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GEOG 3404 Economic Geography LECTURE 3: Modernisation, Dependency and World-Systems Theory Dr. Zachary Klaas Department of Geography and Environmental Studies – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: GEOG 3404 Economic Geography


1
GEOG 3404Economic Geography
LECTURE 3 Modernisation, Dependency and
World-Systems Theory
  • Dr. Zachary Klaas
  • Department of Geography and Environmental Studies
  • Carleton University

2
Geographically-based theories of political economy
  • Todays lecture is about political economy, or
    how economics is a conditioning element of
    political decision-making.
  • We will contrast, in this lecture, three popular
    political economic theories about how the world
    economy functions. These theories generally go
    by the names
  • modernisation theory
  • dependency theory and
  • world systems theory.
  • These political economy theories posit certain
    assumptions about
  • how the factors of production are employed in the
    process of economic development
  • what social groups are benefited or harmed by the
    process of economic development and
  • what economic policies should be pursued
    generally.

3
Unequal exchanges between factors of production
in the world economy?
  • In our last lecture, we observed that land as a
    factor of production was considered problematic
    by some of the early political economists
    (principally David Ricardo and Henry George).
  • The source of the problem lies in scarcity.
    Political economists like Ricardo and George
    observed that landowners could profit in an
    exchange merely because they owned scarce natural
    resources.
  • In this exchange, they are not being rewarded for
    their productive use of the land, or any
    improvements made on the land for later use.
    They are merely being rewarded for having control
    over the land as private property under
    conditions where similar land is scarcely
    available.

4
Possible economic elite 1 Owners of land /
natural resources
  • By this theory, notably propounded in Henry
    Georges Progress and Poverty, landowners are a
    natural (and unjust) economic elite. Their
    ability to collect a payment for the usage of
    land is entirely dependent upon their control
    over private property in land/natural resources,
    and because they have this unjust control, they
    must compensate the community by paying a tax on
    land/natural resource value. (This is the
    essence of Georges famous single tax
    proposal.)
  • Georges theory states that the three factors of
    production each are paid some return
  • Land is paid economic rent or simply put, rent
  • Labour is paid wages and
  • Capital is paid interest (essentially, the
    dividends on the productive investments of
    investing capitalists).

5
Returns and productivity A theme in political
economy
  • Note that, for Henry George, of the three returns
    on the factors of production, only rent is
    defined as an unjust return on unproductive
    activity the ownership over scarce land and/or
    natural resources. Wages and interest are, in
    Georges view, returns on productive activity
    (hard work in the case of labour, selecting more
    efficient and productive industrial practices in
    the case of capital).
  • In the case of Georges theory, the return which
    rewards unproductive activities primarily is
    collected by those associated with one factor of
    production (land), and this return comes at the
    expense of the others (labour and capital).
  • George referred to this reward as the extraction
    of an unearned increment, paid unjustly to
    elitist landowners and natural resource owners by
    productive labourers and capitalists.

6
The declining importance of land?
  • With the beginning of the Industrial Revolution,
    the character of political control in
    industrialising countries changed. The old
    landed gentry began to progressively lose control
    over economic affairs, while the owners of
    industrial business firms began to gain
    prominence.
  • The old landed gentry in Europe was understood by
    the conventions of the times to be the upper
    class in the economic and cultural system,
    because of their control over land. Now,
    however, their power was being rivaled by the
    owners of these industrial firms, the rising
    middle class or bourgeoisie.
  • The middle class, by this definition, were those
    individuals owning the means of economic
    production in other words, those owning
    capital. It was beginning to seem, in this
    period, that the power of landowners was being
    eclipse by the power of capitalists.

7
The labour theory of value and the rise of capital
  • We have already spoken at length now about the
    value attributed to land in the political
    economic thought of many individuals living
    around the time of the 17th, 18th and 19th
    Centuries. However, we should also note that
    some influential arguments were shortly to be
    made about the importance of labour and capital
    as factors of production.
  • First of all, the political philosophy of John
    Locke also had a dimension which introduced a
    notion called the labour theory of value to
    political economy. By this view, scarcity of
    natural resources was not the only thing which
    gave things economic value. Another very
    important element of value was the mixture of
    human labour with those natural resources in the
    process of economic production.

8
Possible downtrodden class 1Workers
  • Starting with Locke, then, political economists
    started to see labour as something which defined
    a possible class of losers in an organised
    economy. Those believing that landowners were a
    natural economic elite often also saw labourers
    as a primary group from which this elite
    extracted value.
  • Karl Marx, in his multi-volume political economy
    treatise Capital, picked up Lockes notion of the
    labour theory of value in order to case workers
    as a dominated class, which offered up its
    productive work, but received no fair return for
    its industriousness.
  • The iron law of wages, a popular economic
    notion of the 19th Century, reflected an
    awareness of the inappropriately low reward
    workers received for their efforts. The iron
    law stated that workers would be paid the lowest
    amount possible which would not at the same time
    threaten their ability to remain alive.

9
Surplus value
  • Presumably, if labour was compensated according
    to its productivity, merely paying workers the
    barest amount necessary just to keep them alive
    to work another day would be vastly
    inappropriate.
  • Marx believed, however, that labours just
    compensation, according to Lockes labour theory
    of value, was being appropriated by others. Marx
    called this amount being extracted from the
    working class by the name surplus value.
  • The form surplus value takes in Marxs work is
    M C M (money ? invested in commodities
    ? makes more money for
    the investor)The additional money made off the
    investment in the commodity is the surplus value,
    but it is not, in Marxs view.)
  • Note the similarity of this view to Georges view
    concerning the unearned increment appropriated
    by the landowner. Its the same concept,
    essentially, but with a different factor of
    production profiting.

10
Capital
  • Karl Marxs work in Capital, however, breaks with
    previous work in political economy for more
    reasons than his appeal to Lockes labour theory
    of value. It also places greater emphasis on
    capital as the taker of surplus value.
  • Marxs view was that land was not valuable in
    itself, but rather for its capacity to be used
    somehow in production in other words, for its
    ability to be used as natural capital. The owner
    of such land, therefore, was not properly classed
    as a landowner, but rather as a capitalist.
  • Furthermore, though it is similarly possible to
    conceive of labour as human capital, a mere
    labourer has nothing to contribute to economic
    exchange but labour, which perhaps can be done by
    others, and has no control over the economy
    unless he is able to control the means of
    economic production, the tools and machines used
    to do the work failing this, the worker is
    dependent upon those who do control them.

11
Possible economic elite 2 Owners of capital
  • Marxism introduced the world to a political
    economic theory that hypothesised that
    capitalists constitute an unjust economic elite.
  • In Marxs view, the earlier idea that it was the
    landowners which constituted this elite was
    discredited by the obvious rise to political
    power of the middle class/bourgeoisie in
    industrialised countries all over the world and
    their eclipsing of the power of the landed
    gentry.
  • Marx was aware of Henry Georges ideas and
    dismissed Georges views as archaic for these
    reasons he thought it was self-evident that
    landowners had ceased to be the kind of
    unchallenged elite that George claimed them to
    be.
  • The solution to the problem posed by the power of
    the capitalists, for Marx, was the expropriation
    and socialist ownership of the capital they
    controlled.

12
Marx vs. George Some interesting points
  • Marxs socialist remedy for the gap in power
    between capitalists and workers seemed to respond
    to the concerns of European workers quite nicely.
    There are some compelling theoretical reasons
    for this, though, to be found in the general
    unavailability of land in Europe.
  • European workers did not have an available option
    of claiming unclaimed land and creating their own
    goods from the land/natural resources they owned.
    Consequently, in order to remedy their lack of
    power, they would be more likely to heed Marxs
    call to revolution against the capitalist elite.
  • In the New World, however, where land was being
    claimed as private property through homesteading
    and land office transactions, there was another
    option available to discontented workers, at
    least until the time of the closing of the
    American frontier in the early 20th Century.

13
A quick comparison
George Marx
Land Landowning elite (takes unearned increment) Land only important for use as capital
Labour Productive labourers lose out Productive labourers lose out
Capital Productive capitalist investors lose out Capitalist elite (takes surplus value)
  • Some questions we could ask
  • Is it obvious that the factors of production
    could only relate in these ways? Could some of
    these elites ever lose out, and could some of
    these losers ever become elites?
  • George thinks land takes unfair advantage over
    other factors of production, and Marx thinks
    capital does. Could labour ever do so? (For
    example, perhaps intellectual labour might be
    scarce enough for labour to be able to claim an
    unearned increment?)
  • Has ownership of land/natural resources
    completely lost its relevance in this kind of
    framework? After all, if it were possible to
    have access to a different source for or kind of
    natural resources, it might be possible to make
    new capital.

14
Modernisation theory, dependency theory and world
systems theory
  • Today, three major political economy theories are
    advanced as basic descriptors of whats going on
    in the world economy. These theories largely
    pick up where the theories weve just been
    describing left off.
  • Modernisation theory emphasises the movement away
    from landownership and towards capital investment
    as important in the promotion of economic
    development.
  • Dependency theory picks up on the theories of
    unearned increment and surplus value to
    isolate the tendency of economic elites to
    extract value away from local workers towards
    external landowning and capitalist elites.
  • World systems theory integrates the insights of
    both modernisation and dependency theory. It
    emphasises both the rising importance of foreign
    capital investment and the economic
    stratification of the world into zones of greater
    or lesser dependency.

15
Modernisation theory
  • Modernisation theory emerged in the early 1960s,
    mostly through the writings of the economist Walt
    Rostow.
  • In this period, many countries in Asia and Africa
    were gaining their independence from European
    colonial powers, and their new governing bodies
    were charting their own economic course for the
    first time. It was, in other words, a logical
    time for countries in the developed world to give
    their advice to developing countries on how best
    to proceed towards economic development.
  • Rostows advice to the countries of the
    developing world was to allow greater capital
    investment and to move from a localised agrarian
    economic base towards involvement in the
    capitalist world economy.
  • Note that Rostows ideas incorporate a distrust
    of the traditional landowning elites of the
    developing world (similar to George), and the
    view that capital is the modern source of
    economic power (similar to Marx).

16
Industrial takeoff
  • Modernisation theory hypothesises that, if
    developing countries allow foreign direct
    investment and shake off the constraints of
    merely being traditional agricultural societies,
    this will allow their economies the capacity to
    take off into full development.
  • At first, developing countries will be dependent
    upon the economic power of the foreign direct
    investors, but Rostow suggests in his work that
    at some point over the course of some decades,
    the economic growth in a developing country may
    become self-sustaining.
  • We do have some evidence of Rostows notions
    being correct in the experience of the Asian
    tiger nations, which initially were
    agriculturally-based traditional economies, and
    which have shown remarkable progress towards
    self-sustaining economic growth in recent years.

17
Criticisms of modernisation theory
  • Modernisation theory is routinely decried for its
    perceived Western bias. Lesser developed
    countries are described in Rostows work as
    backward tradition-bound societies which need
    to be led to economic modernity. The implication
    here is that Western societies are obviously more
    advanced in any relevant aspects. This view
    would later be repudiated by those writing works
    associated with the dependency and world systems
    theories.
  • Modernisation theory also presumes there is no
    unequal exchange taking place between capital and
    labour, or surplus value being transferred from
    workers to owners of capitalist firms. Writers
    in the dependency and world systems schools would
    also reject this idea. For these writers,
    foreign direct investment could pose a far more
    significant threat to the economies of developing
    countries, because of a resulting dependence of
    the local populations upon transnational
    corporations.

18
Dependency theory
  • Dependency theory was principally founded by the
    expatriate German economist and sociologist André
    Gunder Frank in the late 1960s and early 1970s,
    largely in response to the prevalence of the
    modernisation theory over the preceding few
    years. It also found expression in the writings
    of the Argentinian economist Raúl Prebisch.
  • The central idea in dependency theory is that
    there is an extraction of surplus value process
    (or something analogous to such a process) which
    makes it possible for foreign firms to extract
    the value of labour done for their firms in a
    country outside to the country of location for
    the firm itself. In other words, there are core
    countries (where the firms are located) and
    periphery countries (where the workers and
    industrial sites are to be found) and profits
    from industrial activities leave the periphery
    countries for the core countries.

19
The core and the periphery
  • In André Gunder Franks most well-known work, an
    article called The Development of
    Underdevelopment, he argues that industrialised
    societies presume that lesser developed societies
    (if that term is even appropriate) would be
    better off if they adopted their models of
    economic development, but that this may not be
    true. One thing that those societies would
    retain, even if they did not gain the modern
    conveniences of industrialised societies, was
    self-control rather than dependency on the
    countries of the economic core.
  • Note that one of the assumptions Gunder Frank
    makes is that the agrarian lifestyle to which
    lesser developed countries are accustomed might
    provide this economic control thats
    essentially the agrarian republican notion that
    control over land gives one economic power.

20
Relations of unequal exchange
  • Dependency theory highlights relations of unequal
    exchange between core and periphery countries,
    where the core countries clearly benefit at the
    expense of the peripheral countries.
  • When foreign investment occurs in a country, the
    profits for the sale of the goods produce largely
    go to the foreign firm. Some of it goes to pay
    domestic wages, but the firms will likely locate
    in the place where they can pay the lowest wages,
    so this factor is more negligible, and in
    general, things would be expected to work out so
    that the maximum part of the domestically-produced
    profit is taken by the foreign investors.
  • Furthermore, if any of the products produced by
    the foreign-controlled firm are actually
    purchased domestically, then domestic consumers
    end up sending their money out of the country to
    support the foreign firm.

21
Criticisms of dependency theory
  • One major problem with dependency theory has been
    its stubborn insistence on disengagement with
    foreign direct investment and foreign-controlled
    markets.
  • Buying from foreign-controlled firms means
    profits are largely being taken out of the
    country, so a logical response would be to buy
    locally-produced products. This was,
    essentially, the solution advocated by Raúl
    Prebisch, the solution of import substitution.
    The idea behind this strategy was that whenever a
    product could be produced by a locally-controlled
    firm, this was to be preferred.
  • In principle, this was a good idea, but the long
    amount of time required for an industrial take
    off without help from foreign investors has made
    this strategy fairly impractical for most
    developing nations. By contrast, the export-led
    development model, which stresses greater
    integration with the world economy, has been
    associated with rapid development in many
    industrialising countries.

22
World systems theory
  • The countervailing modernisation and dependency
    theories each had certain conceptual problems
    facing them as general theories of economic
    geography, as well as certain conceptual
    strengths which recommended them as approaches.
    World systems theory owes much of its popularity
    to a desire to integrate the strengths of these
    two approaches.
  • The substance of world systems theory was largely
    formulated by the sociologist Immanuel
    Wallerstein, drawing greatly upon earlier work
    done by the historian Fernand Braudel.
  • From the modernisation approach, world systems
    theory takes the notion that greater involvement
    in the world economy is part of a move towards
    modernity. The work of both Braudel and
    Wallerstein emphasises how the world has been
    organising itself, since at least the 16th
    Century, into a coherent world economy.

23
World systems theory as an outgrowth of
dependency theory
  • From the dependency theory approach, world
    systems theory takes the concepts of core and
    periphery, and the concerns about unequal
    exchange between countries based on foreign
    investment and trading relationships.
  • In many respects, world systems theory is a
    direct outgrowth of dependency theory, with many
    of the writers in that school making a transition
    into world systems theory scholarship.
  • However, unlike more orthodox left-wing
    interpretations of dependency theory, world
    systems theory usually makes an allowance for the
    notion of mobility between the core and the
    periphery. Though they do not doubt that
    exchange relationships are often unequal between
    nations, world systems theorists have identified
    a class of countries in the semi-periphery
    which seem to be moving out of a state of
    dependency (or perhaps into one from an earlier
    state of relative independence).
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