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Chapter 9 Development H.D.I. Distribution of Countries Development Models How does a country “Develop”? The three objectives of development • increases in availability and improvements in the distribution of food, shelter, health, protection, etc. • improvements in ‘levels of living,’ including higher incomes, more jobs, better education, etc. • expansions in the range of economic and social choices available to individuals and nations Location of More and Less Developed Countries Development generally reflects a North-South split in the world. United Nations’ Measurement for H.D.I. Economic Indicators • Gross Domestic Product (GDP) country output of product • Types of Work (Economic Sectors) Social Indicators • Education and Literacy • Health and Welfare Demographic Indicators • Life Expectancy (37 - 80 years) • Infant Mortality (<10 - >100 per thousand) • Natural Increase (0 - 4.7 %) Primary Activities Direct removal of natural resources such as mining, forestry, and agriculture -most important in the LDCs. Subsistence Agriculture Fishing and Forestry Mining and Quarrying Primary Products The percentage of people working in agriculture exceeds 75% in many LDCs of Africa and Asia. In Anglo-America and Western Europe the figure is <5% Trade in Primary Products Importance to Developing Economies Danger of Commodity Trade Dependence Puerto Rico Coffee Plantation http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pa ges/frontline/gsearch.html?q =coffee+trade Secondary Activities: Manufacturing Secondary - Processing and transforming natural resources: steel, textiles, auto assembly. These used to be most important in MDCs, but increasingly important in the semi-periphery (Korea, Mexico, Brazil, Singapore) Tertiary and Beyond: Services Provision of services in exchange for payment. Includes retailing, banking, law, education, and government. Education, R & D, and information technology becoming most important in the postindustrial core regions. Less-developed countries often focus on tourism. Services historically were clustered into settlements. Increasingly the most important service centers are massive world cities. Tertiary and Beyond: Services Less-developed countries often focus on tourism. Vendors, Bali Club Med, The Bahamas Tertiary and Beyond: Services Resources and Technology Resources affect patterns of development: cultivable land, energy sources, minerals. But changes in technology affect the value of these resources. Also, trade or lack of it can offset lack of resources (Japan) or make them less relevant (Brazil). Technology Systems: roughly every 50 years since 1790 a new complex of technologies has revolutionized the world economic system and its structure. The most recent of these is the system which includes biotechnology, advanced materials (superconductors, solar power) and information technology. Which parts of the world benefited from the shift from coal to oil? Which suffered? Which parts of the world will benefit from the inevitable end of our reliance on petroleum and the necessary shift to wind, hydro, tide, or solar power ? New International Division of Labor Transnational Companies have been very aggressive in using low-cost labor in LDCs. • Seek elimination of trade barriers (Tariffs) • No minimum standards in place • A “rush” to the bottom? • Loss of U.S. jobs - “a great sucking sound” after NAFTA? New International Division of Labor Trading Blocks International agreements that eliminate barriers to trade within regions: • North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) • European Union (EU) • Oil Producing and Exporting Countries (OPEC) Trading Organizations International agreements that eliminate barriers to trade among members: • World Trade Organization (WTO) Other Economic Indicator Economic structure Worker productivity Access to raw materials Availability to consumer goods Measuring Development Social Indicators • Education and Literacy Measuring Development Social Indicators • Health and Welfare HDI Index Life Expectancy Adult Literacy GDP (US$) Arab States 0.679 67 64.1 2,611 East Asia and the Pacific 0.768 70.5 90.4 1,512 Latin America / Caribbean 0.797 71.9 89.6 3,275 South Asia 0.628 63.4 58.9 617 Sub-Saharan Africa 0.515 46.1 60.5 633 OECD 0.892 77.7 na 25,750 World 0.741 67.1 na 5,801 Rank High Human Development 1 Norway 0.963 79.4 99 48,412 10 United States 0.944 77.4 99 37,648 11 Japan 0.943 82 99 33,713 42 Slovakia 0.849 74 99.6 6,033 47 Costa Rica 0.838 78.2 95.8 4,352 53 Mexico 0.814 75.1 90.3 6,121 Medium Human Development 75 Venezuela 0.772 72.9 93 3,326 83 Armenia 0.759 71.5 99.4 918 84 Philippines 0.758 70.4 92.6 989 94 Turkey 0.75 68.7 88.3 3,399 108 Viet Nam 0.704 70.5 90.3 482 144 Uganda 0.508 47.3 68.9 249 Low Human Development 159 Rwanda 0.45 43.9 64 195 166 Zambia 0.394 37.5 67.9 417 Infrastructure