Economic Development Notes
Economic Development Notes
- reducing poverty
Economic Structure - describes the changing balance of output, trade, incomes and
employment drawn from different economic sectors-ranging from primary (farming, fishing,
Production - measured by Gross National Product (GNP) or Goss National Income (GNY)
Per Capita Income/ Average Income - measures the average income earned per person in a
Human Development Index (HDI) has three basic goals of development that can be
measured:
- The UNDP classifies countries into three categories according to their HDI: High Human
Development (0.800 and above), Medium Human Development (0.55-0.800) and Low Human
- can make conclusion about the country’s success in translating the benefits of national income
- Uses of the HDI is to re-emphasize that people and capabilities should be the ultimate criteria
Gender-Related Development Index (GDI) - examines the same indicators as the HDI but
takes into account the inequalities of these indicators for men and women. It is essentially
Gender Empowerment Measure (GEM) - measures the extent to which woman are able to
opportunity to reach a basic level in each area. Expressed as percentage, with a higher
percentage indicating a greater level of deprivation and thus a higher level of poverty.
Gender Progress Indicator (GPI) - attempts to measures whether a country’s growth has
1. Environmental Costs
4. Resource Depletion
5. Ozone Deletion
6. Pollution Abatement
1. Social Costs
2. Family Breakdown
3. Crime
4. Personal Security
Chapter II
Theories of Economic Development
2. Quality of Life
3. Sustainable Development
- Gender equality
- Child health
- Maternal health
- HIV/AIDS
- Environmental sustainability
- Global partnership
Arthur Lewis - who considered savings and investments to be the driving forces of economic
of growth
1. Increases in labor quantity and quality through population growth and education;
3. Improvements in technology.
Chapter III
country.
Poverty - measurement
POverty” definition
Empirical Evidence
Growth and inequality
Rural
Women
Ethnic minorities
Policies
Extensions systems
Capital - usable, productive resources, all forms of assets and capabilities that can be
Several forms of capital introduces by A. Smith: Land, Building, Machinery and HUman
Abilities
and of a cultural sphere, imparting knowledge, skills and values, making available to each
member the cumulative advances of the collective and providing freedom and opportunity
Chapter V
Migration - geographic movement of people across a specified boundary for the purpose of
Types of Migration:
Immigrant - an international migrant who enters the area from a place outside the country.
international boundary.
In-Migrant - a person who moves into a new area within the same country.
Out-Migrant - a person who moves out of an area within the same country.
Types of Migration
2. Requires information
3. Duration
4. Choice/Constraint
5. Gross migration
6. Net migration
Push-Pull Theory
Economic Approaches
Chapter VI
Agricultural Sector
raising animals and harvesting fish and others animals from a farm, ranch, or their natural
habitats.
and linkages.
Inputs - labor, fertilizers, seeds, land preparation, land quality and tenure.
Outputs - production in form of mature crops and income earned and allocated
Linkages - labor intensity > type of crop; land size > income earned and traditional system
Agricultural Systems
Physical - Ecosystem
Operational - culture, values, class structures, institutions and traditions, political system,
Agrarian Structure - refers to ways in which agricultural system is developed on the land
Communal tenure - land held by village where villagers enjoy usufruct (right to use profit)
Estates - large estates where age laborers are employed by private sector firms, or
Freehold - outright ownership with land being transferred and divided equally among
Tenancy - farmers pay owners for use of land either cash or kind
Forms of Agriculture
Shifting agriculture
Farm to market transport often poor and may be seasonal - collapsing in the wet season
Hybrid Rice - responsive to fertilizers in conditions of adequate water supply and effective
management
1. Land Reforms
2. Supportive Policies
Chapter VII
International Trade - exchange of goods and services that is conducted beyond the political
boundaries of a country.
Benefits of International Trade
6. Simulates production
1. Technological differences
2. Price differences
3. State trading - governments, especially those with socialist and communist economies,
4. Exchange controls - only those with permission from the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas to buy
5. Government regulations - these constitute a sort of protection for the domestic protection for
Classification of Imports
Freely importable
Regulated commodities
Prohibited or banned
Letter of credit - is a letter from the bank guaranteeing that a buyer’s payment to a seller
No Dollar Import - is a special privilege given by the government to returning residents and
other qualified individuals to bring motor vehicles into the country for personal use under
certain conditions.
Basic Requirements
- Importer
- Motor Vehicle
Documentary Requirements
Foreign exchange - refers to the global market where currencies are traded virtually around-
GLOBALIZATION
Exports of LDCs are much less diversified than those of developed countries
Experience
Economic Integration
Regional trading blocs and the globalization of trade
Despite 8 liberalizations rounds over 50 years trade barriers remain in place in agriculture
and textiles
Doha Development Round 2001 has tilted the focus on the needs of the developing world.