Development Economics Chapter 3
Development Economics Chapter 3
2) Contemporary
Harrod Domar
Solow- Swann
Endogenous
New Institutional Economics
Big Push
O-Ring theory
Hausmann-Rodrik-Velasco
But also developed countries could not devise a theory about development.
But they had experience of the Marshall Plan. (US financial and technical assistance for war
torn countries of Europe)
Was it not true that all modern industrial nations were once undeveloped agrarian societies?
Logic= Utility of massive injection of capital, central role of capital accumulation could not be
refuted.
Advanced countries had all passed the stages adn underdeveloped countries were still in
traditional society or the “pre conditions” stage”
Rate of Growth of GDP is determined by net national saving ratio and the national capital output
ratio
In the absence of government, the growth rate of national income will be directly or positively
related to the savings ratio
and inversely or negatively related to the economy’s capital-output ratio
For economic growth, not only investment but also labor force growth is important. (examined
detail in Appendix 3.1), and is not mentioned explicitly because labor is available abundantly in
developing nation and can be hired as needed in given proportion.
3.2.4 Necessary Versus Sufficient Conditions: Some Criticisms of the Stages Model
For developing countries, the mechanism did not work or might not work
Because
Saving and investment is not a sufficient condition.
Before, marshall plan worked for Europe because the European countries receiving aid
possessed the necessary structural, institutional, and attitudinal conditions to convert new
capital effectively into higher levels of output.
Rostow and Harrod - Domar model assume the existence of these arrangement in developing
countries, but in many case, they are lacking.
There is also insufficient focus on reducing capital-output ratio.
2) Modern sector: Urban, industrialised into with labor is transferred. Wage is constant,
determined as a given premium over a fixed average subsistence level of wages in the
traditional agricultural sector.
In b (Traditional sector)
Total output or product of food is determined by changes in the amount of the only variable input
labor (in million), given a fixed amount of capital and unchanging traditional technology.
Assumption here:
Marginal product of labor is 0
All rural workers share equally in the output so that rural real wage is determined by the average
and not marginal product of labor (as will be the case in the modern sector)
In 1 (Modern sector)
Total output or product is a function of a variable of labor input for a given capital stock and
technology. Capital stock increases as a result of reinvestment and this will cause total product
curve to shift upward.
Perfect competition so marginal product of labor curve= demand curves for labor.
Wage in modern sector is more than in traditional sector, so at this wage, the supply of rural
labor is assumed to be unlimited or perfectly elastic (modern sector can hire as many surplus
rural workers as they want without fear of rising wages).
Larger capital stock causes the total product curve of the modern sector to shift
This induces a rise in the marginal product demand curve for labor (because if total product
increase, then marginal product will also increase, which will increase demand)
There might be situation in the future where marginal product of rural labor might no longer be
zero = Lewis turning point. Here labor supply curve becomes positively sloped.
Here, labor demand curves do not shift uniformly outward but instead cross.
Demand curve D2 here has a greater negative slope than previous diagram D2 to reflect the
fact that additions to the capital stock embody labour-saving technical progress.
Total output has growth substantially (from 0D2EL1 before to 0D1EL1 now), total wges
(0WmEL1) and employment (L1) remains unchanged.
All of the extra output accrues to capitalists in the form of profits.
= Antidevelopmental economic growth.
Although GDP would rise but there would be little or no improvement in aggregate social welfare
measured in terms of more widely distributed gains in income and employment.
2) Surplus labor exists in rural areas while there is full employment in the urban sector.
3) Dubious assumption that competitive modern sector labor market that guarantees the
continued existence of constant real urban wages up the point where the supply of rural
surplus labor is exhausted.
(Wages rise over time, even in the presence of rising level of modern sector unemployment and
low/ zero marginal productivity in agriculture. And there are also union bargaining power, civil
service wage scales, and multinational corporations’ hiring practices)
4) Assumption of diminishing returns in the modern industrial sector.
5) Assumes awat the significance of accounting of importance of human capital in
productivity.
When we take into account the labor-saving bias of most modern technological transfer,
the existence of substantial capital flight,
the widespread nonexistence of rural surplus labor,
The growing prevalence of urban surplus labor,
And the tendency for modern-sector wages to rise rapidly even where substantial open
unemployment exists,
We must acknowledge that this model, though valuable as an early conceptual portrayal of
development process, requires considerable modification in assumption and analysis to fit the
reality of most contemporary developing nations.
Developing countries are part of an integrated international system that can promote (as well as
hinder) their development.
Best model of structural change = Hollis B. Chenery = Who examined patterns of development
for numerous developing countries during the postwar period. The study of cross-sectional and
time-series of countries at different level of per capital income led to the identification of several
characteristic features of the development process.
View developing countries as beset by institutional, political, and economic rigidities, both
domestic and international, and caught up in a dependence and dominance relationship with
rich countries
Underdevelopment results from poor resource allocation due to incorrect pricing policies and too
much state intervention by overly active developing-nation governments.
By permitting competitive free markets to flourish, privatising state-owned enterprises,
promoting free trade and export expansion, welcoming investors from developed countries, and
eliminating the plethora of government regulations and price distortions in factor, product, and
financial markets, both economic efficiency and economic growth will be stimulated.
Why developing world is underdeveloped?
- not because of the predatory activities of the developed world and the international
agencies that it controls,
- but rather because of the heavy hand of the state and the corruption,
- inefficiency, and lack of economic incentives that permeate the economies of developing
nations.
What is needed,
- is not a reform of the international economic system, a restructuring of dualistic
developing economies, an increase in foreign aid, attempts to control population growth,
or a more effective development planning system.
- Rather, it is simply a matter of promoting free markets and laissez-faire economics within
the context of permissive governments that allow the “magic of the marketplace” and the
“invisible hand” of market prices to guide resource allocation and stimulate economic
development.
Because the rate of technological progress is given exogenously, the Solow neoclassical model
is sometimes called an “exogenous” growth model.
Economies will converge to the same level of income per worker, other things being equal (like
savings rate depreciation, labor force growth, and productivity)
Closed economies (those with no external activities) with lower savings rates (other things
being equal) grow more slowly in the short run than those with high savings rates and tend to
converge to lower per capita income levels.
Open economies (those with trade, foreign investment, etc.), however, experience income
convergence at higher levels as capital flows from rich countries to poor countries where
capital–labour ratios are lower and thus returns on investments are higher.