized by rural and agricultural economies. Little change occurs in this stage with only a very low level of technology. Bangladesh and Ethiopia today and Canada before 1850. Stage 2, preconditions for takeoff: This stage is apparent when a strong central government encourages “entrepreneurs” to develop businesses. Society has a surplus of wealth. In this stage natural resources become important and are exploited. Britain was the first in 1750 (Industrial Revolution). India and Indonesia today and Canada from 1850 on. Stage 3, the takeoff: This stage is characterized by higher rates of capital investment and more and more entrepreneurs which leads to a manufacturing industry and technological innovations. The tertiary sector starts to grow as well as urbanization. People start to save money which creates a class of future spenders. Foreign Aid could place a country in this stage, Brazil and Mexico today and Canada in the 1900s. Stage 4, the drive to maturity: A strong manufacturing sector is evident. Technology and innovations is widespread. Diversified economy. High levels of saving create wealth. Economic gain outstrips population growth. Hong Kong, South Korea today and Canada in the 1950s. Stage 5, the age of high mass consumption: The society in this stage is predominately urban. There is a high use of technology, high levels of productivity, and a high per capita income. A surplus of money to be spent on non-essentials. Japan, the U.S. and Canada after 1950 to the present. Countries can skip a stage or even go back a stage or two – depending on economic conditions. The above is a theory created by someone from a rich country, it is a capitalist point of view. The developing countries found it hard to reach the latter stages. Brazil and Mexico borrowed lots of money to create capital but of course they fell into debt. Their debt led to economic hardship. They became rich in human resources but the creation of wealth and entrepreneurs did not happen. Often the capital for the developing world’s business remains in the hands of the developed world. Multinational companies invest in the businesses of the developing countries, but the profits go back to the developed countries. Europe, the US and Japan did it this way so could other countries. Globalization could help bring in money and get things started. LDCs do have raw materials and now that most are independent (no longer colonies) they can generate money with these raw materials Oil rich countries used money to fund development but their treatment of women and religious fundamentalism have held overall development back. Time Levels of Economic Development Core and Periphery Theory by Immanuel Wallerstein Wallerstein stated that the existing world economy is based on capital that existed since the time period of 1450 to 1670. He states that countries centered in Western Europe formed an economic “Core” around which the development of the rest of the world – the “Periphery” – took place. These western countries had strong governments, and strong armies to support later economic expansion. Trading developed around the main urban centers of London, Paris and Madrid. Large amounts of Capital was available and this financed the development of later empires. The “periphery” included Asia, Africa, Eastern Europe, and Latin America. These countries were essentially controlled by the core countries. They developed economies to feed materials back to the core. Much of the labour and raw materials provided by the periphery was cheap, and the labour was unskilled. Side note: Canada calls its’ core the Heartland and the Periphery is called the Hinterland. The Windsor to Quebec corridor is Canada’s heartland and the rest of Canada can be considered the hinterland. Countries and even regions in countries can have their own core and peripheries. The meaning of Heartland is even different in the US. Wallerstein suggests that there are four categories into which each region of the world may be placed: Core, Semi-periphery, Periphery, External • Core: - initially developed in Europe - strong central governments with military support - surplus money from periphery returns to core - Urbanization and Industrialization - international trade works in core’s favour • Semi-Periphery: - areas bordering the core and Periphery. Outlying core areas that are in decline or Outlying Periphery areas that are economically getting stronger. - access to international banking is either declining (core) or increasing (periphery) - manufactured goods – (electrical, computers) - exploits the periphery countries - like a transition zone • Periphery: - most industry is owned by core - no central or strong government - surplus profits go back to core - raw materials sent back to core for consumer markets - inexpensive labour • External: - countries are outside the world economy - not really controlled by any economic or political powers - isolated from trading with other countries - Cuba, North Korea, Iran, Iraq before the war. -Today the core countries can consist of North America (Canada and the US.). Interesting but in the early 1900’s Canada was considered a Semi-Periphery country. - The Semi-Periphery countries today are Eastern Europe including Russia and China and India and Malaysia. - The Periphery countries include most of Africa, except South Africa (Semi-Periphery), Central Asia (Middle East, Turkey, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Kazakhstan and South-East Asia (Burma, Thailand, Cambodia) Wallerstein has noticed a change. Countries that are rapidly developing and industrializing arefour are called: These the is Four Asian creating their own cores. A good example East Dragons Asia. The strong economies of South Korea, Singapore, Taiwan and Hong Kong (now part of China) have joined Japan to form a core of trade and centre of banking and investment. Emerging cores can challenge the traditional cores (Europe and North America) but usually these cores remain regional. The theory suggest that the traditional cores will continue to dominate the periphery regions of the world. Latin America will be dominated by North America and Africa will be dominated by Europe. Cores may shift in size and even multiply but their function will remain the same. Wallerstein sees that the present capitalist world economy will be detrimental to a large proportion of the world’s population. He sees the disparities of the world increasing. The gap between rich and poor serves the economic needs of the rich. The rich need to exploit the low wages of the poor. This is the only way Multi-nationals can make money. The rich still control the world economy. The peripheral countries lack the infrastructure to compete. According to the UNDP (United Nations Development Program) the gap between rich and poor has widened from 30:1 in 1960 to 60:1 in 1990. Core and Periphery in World Economy another look This north polar projection of the world shows that most of the MDCs are in a core area north of 30° N latitude. The LDCs are mostly on the periphery of this map. Develop through Self Sufficiency •Sometimes called Balanced Growth •China and India tried this •Spread investment equally across all sectors and regions of the country •Reduce poverty •Set up barriers to limit imports and competition – taxes, tariffs, licenses, quotas •Government would subsidize companies to stay in business •Protect your own companies Problems: •Inefficiency – little incentive to improve or change since government controlled everything •Large Bureaucracy – abuse and corruption, many regulations, created a black market Development Through International Trade •Most of the world - simple •Identify unique economic assets and use them to create a surplus and trade for other needed products •Rostow and Wallerstein •Concept of Globalization Problems: •Uneven resource distribution – if the price drops of a resource and your country specializes in that resource, you may be unable to make enough money to support your industry •Market Stagnation – What if sales flatten out and demand drops of a product •Increased dependence on MDCs – the LDCs depend on the MDCs for a market – what if MDCs no longer want coffee •Still International Trade is the way to go! •Globalization is all about International Trade. •India and China have both removed trade barriers and opened up their economies •WTO – World Trade Organization – part of the UN has been set up as an international overseer that all countries trade fairly •The WTO is all about Globalization – removing trade barriers •Globalization Good – promotes peace and trade – countries that trade will not go to war Globalization Good – improves standard of living for everyone Globalization Bad – economy still controlled by the rich and multi-nationals (trans-nationals) Globalization Bad – countries loose their identity and uniqueness. This threatens Religion, language and culture. A word about – Trans-nationals – “A company that locates and does business in counties other than the one it has its headquarters in” Transnational corporation are aggressive in finding low-cost labour, especially in LDCs. They can successfully transfer labour (transfer of Jobs) to another country despite greater transportation costs. High skilled labour stays with the MDCs. This selective transfer of labour is known as: the New international division of labour •LDCs need money to get started. •So they borrow money •Two ways 1. They get loans – World Bank, IMF (International Monetary Fund) 2. They let Trans-nationals invest in their country •Problem: What happens if countries cannot pay the money back •Brazil and Mexico have defaulted in payments •Sometimes the World Bank or the IMF tells these countries to adopt a “Structural Adjustment Program” – The countries are told to raise taxes, sell companies or change economy or start making products that MDCs want. Fair Trade • Products are made and traded according to standards that protect workers and small businesses in LDCs. Standards are set by the FLO (FairTrade Labeling Organizations International). • Primarily for craft products like textiles, ceramics, jewelry and home accessories. Food can also be included - coffee, tea, bananas, chocolate, sugar and juice products. • Protect workers rights and working conditions • Fight against child labour Vocabulary List Unit VI. Industrialization and Development—Basic Vocabulary and Concepts Development Agricultural labor force Calorie consumption Core-periphery model Cultural convergence Dependency theory Development Energy consumption Foreign direct investment Gender Gross domestic product (GDP) Gross national product (GNP) Human Development Index Levels of development Measures of development Neocolonialism Physical Quality of Life Index Purchasing power parity Rostow, W. W. “Stages of Growth” model Technology gap Technology transfer Third World World Systems Theory The End!