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Transcript
Life in Developing Nations:
Population and Poverty
• The universality of scarcity makes
economic analysis relevant to all
nations.
• Economic problems and policy
instruments are different, but
economic thinking about these
problems can be transferred easily
from country to country.
© 2002 Prentice Hall Business Publishing
Principles of Economics, 6/e
Karl Case, Ray Fair
Life in Developing Nations:
Population and Poverty
• food shortages
• explosive population growth
• hyperinflation
• low productivity and low GDP per capita
• prevalence of informal markets
• primitive shelter
• Illiteracy
• infant mortality
© 2002 Prentice Hall Business Publishing
Principles of Economics, 6/e
Karl Case, Ray Fair
Life in Developing Nations:
Population and Poverty
• In the year 2,000, the world
population reached over 6.1 billion
people. Most of the world’s more than
200 nations belong to the developing
world.
• While the developed nations account
for only about one-quarter of the
world’s population, they consume
about three-quarters of the world’s
output.
© 2002 Prentice Hall Business Publishing
Principles of Economics, 6/e
Karl Case, Ray Fair
Life in Developing Nations:
Population and Poverty
• Developing countries
have three-fourths of the
world’s population, but
only one-fourth of the
world’s income.
© 2002 Prentice Hall Business Publishing
Principles of Economics, 6/e
Karl Case, Ray Fair
Sources of Economic Development: Land
• Many developing nations are rich in
natural resources
• Their ability to exploit these resources
depends largely on their access to capital
technology
• The presence of valuable resources has
led to instability due to past colonization
and current resource wars
© 2002 Prentice Hall Business Publishing
Principles of Economics, 6/e
Karl Case, Ray Fair
Sources of Economic Development:
Labor/Entrepreneurship aka Human Capital
• Human resources and Entrepreneurial
Ability The quality of labor may pose a
serious constraint on the growth of income.
• Just as financial capital seeks the highest
return, so does human capital:
• Brain drain is the tendency for talented people
from developing countries to become educated
in a developed country and remain there after
graduation.
© 2002 Prentice Hall Business Publishing
Principles of Economics, 6/e
Karl Case, Ray Fair
Sources of Economic Development:
Labor/Entrepreneurship aka Human Capital
• Entrepreneurs who can organize economic
activity appear to be in short supply.
• Government intervention/ownership often
serves as a substitute for private
entrepreneurship,
© 2002 Prentice Hall Business Publishing
Principles of Economics, 6/e
Karl Case, Ray Fair
Sources of Economic Development: Capital
• Capital formation Almost all
developing nations have a scarcity of
physical capital relative to other
resources, especially labor.
• The vicious cycle of poverty
hypothesis suggests that poverty is selfperpetuating because poor nations are
unable to save and invest enough to
accumulate the capital stock that would
help them grow.
• A poor nation consumes most of its
income. This implies limited saving and
investment.
© 2002 Prentice Hall Business Publishing
Principles of Economics, 6/e
Karl Case, Ray Fair
Sources of Economic Development:
Financial Capital
• Capital flight is the tendency of both
human capital and financial capital to
leave developing countries in search
of higher rates of return elsewhere.
• Instability discourages domestic
investment.
• The absence of productive capital
prevents incomes from rising.
© 2002 Prentice Hall Business Publishing
Principles of Economics, 6/e
Karl Case, Ray Fair
Sources of Economic Development:
Social Capital
• Social Capital is the basic infrastructure
projects such as roads, power generation,
and irrigation systems that add to a nation’s
productive capacity.
• It also includes health and human services
• In developing economies, government
provision of public goods is highly deficient
due to lack of resources and corruption
© 2002 Prentice Hall Business Publishing
Principles of Economics, 6/e
Karl Case, Ray Fair
Strategies for Economic Development
• A developing economy with insufficient
human and physical capital faces some
very basic trade-offs. Three of these
trade-offs are:
• Agriculture or industry?
• Exports or Import Substitution?
• Central planning or free markets?
© 2002 Prentice Hall Business Publishing
Principles of Economics, 6/e
Karl Case, Ray Fair
Agriculture or Industry?
• Industry has some apparent attractions
over agriculture:
• The building of factories is an important step
toward increasing the stock of capital.
• Developed economies have experienced a
structural transition from agriculture to
industrialization and greater provision of
services.
• However, industrialization in many
developed countries has not brought the
benefits that were expected.
© 2002 Prentice Hall Business Publishing
Principles of Economics, 6/e
Karl Case, Ray Fair
Agriculture or Industry?
The Structure of Production in Selected Developed and Developing Economies,
1998
COUNTRY
PER CAPITA
INCOME
PERCENTAGE OF GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT
AGRICULTURE
INDUSTRY
SERVICES
220
46
15
39
Bangladesh
350
22
28
50
China
750
18
49
33
Thailand
2,160
11
41
48
Colombia
2,470
13
25
61
Brazil
4,630
8
29
63
Korea
8,600
5
43
52
United States
29,240
2
26
72
Japan
32,350
2
37
61
Tanzania
$
Source: World Bank, World Development Report, 2000.
© 2002 Prentice Hall Business Publishing
Principles of Economics, 6/e
Karl Case, Ray Fair
Exports or Import Substitution?
• Import substitution is an industrial trade
strategy that favors developing local
industries that can manufacture goods to
replace imports.
• When the terms of trade deteriorate
(imports become relatively expensive and
exports relatively cheap), import
substitution becomes attractive.
© 2002 Prentice Hall Business Publishing
Principles of Economics, 6/e
Karl Case, Ray Fair
Exports or Import Substitution?
• The import-substitution strategy has failed
almost everywhere, for the following
reasons:
• Domestic industries, sheltered from
international competition, develop major
economic inefficiencies.
• Import substitution encouraged the production
of capital-intensive production methods, which
limited the creation of jobs.
• The cost of the resulting output was far greater
than the price of that output in world markets.
© 2002 Prentice Hall Business Publishing
Principles of Economics, 6/e
Karl Case, Ray Fair
Exports or Import Substitution?
• Export promotion is a trade policy
designed to encourage exports.
• Several countries including Japan, South
Korea, Colombia, and Turkey, have had
some success with outward-looking trade
policy.
• Government policies to promote exports
include subsidies to export industries and
the maintenance of a favorable exchange
rate environment.
© 2002 Prentice Hall Business Publishing
Principles of Economics, 6/e
Karl Case, Ray Fair
Central Planning or the Market?
• Today, planning takes many forms in
developing nations.
• The economic appeal of planning lies in its
ability to channel savings into productive
investment and to coordinate economic
activities that otherwise might not exist.
• But the reality of central planning is that it
is technically difficult, highly politicized,
and difficult to administer.
© 2002 Prentice Hall Business Publishing
Principles of Economics, 6/e
Karl Case, Ray Fair
Central Planning or the Market?
• Market-oriented reforms recommended by
international agencies include:
• the elimination of price controls
• privatization of state-run enterprises
• reductions in import restraints
• The International Monetary Fund is an
international agency whose primary goals
are to stabilize international exchange
rates and to lend money to countries that
have problems financing their international
transactions.
© 2002 Prentice Hall Business Publishing
Principles of Economics, 6/e
Karl Case, Ray Fair
Central Planning or the Market?
•
Structural adjustment is a series of
programs in developing nations designed to:
1. reduce the size of their public sectors through
privatization and/or expenditure reductions,
2. decrease their budget deficits,
3. control inflation, and
4. Encourage private saving and investment through
tax reform.
© 2002 Prentice Hall Business Publishing
Principles of Economics, 6/e
Karl Case, Ray Fair
Issues in Economic Development
• The growth of the population in developing
nations is about 1.7 percent per year,
compared to only 0.5 percent per year in
industrial market economies.
• Thomas Malthus, England’s first professor
of political economy, believed population
grows geometrically. He believed that due
to the diminished marginal productivity of
land, food supplies grow much more
slowly.
© 2002 Prentice Hall Business Publishing
Principles of Economics, 6/e
Karl Case, Ray Fair
Issues in Economic Development
• Population growth is determined by the
relationship between births and deaths.
• The fertility rate, or birth rate, equals:
number of births per year
 100
population
• The mortality rate, or death rate, equals:
number of deaths per year
 100
population
© 2002 Prentice Hall Business Publishing
Principles of Economics, 6/e
Karl Case, Ray Fair
Issues in Economic Development
© 2002 Prentice Hall Business Publishing
Principles of Economics, 6/e
Karl Case, Ray Fair
Issues in Economic Development
• The natural rate of population increase
is the difference between the birth rate and
the death rate. It does not take migration
into account.
• Any nation that wants to slow its rate of
population growth will probably find it
necessary to have in place economic
incentives for fewer children as well as
family planning programs.
© 2002 Prentice Hall Business Publishing
Principles of Economics, 6/e
Karl Case, Ray Fair
Developing Country Debt Burdens
• Debt rescheduling is an agreement
between banks and borrowers through
which a new schedule of repayments of
the debt is negotiated; often some of the
debt is written off and the repayment
period is extended.
• An stabilization program is an agreement
between a borrower country and the
International Monetary Fund in which the
country agrees to revamp its economic
policies to provide incentives for higher
export earnings and lower imports.
© 2002 Prentice Hall Business Publishing
Principles of Economics, 6/e
Karl Case, Ray Fair
Developing Country Debt Burdens
Total (Public and Private) External Debt for Selected Countries, 1998
(Billions of Dollars)
TOTAL EXTERNAL
COUNTRY
DEBT
Guinea-Bissau
1.0
Nicaragua
6.0
Angola
12.7
Sudan
16.8
Indonesia
150.9
Thailand
86.2
Russian Federation
183.6
Peru
32.4
Argentina
144.0
Turkey
102.1
Mexico
159.9
Brazil
232.0
India
98.2
China
154.6
Source: World Bank, World Development Indicators, 2000.
© 2002 Prentice Hall Business Publishing
Principles of Economics, 6/e
TOTAL DEBT
AS A PERCENTAGE OF GDP
363
295
280
172
169
76
62
55
52
49
41
29
20
14
Karl Case, Ray Fair