Transcript Development
APHG Ch. 9
Development
Improving material conditions
Diffusion of knowledge & technology
Nations & regions clustered at high & low ends
MDC v. LDC
3 factors impact variation
Economic = GDP per capita
Social = literacy & amount of education
Demographics = life expectancy
Together = HDI ratio created by UN (1.0 = highest)
Economic Indicators
1. HDI only counts GDP per capita
>$20,000 in MDC and <$1,000 in LDC
Highest ones >$40,000, lowest <$500
Gap widening
Does NOT indicate distribution
GDP per capita PPP = adjusted for purchasing power parity
2. Types of Jobs or Economic Structure
Primary, Secondary & Tertiary
% pop. Working in Ag. >75% in LDC, <5% in MDC
Efficiency & global competition decrease primary &
secondary jobs and increase tertiary in MDCs
Economic Indicators
3. Productivity
MDC produce more with less labor
LDC use more human or animal labor, less machinery
Measured by value added per worker
U.S. avg $40,000 vs. LDC avg $2,500
4. Raw Materials
Inputs & energy sources
Europe had coal & iron ore to promote 19th century industrial
revolution
Colonial period sustained Europe’s development & retarded
Africa & Asia’s
Some nations develop w/o raw materials
Economic Indicators
5. Consumer Goods
Nonessentials (beyond food, clothing, shelter)
Production promotes expansion of manufacturing &
generates increase in GDP
3 items = good indicators of society’s development level
Vehicles, telephones, televisions
Accessible to almost all in MDC & vital to economy
1:1 ration in MDC over 100:1 ration common in LDC
Gaps in LDCs from urban to rural
Increase exposure to diversity & impact social
characteristics
Economic Indicators
6. Gini Coefficient: measures income disparity
between wealthy & poor in a nation
0=complete equality, 1=complete inequality
MDCs may have higher # than LDCs
Best nations ≈.2, Worst nations ≈.6
Does not address wealth (only income)
Greece
U.K.
Merica!
Social Indicators
1. Education & Literacy
Quantity = avg # years (10 in MDC vs. 2 0r 3 in LDC)
Quality
student/teacher ratio (LDC = 2x MDC)
Literacy – MDC >95%, LDC < 1/3
Gender gap in LDCs – avg 60F:100M
MDCs publish more
Textbooks predominantly in Eng, Germ, Russian, or
French even in LDCs
LDC often focus on Education as key to development
but funds in short supply
Social Indicators
2. Health & Welfare
MDC have lower ratios of people to doctors, hospitals
Often health care = public service in MDC
Access to utilities and sanitation = issues
Diet impacts health
Most MDCs = more calories & protein than needed
Most LDCs = less calories & protein than needed
MDCs = public assistance for sick, disabled, veterans,
orphaned, widows, unemployed etc.
Highest levels in Scandinavian countries
Slower economic growth = program maintenance is a hardship
Social Indicators
3. Gender Inequality Index
UN started calculating in 2010
3 dimensions
Reproductive health: MMR (Maternal mortality), AFR
(Adolescent fertility)
Empowerment: Share of parliamentary seats & higher
education attainment
Labor market: Participation in the workforce
Range from .04 in best nations to .7 in worst
(Netherlands to Yemen)
Demographic Indicators
1. Life expectancy in HDI
MDCs ≈ mid 70s, LDCs ≈ early 40s
Gap larger for women
MDCs have increasing elderly % & decreasing % <15
2. Infant Mortality
MDCs ≈ 1%, LDCs ≈ 10%
3. NIR
>2% in LDC, <1% in MDC
LDCs need increased income to cover increased population vs.
improving development level
4. Crude Birth Rate
Range from 8 per 1000 to 50 per 1000
Economic & social factors decrease # babies in MDCs
10 to 20 times more mothers die in childbirth in LDCs
Other Indices
GPI – Genuine Progress Indicator
Modifies GDP based on ‘quality of life’
Considers environmental impact, social values, level of
equality etc.
GNH – Gross National Happiness
Origins in Bhutan
Includes 9 domains of wellness, mostly measured via
survey data
How was 2013?
Distribution of MDCs and LDCs
Distribution of MDCs vs. LDCs
9 regions based on development
1. Anglo-America = MDC
2. Latin America = upper LDC
3. Western Europe = MDC
4. Eastern Europe = lower MDC
5. East Asia = Upper LDC
6. South Asia = Upper LDC
7. Southeast Asia = LDC
8. Southwest Asia & North Africa (Middle East) = LDC
9. Sub-Saharan Africa = Lower LDC
Two other areas not part of 9 major regions = Japan and
South Pacific = MDC
Distribution of MDCs vs. LDCs
North/South Split
MDCs mainly north of 30
degree North latitude
LDCs south of 30 degree
South latitude
Core-Periphery – using
north polar projection p.
307
MDCs = inner core =
dominant economic role
LDCs = peripheral
locations = dependent on
MDC core
Anglo-America – HDI .93
Less diverse language & religious patterns
95% English & 95% Christian
Tensions with diversity relatively small vs. other
regions
Wealth of raw materials = important producer
Main exporter of:
Leisure services, entertainment, mass media, sports etc.
Important food
Information processing systems
Western Europe – HDI .91
Strong national identities forged from language &
religious differences (previous comp. led to wars)
Post WWII cooperation – eliminating economic
barriers
NIR ≤ 0, population growth mainly Muslim or Hindu
immigrants
Lacks raw materials: need to import food, energy,
minerals since end of colonies
Compensate by providing high-value goods/services
like luxury items, banking services etc.
Eastern Europe – HDI .75
Abundant reserves of raw materials
Historically = MDC but low HDI
Rapid development in 50s & 60s under communism
Soviet 5 year plans for heavy industry
Moved manufacturing near raw materials vs. near markets
Numbers inflated under communist government?
1990s dismantled communist structures
Uncontrolled pollution, closing inefficient factories, ending
subsidies, increased unemployment & inflation
Czech Republic, Hungary & Slovenia convert rapidly to
market economy.
Japan – HDI .92
Remarkable development considering ratio of
population to resources—high physiological density
Land intensively farmed
Imports most meat & grain & raw materials
Lower labor & production costs gained global foothold
Switched to what they were best at:
Abundant supply of skilled labor
Specializing in high-quality, high-value items
Educated/skilled labor force, R&D
South Pacific – HDI .92
High HDI in Australia & New Zealand but rest = LDC
Less central to global economy
Smaller population & peripheral location
Culturally tied to Britain
Net exporters of food & resources
Economic ties to Japan & Asia
Latin America – HDI .76
Culturally, majority = Spanish or Portuguese &
Catholic
Masks diversity of heritage from natives & Africa
More urbanized than other LDC
Population concentrated on Atlantic Coast
Proximity to U.S. aids some development
Brazil & Argentina export wheat & corn
Development hindered by inequitable distribution of
land and wealth
East Asia – HDI .70
China = largest size but low per capita GDP, on track to
become 2nd largest economy this year or next
Communist control of production & distribution
loosening
Intensive farming required to feed population
Lack of farming risks starvation, famine
Lower NIR than other LDC
Growth can help improve standard of living vs. support
increased population
Southeast
Asia
–
HDI
.68
Indonesia = largest population w/one of highest arithmetic densities
on Java
½ century of warfare in various areas
Tropical climate limits intensive grain production
Mountains, volcanoes & typhoons = natural limits
Rice = most important food
Exported from Thailand & Vietnam
Imported to Malaysia, Philippines etc.
Harvest many products for manufacturing
Palm oil, copra, natural rubber, kapok (insulation), abaca (fabric/rope),
tin & oil
Rapid manufacturing development in Thailand, Singapore, Malaysia &
Philippines
textiles etc. with cheap labor
Auto center in Thailand
Reforms in mid to late 1990s to restore international confidence =
reduced standard of living.
Middle East – HDI .63
Mostly desert but oil = major asset (but not for ALL)
Tension between nation with and nations without
Must import most products
Oil = only region out of main 9 with trade surplus
Only region where lack of funds does not prevent
development
Challenge to promote development w/o eroding traditional
Islamic values (95% of population)
Internal cultural disputes & revolt against Anglo-Am or
European customs
Israeli issue means more $ put toward military vs.
development
South Asia – HDI .54
World’s 2nd highest population & 2nd lowest per capita
income
High population density & NIR
Many resources but ratio of resources to population
unfavorable
Leads production of some products
Green Revolution
Big help but monsoon rains still dictate productivity
Sub-Saharan Africa – HDI .46
Lower population density than other LDCs
Contains resources valuable to development
Least favorable prospects
Highest % of poverty, poor health & lack of education
Colonial influence
Mainly export raw materials
Landlocked status and decreased prices for materials hurt
Frequent wars
Imbalance between population & capacity of land
Can’t support large concentrations
World’s highest NIR rates
How will everyone else get here?
Model of Devlopment
Rostow’s
Development Model
5 stages of Development
(take off model)
MDCs completed stage 1-3
earlier – now in 4 or 5
LDCs in stages 1-3
Money required to advance
International Aid = $
International Aid usually
means debt (not part of
model)
Rostow
Rostow countries
2 groups chose Rostov model vs. self sufficiency in mid
20th century
1. Persian Gulf Area
Use petroleaum $ for housing, infrastructure, airports
Leads to supranationalism--OPEC
Started producing steel, aluminum, & chemicals for
world export
Diffusion of goods changes landscape (globalization)
Conflict between Islam & MDC business tactics
Women’s restrictions
All business halting for prayer several times daily
Rostow countries
2. East/SE Asia
‘Asian tigers’
Singapore, Hong Kong, Taiwan, S. Korea
Virtually no resources under imperialism
Post WW2: Began focusing on handful of goods to
produce using lower cost advantage
Exploits cheap labor
Colonialism still lingers: wealth concentrated in handful
of ppl
Move from periphery to semi-periphery or core
Social mobility limited by caste system (Hindu)
Wallerstein’s World Systems Model
Core (majority MDCs)
Geographically advantaged,
exploit peripheral areas, mainly
N. America & Europe, also
Japan & Australia
Periphery
least developed; exploited for
cheap labor, raw materials, and
agricultural production.
Semi-periphery
exploited by the core and
exploiting the periphery areas
Recent expansion into
manufacturing areas no longer
profitable in core
Obstacles to LDC Development
Many making progress with key indicators
But, MDC/LDC gap widening (1st World Problems)
Last 20 years
LDCs GDP per capita doubled and NIR down 5%
MDCs GDP per capita tripled and NIR down 83%
Am. Spend more on cosmetics than cost of building schools for
all children
Eur. Spends more on ice cream than cost of providing working
indoor plumbing to all
2 major obstacles to rapid development
Adopting policies that promote development
Self-sufficiency model vs. International trade model (Rostow)
Finding funds to pay for development
Self Sufficiency/Balanced Growth Model
Most common in 20th century
Adopted by India, China, most of Africa & Eastern
Europe
Invest equally across sectors of economy & regions of
nation
Modest growth
Fair to urban & rural
Reducing poverty
Protects infant-industries with tariffs, quotas, licenses
etc.
Self Sufficiency/Balanced Growth Model
Example: India
Effective trade barriers on imports & exports
Did not allow converting rupees to other currencies
Government subsidized some industries & controlled
others
Problems
Protection of inefficient industries
Lack of competition keeps prices high & quality low
Large bureaucracy = abuse & corruption easily develop
International Trade Model
Identify distinctive assets (comparative advantage)
Expand distinct local industries to world market
Use to finance further development
International competition forces continuing
improvement of processes & products
International Trade Model
Problems
Uneven resource distribution (ex. of oil in Middle East
won’t work for everyone etc.)
Market Stagnation – world market expanding slower
Limited population growth in MDCs
LDCs must capture sales from established competitors vs.
supply for expanded demand
Increased dependence on MDCs – must import basic needs
that are not part of the few goods being focused on (drains
profits)
Gained popularity in 1990s after India converted and
doubled GDP growth rate
Financing Development
Loans
Borrow to build infrastructure
Main lenders = World Bank &
IMF = controlled by MDC
Theory = infrastructure brings
investors/businesses
Problems with expensive failures
– don’t work or don’t attract
investors = can’t repay debt
Lack of repayment stops loans =
stops building = damages
economic stability in MDCs
Canceling or refinancing debts =
MDCs require unpopular
structural adjustments =
political unrest
Transnational Corporations
Initially, most with headquarters in
U.S.; recent: Japan, Germany,
France, UK
Private investment in LDCs
increased 10x in 1990s
Transfers of manufacturing &/or
assembly within a corporation
common
Most $ going from MDCs to MDCs
11 nations in Asia & Latin America
top LDC recipients
China gets about 20%
Brazil about 15%
Others include: Argentina, Chile,
Mexico, India, Indonesia,
Malaysia, South Korea, Thailand,
Turkey & Russia