Development Economics
Development Economics
Questions:
Why does affluence coexist with dire poverty not only across different continents, but also within the same country or even the same city? Can traditional, low productivity, subsistence societies be transformed into modern, high productivity, high income nations? To what extent are the development aspirations of poor nations helped or hindered by the economic activities of rich nations? By what process and under what conditions do rural subsistence farmers of traditional societies evolve into successful commercial farmers? How poverty can be reduced and living conditions of poor people can be improved?
Traditional Economics
(classical and neoclassical) is concerned primarily with the efficient, least-cost allocation of scarIce productive resources and with the optimal growth of these resources over time so as to produce an ever-expanding range of goods and services. Neoclassical economics deals with an advanced capitalist world of perfect markets, consumer sovereignty, automatic price adjustment, decisions made on the basis of marginal, private profit and utility calculation and equilibrium outcomes in all product and resource markets. It assumes economic rationality and a purely materialistic and individualistic self-interested orientation toward economic decision making.
DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS
Development economics, in addition to being concerned with the efficient allocation of resources and their sustained growth over time, must also deal with economic, social, political and institutional mechanisms, both public and private, necessary to bring rapid and large scale improvements in the living standard of poverty stricken masses of Africa, Asia and Latin America. . In these less developed countries commodity and resource markets are highly imperfect, consumers and producers have limited information, major structural changes are taking place, disequilibrium situation often prevail (prices often do not equate demand and supply). In many cases economic calculations are dominated by political and social priorities such as building a new nation, resolving ethnic conflict or preserving cultural and religious traditions. The ultimate purpose of development economics is to help us better understand developing countries in order to improve living conditions of the people of these countries. Theories of economic development and their compatibility Economic development experiences of developed countries Status of women and development process Population growth and economic development Poverty alleviation Health and development Unemployment and migration Education and development Agricultural and rural development Environment and sustainable development International trade and development Industrialization and development International debt problem and economic development Foreign investment Foreign aid and development Role of public and private sector for development Globalization
Economics, being a branch of social sciences, deals with human and the fulfillment of their desires. The activities of human are usually rooted in social context. Therefore, social science of economics can claim neither scientific laws nor universal truths. In economics there can only be tendencies, and even these are subject to great variations in different countries and cultures and at different times. Many so called general economic models are in fact based on a set of assumptions about human behavior and economic relationship that may have little or no connection with the realities of developing economies. Value premises (like what is or is not) are central features of economic discipline in general and of development economics in particular.
Development must therefore be conceived of as a multidimensional process involving major changes in social structures, popular attitudes, and national institutions, as well as the acceleration of economic growth, the reduction of inequality, and the eradication of poverty.