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Lecture 1: Economics, Institutions and Development

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Title: Lecture 1: Economics, Institutions and Development


1
Introduction
  • Lecture 1 Economics, Institutions and Development

2
Economics, Institutions and Development
  • Overview
  • Global Differences in Standard of Living
  • Purpose of Development Studies Values and
    Objectives
  • The Meaning of Development

3
Economics, Institutions and Development
  • Global Differences in Living Standards
  • The majority of the 6.4 billion people in the
    world live in relative poverty.
  • Differences in
  • Household Size, Income and Property
  • Educational Attainment and Opportunities
  • Health and Nutrition
  • Access to basic necessities (e.g. clean water)
  • Life Expectancy

4
Economics, Institutions and Development
  • Global Differences (Contd)
  • Employment Opportunities
  • Inequality within Countries/Cities
  • Interdependence Economic and Environmental
    interdependence in an ever-shrinking world

5
Development Measures by Country
Source UNDP Human Development Report, 2005
6
(No Transcript)
7
The Purpose of Development Studies
  • Although development economics often draws on the
    principles and concepts of other branches of
    economics, it differs from traditional economics
    and political economy.
  • Traditional economics (neoclassical economics) is
    concerned with the efficient allocation of scarce
    productive resources and sustained optimal growth
    of production possibilities over time. This is
    appropriate for studying advanced capitalist
    economies
  • Perfect and Complete Markets
  • Purely Capitalist Incentives in Decision-making
  • Economic Rationality

8
The Purpose of Development Studies (contd)
  • Political economy analyzes how politics and
    economics are related. It studies the social and
    institutional mechanisms through which decisions
    about the allocation of scarce productive
    resources are made.
  • Development economics has a broader scope.
  • The focus is not just on efficient allocation of
    scarce resources and sustained growth but also
    analyzing the role of economic, social, political
    and institutional mechanisms that exist in
    promoting/hindering the well being of the people
    in less developed countries.

9
The Purpose of Development Studies (contd)
  • It is the economics of the contemporary poor,
    underdeveloped nations with varying ideological
    orientations, diverse cultural backgrounds, and
    very complex yet similar economic problems.
  • These problems demand a different approach than
    those of advanced capitalist and centrally
    planned economies.

10
The Purpose of Development Studies (contd)
  • Additional Challenges
  • Market Imperfections
  • Informational Asymmetries
  • Structural Transitions
  • Multiple Equilibria and Disequilibrium
  • Political and Social Considerations
  • Attitudes toward life, work and authority,
    cultural traditions, integrity of government
    agencies, levels of political participation,
    bureaucratic, legal and administrative
    structures, level of political participation,
    systems of land tenure, flexibility/rigidity of
    economic and social classes.
  • Requires larger government role, wide scale
    planning and coordinated efforts

11
Questions asked in Development Studies
  • Can traditional, low-productivity, subsistence
    societies be transformed into modern,
    high-productivity, high-income nations?
  • To what extent are the development goals of
    developing countries thwarted by the economic
    activities of developed nations?
  • How is it that extreme inequality can exist not
    only across continents but within cities and
    countries?

12
More Questions
  • What lessons can developing countries learn from
    the historical record of economic progress of
    developed countries?
  • What are the primary causes of extreme poverty?
  • What strategies have been most successful in
    eradicating poverty?

13
Even more questions
  • What roles do population growth and migration
    play in the development process?
  • Do the educations systems in developing countries
    promote development and reduce inequality or do
    they help to sustain wealth and class structures?
  • Are deregulation and privatization the answer?

14
Values in Development Economics
  • The goals of this discipline are derived from
    subjective value judgments about what is good and
    desirable.
  • Economic and Social Equality
  • Elimination of Poverty
  • Universal Education
  • Higher Living Standards

15
Values (contd)
  • Political and Economic Freedom and Participation
  • Self-reliance
  • National Independence
  • Institutional Modernization
  • Personal Fulfillment

16
Core Values of Development
  • Common goals sought by all individuals and
    societies
  • Sustenance ability to meet basic needs food,
    shelter, health and protection. Absolute
    underdevelopment describes the absence of these
    basic needs.
  • Self-Esteem to achieve a sense of worth and
    self-respect (i.e. dignity)
  • Freedom from Servitude emancipation from
    alienating material conditions of life, from
    social servitude to nature, ignorance, other
    people, misery, institutions, and dogmatic
    beliefs.

17
United Nations Millennium Development Goals
  • Eradicate Extreme Hunger and Poverty
  • Achieve Universal Primary Education
  • Promote Gender Equality and Empower Women
  • Reduce Child Mortality
  • Improve Maternal Health
  • Combat HIV/AIDS, Malaria and other diseases
  • Ensure Environmental Stability
  • Develop a Global Partnership for Development

18
Core Objectives of Development
  • The improvement in the access and distribution of
    basic necessities
  • The improvement of living standards
  • The expansion economic and social opportunities

19
The Meaning of Development
  • Traditional Measures
  • The capacity of a once relatively stagnant
    national economy to generate and sustain
    significant economic growth
  • Annual increases of 5 or higher in gross
    national product. Alternative measures include
    income per capita and real income per capita
    (real accounting for inflation).
  • Changes in the structure of production shifts
    from agriculture towards manufacturing and
    services (i.e. industrialization)
  • Little attention paid to eradicating poverty,
    unemployment, inequality and discrimination.

20
Economics, Institutions and Development
  • Contemporary Measures
  • Broader definition of development to include the
    reduction of poverty, unemployment and inequality
    within the context of a growing economy.
  • The goal can no longer be just higher incomes.
    The objectives of development must also include
    better education, health and nutrition, equal
    opportunities, individual rights and freedoms,
    clean environment etc.

21
Sens Capability Approach
  • Economic growth cannot be sensibly treated as an
    end in itself. Development has to be more
    concerned with enhancing the lives we lead and
    the freedoms we enjoy.
  • -Amartya Sen, Development as Freedom
  • 1998 Nobel Laureate in Economics

22
Sens Functionings and Capabilities
  • Functionings what an individual does (or can do)
    with the commodities of given characteristics
    that are in his/her possession or control. This
    reflects the various things an individual may
    value doing or being.
  • Capabilities the freedom an individual possesses
    with respect to choice of functionings, given
    his/her personal traits and his control over
    commodities.

23
Limitations of Traditional Measures
  • Sen points to the limitations of traditional
    measures of real income in defining well being.
    These measures fail to include
  • Personal heterogeneities
  • Environmental diversities
  • Variations in social climate
  • Differences in relational perspectives
  • Distribution within households
  • Sen argues that changes in functions and
    capabilities are better measures of development

24
  • Next topic
  • Differences and Commonalities among Developing
    Countries
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