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Barriers to Economic Growth and
Development
Limits to Growth and Development on
the A2 Unit 4 Syllabus
• Students should consider factors such as:
1. Poor infrastructure
2. Human capital inadequacies
3. Primary product dependency
4. Declining terms of trade
5. Savings gap; inadequate capital accumulation
6. Foreign currency gap and capital flight
7. Corruption, poor governance, impact of civil war
8. Population issues
9. Debt dependence
Introduction – Some Growth Data
Key issues
• Is rapid growth sustainable?
• Does it feed through to significant
improvements in human
development?
2015 Human Development Index – Lowest Rankings
Human
Development
Index (HDI)
Life expectancy
at birth
Expected years
of schooling
Mean years of
schooling
Gross national
income (GNI)
per capita
GNI per capita
rank minus HDI
rank
Country Value (years) (years) (years) (2011 PPP $)
Côte d'Ivoire 0.462 51.5 8.9 4.3 3,171 -24
Malawi 0.445 62.8 10.8 4.3 747 13
Ethiopia 0.442 64.1 8.5 2.4 1,428 2
Gambia 0.441 60.2 8.8 2.8 1,507 -2
DRC 0.433 58.7 9.8 6.0 680 11
Liberia 0.430 60.9 9.5 4.1 805 7
Guinea-Bissau 0.420 55.2 9.0 2.8 1,362 -1
Mali 0.419 58.0 8.4 2.0 1,583 -8
Mozambique 0.416 55.1 9.3 3.2 1,123 1
Sierra Leone 0.413 50.9 8.6 3.1 1,780 -16
Guinea 0.411 58.8 8.7 2.4 1,096 0
Burkina Faso 0.402 58.7 7.8 1.4 1,591 -13
Burundi 0.400 56.7 10.1 2.7 758 1
Chad 0.392 51.6 7.4 1.9 2,085 -22
Eritrea 0.391 63.7 4.1 3.9 1,130 -6
Central African Republic 0.350 50.7 7.2 4.2 581 1
Niger 0.348 61.4 5.4 1.5 908 -5
Nations whose HDI Outcome > GNI Per Capita Ranking
Source: HDI report 2015, UNDP
Human Development
Index (HDI)
Gross national income
(GNI) per capita
GNI per capita rank
minus HDI rank
HDI rank Country Value (2011 PPP $)
67 Cuba 0.769 7,301 47
76 Georgia 0.754 7,164 40
100 Tonga 0.717 5,069 32
73 Sri Lanka 0.757 9,779 29
81 Ukraine 0.747 8,178 25
9 New Zealand 0.913 32,689 23
113 Palestine, State of 0.677 4,699 21
2 Australia 0.935 42,261 17
6 Ireland 0.916 39,568 16
18 Israel 0.894 30,676 16
145 Nepal 0.548 2,311 16
116 Vietnam 0.666 5,092 15
29 Greece 0.865 24,524 14
17 South Korea 0.898 33,890 13
173 Malawi 0.445 747 13
36 Poland 0.843 23,177 10
52 Romania 0.793 18,108 10
69 Costa Rica 0.766 13,413 10
5 Netherlands 0.922 45,435 9
14 United Kingdom 0.907 39,267 9
Nations whose HDI Outcome < GNI Per Capita Ranking
Source: HDI report 2015, UNDP
Human
Development
Index (HDI)
Gross national income
(GNI) per capita
GNI per capita rank
minus HDI rank
HDI rank Country Value (2011 PPP $)
138 Equatorial Guinea 0.587 21,056 -84
48 Kuwait 0.816 83,961 -46
121 Iraq 0.654 14,003 -44
106 Botswana 0.698 16,646 -41
41 United Arab Emirates 0.835 60,868 -34
32 Qatar 0.850 123,124 -31
149 Angola 0.532 6,822 -30
116 South Africa 0.666 12,122 -29
109 Turkmenistan 0.688 13,066 -28
39 Saudi Arabia 0.837 52,821 -27
152 Nigeria 0.514 5,341 -24
172 Côte d'Ivoire 0.462 3,171 -24
52 Oman 0.793 34,858 -23
64 Seychelles 0.772 23,300 -19
62 Malaysia 0.779 22,762 -14
72 Turkey 0.761 18,677 -12
11 Singapore 0.912 76,628 -7
90 China 0.727 12,547 -7
Limits to Growth and Development on
the A2 Unit 4 Syllabus
• Students should consider factors such as:
1. Poor infrastructure
2. Human capital inadequacies
3. Primary product dependency
4. Declining terms of trade
5. Savings gap; inadequate capital accumulation
6. Foreign currency gap and capital flight
7. Corruption, poor governance, impact of civil war
8. Population issues
9. Debt dependence
Paul Collier’s 4 “Development Traps”
• Professor Paul
Collier has
identified four
“development
traps” - they are
1. Conflict
2. Reliance on
natural
resources
3. Being
landlocked
with bad
neighbours
4. Bad
governance
Infrastructure Gaps
• Infrastructure gaps limit economic growth
& human development because
1. They increase supply costs for
businesses – this causes higher prices –
hitting real incomes
2. Reduce geographical mobility of labour /
higher structural unemployment
3. Damage export competitiveness and
limit intra-regional trade
4. Make a country less attractive to inward
foreign direct investment
5. Make an economy vulnerable to effects
of climate change / natural disasters
6. Contribute to gender inequality
The Asian Development Bank forecasts that Asia needs
US$8 trillion (S$11 trillion) in the decade to 2020 to plug
the infrastructure deficit
Poor access to
credit
Poor
infrastructure
Excessive
bureaucracy
Regulations
and licensing
requirements
Supply-Side
Constraints
• Landlocked Zambia scores poorly in the
infrastructure rankings published as part of
the Global Competitiveness Index
• Quality of overall infrastructure 93/140
• Quality of roads 81/140
• Quality of railroad 80/140
• Quality of port infrastructure 131/140
• Quality of air transport 112/140
• Electricity and telephony 119/140
• 90% of Zambia’s power comes from hydro-
electric plants making the country especially
vulnerable to drought
• To earn foreign exchange, Zambia exports
power from hydro-electric plants – this then
damages electricity supply to the farming
industry which employs 60% of people
• Copper mines absorb much of the available
energy supply. There are frequent power
outages affecting homes & businesses
• Much copper output is transported on poor
roads which adds to costs and hurts profits
Infrastructure Gaps - Zambia
Human Capital Inadequacies
“The low level of human capital in Africa’s agricultural sector remains a significant
constraint to growth, poverty reduction, and food security on the continent. “ World Bank
World Economic Forum Human
Capital Index
“A nation’s human capital
endowment—the skills and
capacities that reside in people
and that are put to productive
use—can be a more important
determinant of its long term
economic success than virtually
any other resource. This resource
must be invested in and leveraged
efficiently in order for it to
generate returns—for the
individuals involved as well as an
economy as a whole.”
Source: http://reports.weforum.org/human-capital-
report-2015/the-human-capital-index/
Human Capital Inadequacies
• Human capital refers to skills, experience, attitudes, aptitudes
of the human input into production
• In many countries secondary + tertiary school enrolment is low
and teaching quality is poor
• In many countries there is a big gap between expected years of
schooling and mean (actual) years of schooling
• Huge inequality within and between developing countries in
the quality of schooling and access
• Lower and middle-income countries may suffer from brain
drains of their younger, more skilled workers
• Weak human capital constrains labour productivity and ability
to harness new technologies
• Human capital deficiencies often linked to malnutrition. Better
basic health care and nutrition often unlocks improved human
capital by avoiding brain impairment.
• Mean years of schooling 6.5
• Expected years of schooling (note mismatch with mean years) 13.5
• Adult literacy rate (% aged 15 and older) 61.4%
• Population with secondary education (% aged 25 and above) 35%
• Primary enrolment (% of children of primary school age) 114%
• Secondary enrolment (% of children of secondary school age) 101%
• Primary school dropout rates (% of primary school cohort) 47%
• Pupil-teacher ratio 49
• Expenditure on education (measured as a % of GDP) 1.35%
• Only one third of adults have experienced some form of secondary education
• The primary school drop-out rate is nearly 50%
• The pupil teacher ratio remains high and spending on education is less than
1.5% of GDP. Teacher quality is variable and there are hundreds of thousands of
aids orphans in Zambia – a key cause of the 40% child labour ratio
Human Capital Inadequacies - Zambia
Primary Product Dependence
• Many developing countries continue to have high
dependence on extracting & exporting primary commodities
• These economies are vulnerable to volatile global prices
• Significant risks from over-specialisation especially when the
terms of trade from their main exports decline
• Resource-rich (factor input-driven) countries may suffer from
the natural resource curse including the Dutch Disease effect
• Extractive rents often fuel corruption, inequality and
wasteful consumption as natural resources are depleted
• High commodity prices can cause currency appreciation –
and may lead to the Dutch Disease / de-industrialisation
• Often resource revenues are not used productively to
diversify the economy / and improve HDI outcomes through
investment in education and health care.
• Result: Many countries rich in natural resources often have
slow rates of growth and poor development scores
Primary Product Dependence
Primary Product Dependence - Malawi
Over 90% of Malawi’s exports of goods are agriculture or mining/extractive
products. Only 8% of their exports are manufactured goods
The Natural Resource Curse
“Although large deposits of
key resources such as oil
would usually be considered
a blessing for the
development prospects of a
country, it often turns out to
be a ‘resource curse’”
Professor Paul Collier
“Close to one third of the
wealth of low-income
countries comes from their
“natural capital” which
includes forests, protected
areas, agricultural lands,
energy and minerals”
World Bank
The Natural Resource Curse
“The fundamental
goal of resource-rich
economies should
be to transform
their exhaustible
natural resources
into assets—
human, domestic,
and private capital
and foreign
financial assets—
that will generate
future income and
support sustained
development. But
the record is mixed.”
Source: IMF Finance
and Development,
September 2013
Primary Product Dependence - Zambia
The extent of primary export dependence is shown in this graphic from the
Observatory of Economic Complexity (MIT).
Click here for the latest data on Zambian exports:
http://atlas.media.mit.edu/en/profile/country/zmb/
Zambia is the 86th largest export
economy in the world and the 66th most
complex economy according to the
Economic Complexity Index (ECI).
Primary Product Dependence – Volatile Copper Prices
0
2000
4000
6000
8000
10000
12000
Jan-80
Jun-81
Nov-82
Apr-84
Sep-85
Feb-87
Jul-88
Dec-89
May-91
Oct-92
Mar-94
Aug-95
Jan-97
Jun-98
Nov-99
Apr-01
Sep-02
Feb-04
Jul-05
Dec-06
May-08
Oct-09
Mar-11
Aug-12
Jan-14
Jun-15
Copper benchmark price, US dollars per tonne
Zambia is not the biggest copper
producer in the world economy. In
most cases Zambian copper mines are
“price-takers” which means that they
sell as much as they can at the
prevailing world price.
Risks to Growth for Zambia from falling Copper Prices
Fall in export revenues - fall in AD – causing drop in Zambian GDP growth
Zambia now running a large current account deficit – draining FX reserves
Depreciation of currency – leading to accelerating inflation > 10%
Job losses in mining – rising cyclical & structural unemployment
Negative multiplier effects for supply-chain businesses, housing, retailing
Fall in tax revenues - rising budget deficit / debt – may need IMF support
Social consequences – mining companies have subsidised HIV medicines,
inequality worsening as a result
Strategies for Reducing Primary Product Dependency
Better government – including more transparency &
accountability to tax payers so that it is clear where
natural resource revenues are going
Stabilisation Fund / Sovereign Wealth Fund – e.g. to
fund human capital and infrastructure or to inject
money into an economy when aggregate demand dips
Higher taxes of natural resource profits (i.e. extracting
resource rents and then reinvesting in the domestic
economy to increase supply-side capacity)
Diversification – including processing, light
manufacturing & tourism – giving higher value added
and making the economy less susceptible to shocks
Savings Gap and Foreign Exchange Gaps as Barriers
• The Harrod-Domar model emphasizes the role of savings to
help fund capital investment / capital deepening
• In many lower and middle income countries gross national
saving is insufficient to fund investment
• Financial systems are frequently poorly developed rationing
access to affordable credit / insurance
• Low national savings may limit investment and make
developing countries dependent on external finance
• Overseas development assistance (aid)
• Foreign direct investment
• Remittance inflows
• Private sector debt
• Many developing economies have low foreign exchange
reserves to cover their spending on imports – risking running
into a balance of payments / currency crisis.
Overcoming a Savings Gap – External Financial Flows
Capital Flight
• Capital flight is the uncertain and rapid movement of large
sums of money out of a country
• There could be several reasons linked to a lack of investor
confidence - factors include
1. Political turmoil / unrest / risk of civil conflict
2. Fears that a government plans to take assets under state control
3. Exchange rate uncertainty e.g. ahead of a possible devaluation
4. Fears over the stability of a country’s banking system
• Many billions of $s each year are taken out of a country
illegally especially in countries with high levels of corruption
• E.g. many Chinese leaders have relatives with offshore companies
• The rise of crypto digital currencies such as Bitcoin may be
encouraging capital flight – a form of digital money laundering
• Capital flight can undermine the stability of the financial
system and also bring about a much weaker currency which
in turn then increases the prices of essential imported goods
Corruption as a Barrier to Growth & Development
1 Denmark 145 Central African Republic
2 Finland 146 Congo Republic
3 Sweden 147 Chad
4 New Zealand 147 Democratic Republic of the Congo
5 Netherlands 147 Myanmar
5 Norway 150 Burundi
7 Switzerland 150 Cambodia
8 Singapore 150 Zimbabwe
9 Canada 153 Uzbekistan
10 Germany 154 Eritrea
10 Luxembourg 154 Syria
10 United Kingdom 154 Turkmenistan
13 Australia 154 Yemen
13 Iceland 158 Haiti
15 Belgium 158 Guinea-Bissau
16 Austria 158 Venezuela
16 The United States Of America 161 Iraq
18 Hong Kong 161 Libya
18 Ireland 163 Angola
18 Japan 163 South Sudan
21 Uruguay 165 Sudan
22 Qatar 166 Afghanistan
23 Chile 167 Korea (North)
23 Estonia 167 Somalia
Transparency International Corruption Perceptions Index for 2015
Cleanest Most Corrupt
Corruption as a Barrier to Growth & Development
• According to the United Nations, “corruption undermines
human development and democracy. It reduces access to
public services by diverting public resources for private gain.”
• Corruption is due to a failure of governing institutions who
lack transparency both in where their tax revenues are
coming from and in how state resources are spent
• High levels of corruption damage growth & development:
1. Inhibits direct foreign investment into an economy
2. Leads to allocative inefficiency / i.e. diverting public resources for
private gain, extreme examples of extravagant wealth
3. Contributes to persistent income & wealth inequality and
reduced progress in cutting the incidence of extreme poverty
4. Causes a loss of trust - a breakdown of social capital
5. Leads to substantially poorer human development outcomes
because governments are not collecting in enough tax revenues
Corruption as a Barrier to Growth & Development
Transparency International Corruption Perceptions Index for 2015
Many Trust Businesses more than Governments
Labour Migration and Brain Drain Effects
• It has been estimated
that there were 232
million international
migrants in the world in
2013
• 207 million of them
were of working age, 15
years old and over.
• Of these migrants, 150
million were working or
economically active.
Brain Drains - De-population as a Barrier to Growth
Evaluate some of the consequences of the net outward migration
of skilled workers from developing countries
• Disadvantages
1. Loss of human capital
(expertise) from the economy –
this damages long-run supply-
side potential and is a barrier to
development
2. Loss of enterprising younger
workers who might have
started up businesses at home
3. Skills shortages will grow and
could seriously affect HDI
outcomes e.g. emigration of
doctors and teachers
4. Fall in aggregate demand
5. May make the country less
attractive to inward investment
6. May make a country less
innovative
Brain Drains - De-population as a Barrier to Growth
Evaluate some of the consequences of the net outward migration
of skilled workers from developing countries
• Disadvantages
1. Loss of human capital
(expertise) from the economy –
this damages long-run supply-
side potential and is a barrier to
development
2. Loss of enterprising younger
workers who might have
started up businesses at home
3. Skills shortages will grow and
could seriously affect HDI
outcomes e.g. emigration of
doctors and teachers
4. Fall in aggregate demand
5. May make the country less
attractive to inward investment
6. May make a country less
innovative
• Possible Advantages
1. Remittances from emigrants
flow back to increase GNI
2. People living overseas (diaspora)
may be able to help finance
private sector capital projects in
the future
3. Acquisition of human capital by
working & studying in other
countries e.g. learning
languages, earning degrees –
possibly leading to brain
deposits & gains?
4. May help to offset rapid natural
growth of population
Limits to Growth and Development on
the A2 Unit 4 Syllabus
• Students should consider factors such as:
1. Poor infrastructure
2. Human capital inadequacies
3. Primary product dependency
4. Declining terms of trade
5. Savings gap; inadequate capital accumulation
6. Foreign currency gap and capital flight
7. Corruption, poor governance, impact of civil war
8. Population issues
9. Debt dependence
More Notable Barriers to Growth & Development
Vulnerable
employment /
exploitation
Gender inequality and
other forms of
discrimination
Trade barriers e.g.
limited access to
developed markets
Landlocked countries High inflation for
some, deflation for
others
Income & wealth
inequality
Evaluating Main Strengths and Weaknesses for Zambia
Competitive Strengths
1/ Rich natural factor endowment (copper & emeralds)
2/ Young workforce (half pop are under 15yrs old)
3/ Now a middle income country – GNI per capita
increased by about 69% between 1980 and 2014.
4/ Progress in improving health outcomes /HDI rank is
higher than average for Sub Saharan Africa
5/ Functioning democracy with political stability
Other Notes
• Zambia has become a favoured venue for inward
investment worth 5-6% of GDP annually with much
coming from China.
• Country still has strong long-run growth potential
given it’s natural resource endowment
• Zambia has a functioning democracy but economic
management is weak and Zambia has not successfully
used revenues from copper mining/exporting into
establishing a diversified industrial base –
manufacturing is shrinking as % of GDP
• Can Zambia survive what many believe to be the end
of the global commodity super price cycle?
Main Weaknesses in their Economy
1/ Vulnerable to global slowdown / Zambia does not
have a stabilisation fund / wealth fund to draw upon
2/ High secondary school drop-out ratio – disparity
between expected and mean years of schooling
3/ Low tax revenues / big tax avoidance issues
4/ Weak currency / growing fiscal & BoP deficits
5/ Finance is under-developed / very high interest rates
of 30-40% for small businesses / farmers
Other Useful Contextual Knowledge
• 40% child labour (14% in developing countries)
• Zambia is too dependent on hydro-electricity – much
goes to power the copper mines. Drought is leading
to power shortages and affecting farming
• The big threat facing Zambia is stagflation i.e. a sharp
reduction in economic growth accompanied to
double-digit rates of inflation fuelled by a severe
depreciation of the currency.
• Youth under employment is also a huge issue
• Zambia’s economic growth has not translated into
significant poverty reduction
Main Strengths and Weaknesses for Mexico
Economic / Competitive Strengths
1/ Low unit labour costs – attractive to FDI
2/ Large / growing population (market size)
3/ Competitive currency helping exports
4/ Many free trade agreements completed
5/ Low unemployment and government debt
Other Notes
• Mexico is developing a strong comparative
advantage in manufacturing especially in
industries such as vehicle manufacturing
• Unemployment is low but there is significant
under-employment in a dual economy
• Fast growing middle class is attractive to FDI
especially from service businesses
• Rising consumption supports GDP growth
• More than 90% of Mexican overseas trade now
covered by free trade agreements
Main Weaknesses in their Economy
1/ Concerns over violence and corruption
2/ Heavily dependent on oil revenues
3/ Informal labour market – dual economy
4/ High levels of income/wealth inequality
5/ Long tail of low productivity businesses
Other Useful Contextual Knowledge
• Mexico has over 4 million micro businesses
that employ the majority of Mexicans – few
have access to equity / loan finance which
hampers finance for extra investment
• Key industries in Mexico have been dominated
by monopolies such as Mexico Telecom and
Pemex (Oil). The lack of contestability keeps
prices and high and limits capital investment
and innovation
Barriers to Economic Growth and
Development

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Barriers to Economic Growth and Development

  • 1. Barriers to Economic Growth and Development
  • 2. Limits to Growth and Development on the A2 Unit 4 Syllabus • Students should consider factors such as: 1. Poor infrastructure 2. Human capital inadequacies 3. Primary product dependency 4. Declining terms of trade 5. Savings gap; inadequate capital accumulation 6. Foreign currency gap and capital flight 7. Corruption, poor governance, impact of civil war 8. Population issues 9. Debt dependence
  • 3. Introduction – Some Growth Data Key issues • Is rapid growth sustainable? • Does it feed through to significant improvements in human development?
  • 4. 2015 Human Development Index – Lowest Rankings Human Development Index (HDI) Life expectancy at birth Expected years of schooling Mean years of schooling Gross national income (GNI) per capita GNI per capita rank minus HDI rank Country Value (years) (years) (years) (2011 PPP $) Côte d'Ivoire 0.462 51.5 8.9 4.3 3,171 -24 Malawi 0.445 62.8 10.8 4.3 747 13 Ethiopia 0.442 64.1 8.5 2.4 1,428 2 Gambia 0.441 60.2 8.8 2.8 1,507 -2 DRC 0.433 58.7 9.8 6.0 680 11 Liberia 0.430 60.9 9.5 4.1 805 7 Guinea-Bissau 0.420 55.2 9.0 2.8 1,362 -1 Mali 0.419 58.0 8.4 2.0 1,583 -8 Mozambique 0.416 55.1 9.3 3.2 1,123 1 Sierra Leone 0.413 50.9 8.6 3.1 1,780 -16 Guinea 0.411 58.8 8.7 2.4 1,096 0 Burkina Faso 0.402 58.7 7.8 1.4 1,591 -13 Burundi 0.400 56.7 10.1 2.7 758 1 Chad 0.392 51.6 7.4 1.9 2,085 -22 Eritrea 0.391 63.7 4.1 3.9 1,130 -6 Central African Republic 0.350 50.7 7.2 4.2 581 1 Niger 0.348 61.4 5.4 1.5 908 -5
  • 5. Nations whose HDI Outcome > GNI Per Capita Ranking Source: HDI report 2015, UNDP Human Development Index (HDI) Gross national income (GNI) per capita GNI per capita rank minus HDI rank HDI rank Country Value (2011 PPP $) 67 Cuba 0.769 7,301 47 76 Georgia 0.754 7,164 40 100 Tonga 0.717 5,069 32 73 Sri Lanka 0.757 9,779 29 81 Ukraine 0.747 8,178 25 9 New Zealand 0.913 32,689 23 113 Palestine, State of 0.677 4,699 21 2 Australia 0.935 42,261 17 6 Ireland 0.916 39,568 16 18 Israel 0.894 30,676 16 145 Nepal 0.548 2,311 16 116 Vietnam 0.666 5,092 15 29 Greece 0.865 24,524 14 17 South Korea 0.898 33,890 13 173 Malawi 0.445 747 13 36 Poland 0.843 23,177 10 52 Romania 0.793 18,108 10 69 Costa Rica 0.766 13,413 10 5 Netherlands 0.922 45,435 9 14 United Kingdom 0.907 39,267 9
  • 6. Nations whose HDI Outcome < GNI Per Capita Ranking Source: HDI report 2015, UNDP Human Development Index (HDI) Gross national income (GNI) per capita GNI per capita rank minus HDI rank HDI rank Country Value (2011 PPP $) 138 Equatorial Guinea 0.587 21,056 -84 48 Kuwait 0.816 83,961 -46 121 Iraq 0.654 14,003 -44 106 Botswana 0.698 16,646 -41 41 United Arab Emirates 0.835 60,868 -34 32 Qatar 0.850 123,124 -31 149 Angola 0.532 6,822 -30 116 South Africa 0.666 12,122 -29 109 Turkmenistan 0.688 13,066 -28 39 Saudi Arabia 0.837 52,821 -27 152 Nigeria 0.514 5,341 -24 172 Côte d'Ivoire 0.462 3,171 -24 52 Oman 0.793 34,858 -23 64 Seychelles 0.772 23,300 -19 62 Malaysia 0.779 22,762 -14 72 Turkey 0.761 18,677 -12 11 Singapore 0.912 76,628 -7 90 China 0.727 12,547 -7
  • 7. Limits to Growth and Development on the A2 Unit 4 Syllabus • Students should consider factors such as: 1. Poor infrastructure 2. Human capital inadequacies 3. Primary product dependency 4. Declining terms of trade 5. Savings gap; inadequate capital accumulation 6. Foreign currency gap and capital flight 7. Corruption, poor governance, impact of civil war 8. Population issues 9. Debt dependence
  • 8. Paul Collier’s 4 “Development Traps” • Professor Paul Collier has identified four “development traps” - they are 1. Conflict 2. Reliance on natural resources 3. Being landlocked with bad neighbours 4. Bad governance
  • 9. Infrastructure Gaps • Infrastructure gaps limit economic growth & human development because 1. They increase supply costs for businesses – this causes higher prices – hitting real incomes 2. Reduce geographical mobility of labour / higher structural unemployment 3. Damage export competitiveness and limit intra-regional trade 4. Make a country less attractive to inward foreign direct investment 5. Make an economy vulnerable to effects of climate change / natural disasters 6. Contribute to gender inequality The Asian Development Bank forecasts that Asia needs US$8 trillion (S$11 trillion) in the decade to 2020 to plug the infrastructure deficit
  • 10. Poor access to credit Poor infrastructure Excessive bureaucracy Regulations and licensing requirements Supply-Side Constraints • Landlocked Zambia scores poorly in the infrastructure rankings published as part of the Global Competitiveness Index • Quality of overall infrastructure 93/140 • Quality of roads 81/140 • Quality of railroad 80/140 • Quality of port infrastructure 131/140 • Quality of air transport 112/140 • Electricity and telephony 119/140 • 90% of Zambia’s power comes from hydro- electric plants making the country especially vulnerable to drought • To earn foreign exchange, Zambia exports power from hydro-electric plants – this then damages electricity supply to the farming industry which employs 60% of people • Copper mines absorb much of the available energy supply. There are frequent power outages affecting homes & businesses • Much copper output is transported on poor roads which adds to costs and hurts profits Infrastructure Gaps - Zambia
  • 11. Human Capital Inadequacies “The low level of human capital in Africa’s agricultural sector remains a significant constraint to growth, poverty reduction, and food security on the continent. “ World Bank World Economic Forum Human Capital Index “A nation’s human capital endowment—the skills and capacities that reside in people and that are put to productive use—can be a more important determinant of its long term economic success than virtually any other resource. This resource must be invested in and leveraged efficiently in order for it to generate returns—for the individuals involved as well as an economy as a whole.” Source: http://reports.weforum.org/human-capital- report-2015/the-human-capital-index/
  • 12. Human Capital Inadequacies • Human capital refers to skills, experience, attitudes, aptitudes of the human input into production • In many countries secondary + tertiary school enrolment is low and teaching quality is poor • In many countries there is a big gap between expected years of schooling and mean (actual) years of schooling • Huge inequality within and between developing countries in the quality of schooling and access • Lower and middle-income countries may suffer from brain drains of their younger, more skilled workers • Weak human capital constrains labour productivity and ability to harness new technologies • Human capital deficiencies often linked to malnutrition. Better basic health care and nutrition often unlocks improved human capital by avoiding brain impairment.
  • 13. • Mean years of schooling 6.5 • Expected years of schooling (note mismatch with mean years) 13.5 • Adult literacy rate (% aged 15 and older) 61.4% • Population with secondary education (% aged 25 and above) 35% • Primary enrolment (% of children of primary school age) 114% • Secondary enrolment (% of children of secondary school age) 101% • Primary school dropout rates (% of primary school cohort) 47% • Pupil-teacher ratio 49 • Expenditure on education (measured as a % of GDP) 1.35% • Only one third of adults have experienced some form of secondary education • The primary school drop-out rate is nearly 50% • The pupil teacher ratio remains high and spending on education is less than 1.5% of GDP. Teacher quality is variable and there are hundreds of thousands of aids orphans in Zambia – a key cause of the 40% child labour ratio Human Capital Inadequacies - Zambia
  • 14. Primary Product Dependence • Many developing countries continue to have high dependence on extracting & exporting primary commodities • These economies are vulnerable to volatile global prices • Significant risks from over-specialisation especially when the terms of trade from their main exports decline • Resource-rich (factor input-driven) countries may suffer from the natural resource curse including the Dutch Disease effect • Extractive rents often fuel corruption, inequality and wasteful consumption as natural resources are depleted • High commodity prices can cause currency appreciation – and may lead to the Dutch Disease / de-industrialisation • Often resource revenues are not used productively to diversify the economy / and improve HDI outcomes through investment in education and health care. • Result: Many countries rich in natural resources often have slow rates of growth and poor development scores
  • 16. Primary Product Dependence - Malawi Over 90% of Malawi’s exports of goods are agriculture or mining/extractive products. Only 8% of their exports are manufactured goods
  • 17. The Natural Resource Curse “Although large deposits of key resources such as oil would usually be considered a blessing for the development prospects of a country, it often turns out to be a ‘resource curse’” Professor Paul Collier “Close to one third of the wealth of low-income countries comes from their “natural capital” which includes forests, protected areas, agricultural lands, energy and minerals” World Bank
  • 18. The Natural Resource Curse “The fundamental goal of resource-rich economies should be to transform their exhaustible natural resources into assets— human, domestic, and private capital and foreign financial assets— that will generate future income and support sustained development. But the record is mixed.” Source: IMF Finance and Development, September 2013
  • 19. Primary Product Dependence - Zambia The extent of primary export dependence is shown in this graphic from the Observatory of Economic Complexity (MIT). Click here for the latest data on Zambian exports: http://atlas.media.mit.edu/en/profile/country/zmb/ Zambia is the 86th largest export economy in the world and the 66th most complex economy according to the Economic Complexity Index (ECI).
  • 20. Primary Product Dependence – Volatile Copper Prices 0 2000 4000 6000 8000 10000 12000 Jan-80 Jun-81 Nov-82 Apr-84 Sep-85 Feb-87 Jul-88 Dec-89 May-91 Oct-92 Mar-94 Aug-95 Jan-97 Jun-98 Nov-99 Apr-01 Sep-02 Feb-04 Jul-05 Dec-06 May-08 Oct-09 Mar-11 Aug-12 Jan-14 Jun-15 Copper benchmark price, US dollars per tonne Zambia is not the biggest copper producer in the world economy. In most cases Zambian copper mines are “price-takers” which means that they sell as much as they can at the prevailing world price.
  • 21. Risks to Growth for Zambia from falling Copper Prices Fall in export revenues - fall in AD – causing drop in Zambian GDP growth Zambia now running a large current account deficit – draining FX reserves Depreciation of currency – leading to accelerating inflation > 10% Job losses in mining – rising cyclical & structural unemployment Negative multiplier effects for supply-chain businesses, housing, retailing Fall in tax revenues - rising budget deficit / debt – may need IMF support Social consequences – mining companies have subsidised HIV medicines, inequality worsening as a result
  • 22. Strategies for Reducing Primary Product Dependency Better government – including more transparency & accountability to tax payers so that it is clear where natural resource revenues are going Stabilisation Fund / Sovereign Wealth Fund – e.g. to fund human capital and infrastructure or to inject money into an economy when aggregate demand dips Higher taxes of natural resource profits (i.e. extracting resource rents and then reinvesting in the domestic economy to increase supply-side capacity) Diversification – including processing, light manufacturing & tourism – giving higher value added and making the economy less susceptible to shocks
  • 23. Savings Gap and Foreign Exchange Gaps as Barriers • The Harrod-Domar model emphasizes the role of savings to help fund capital investment / capital deepening • In many lower and middle income countries gross national saving is insufficient to fund investment • Financial systems are frequently poorly developed rationing access to affordable credit / insurance • Low national savings may limit investment and make developing countries dependent on external finance • Overseas development assistance (aid) • Foreign direct investment • Remittance inflows • Private sector debt • Many developing economies have low foreign exchange reserves to cover their spending on imports – risking running into a balance of payments / currency crisis.
  • 24. Overcoming a Savings Gap – External Financial Flows
  • 25. Capital Flight • Capital flight is the uncertain and rapid movement of large sums of money out of a country • There could be several reasons linked to a lack of investor confidence - factors include 1. Political turmoil / unrest / risk of civil conflict 2. Fears that a government plans to take assets under state control 3. Exchange rate uncertainty e.g. ahead of a possible devaluation 4. Fears over the stability of a country’s banking system • Many billions of $s each year are taken out of a country illegally especially in countries with high levels of corruption • E.g. many Chinese leaders have relatives with offshore companies • The rise of crypto digital currencies such as Bitcoin may be encouraging capital flight – a form of digital money laundering • Capital flight can undermine the stability of the financial system and also bring about a much weaker currency which in turn then increases the prices of essential imported goods
  • 26. Corruption as a Barrier to Growth & Development 1 Denmark 145 Central African Republic 2 Finland 146 Congo Republic 3 Sweden 147 Chad 4 New Zealand 147 Democratic Republic of the Congo 5 Netherlands 147 Myanmar 5 Norway 150 Burundi 7 Switzerland 150 Cambodia 8 Singapore 150 Zimbabwe 9 Canada 153 Uzbekistan 10 Germany 154 Eritrea 10 Luxembourg 154 Syria 10 United Kingdom 154 Turkmenistan 13 Australia 154 Yemen 13 Iceland 158 Haiti 15 Belgium 158 Guinea-Bissau 16 Austria 158 Venezuela 16 The United States Of America 161 Iraq 18 Hong Kong 161 Libya 18 Ireland 163 Angola 18 Japan 163 South Sudan 21 Uruguay 165 Sudan 22 Qatar 166 Afghanistan 23 Chile 167 Korea (North) 23 Estonia 167 Somalia Transparency International Corruption Perceptions Index for 2015 Cleanest Most Corrupt
  • 27. Corruption as a Barrier to Growth & Development • According to the United Nations, “corruption undermines human development and democracy. It reduces access to public services by diverting public resources for private gain.” • Corruption is due to a failure of governing institutions who lack transparency both in where their tax revenues are coming from and in how state resources are spent • High levels of corruption damage growth & development: 1. Inhibits direct foreign investment into an economy 2. Leads to allocative inefficiency / i.e. diverting public resources for private gain, extreme examples of extravagant wealth 3. Contributes to persistent income & wealth inequality and reduced progress in cutting the incidence of extreme poverty 4. Causes a loss of trust - a breakdown of social capital 5. Leads to substantially poorer human development outcomes because governments are not collecting in enough tax revenues
  • 28. Corruption as a Barrier to Growth & Development Transparency International Corruption Perceptions Index for 2015
  • 29. Many Trust Businesses more than Governments
  • 30. Labour Migration and Brain Drain Effects • It has been estimated that there were 232 million international migrants in the world in 2013 • 207 million of them were of working age, 15 years old and over. • Of these migrants, 150 million were working or economically active.
  • 31. Brain Drains - De-population as a Barrier to Growth Evaluate some of the consequences of the net outward migration of skilled workers from developing countries • Disadvantages 1. Loss of human capital (expertise) from the economy – this damages long-run supply- side potential and is a barrier to development 2. Loss of enterprising younger workers who might have started up businesses at home 3. Skills shortages will grow and could seriously affect HDI outcomes e.g. emigration of doctors and teachers 4. Fall in aggregate demand 5. May make the country less attractive to inward investment 6. May make a country less innovative
  • 32. Brain Drains - De-population as a Barrier to Growth Evaluate some of the consequences of the net outward migration of skilled workers from developing countries • Disadvantages 1. Loss of human capital (expertise) from the economy – this damages long-run supply- side potential and is a barrier to development 2. Loss of enterprising younger workers who might have started up businesses at home 3. Skills shortages will grow and could seriously affect HDI outcomes e.g. emigration of doctors and teachers 4. Fall in aggregate demand 5. May make the country less attractive to inward investment 6. May make a country less innovative • Possible Advantages 1. Remittances from emigrants flow back to increase GNI 2. People living overseas (diaspora) may be able to help finance private sector capital projects in the future 3. Acquisition of human capital by working & studying in other countries e.g. learning languages, earning degrees – possibly leading to brain deposits & gains? 4. May help to offset rapid natural growth of population
  • 33. Limits to Growth and Development on the A2 Unit 4 Syllabus • Students should consider factors such as: 1. Poor infrastructure 2. Human capital inadequacies 3. Primary product dependency 4. Declining terms of trade 5. Savings gap; inadequate capital accumulation 6. Foreign currency gap and capital flight 7. Corruption, poor governance, impact of civil war 8. Population issues 9. Debt dependence
  • 34. More Notable Barriers to Growth & Development Vulnerable employment / exploitation Gender inequality and other forms of discrimination Trade barriers e.g. limited access to developed markets Landlocked countries High inflation for some, deflation for others Income & wealth inequality
  • 35. Evaluating Main Strengths and Weaknesses for Zambia Competitive Strengths 1/ Rich natural factor endowment (copper & emeralds) 2/ Young workforce (half pop are under 15yrs old) 3/ Now a middle income country – GNI per capita increased by about 69% between 1980 and 2014. 4/ Progress in improving health outcomes /HDI rank is higher than average for Sub Saharan Africa 5/ Functioning democracy with political stability Other Notes • Zambia has become a favoured venue for inward investment worth 5-6% of GDP annually with much coming from China. • Country still has strong long-run growth potential given it’s natural resource endowment • Zambia has a functioning democracy but economic management is weak and Zambia has not successfully used revenues from copper mining/exporting into establishing a diversified industrial base – manufacturing is shrinking as % of GDP • Can Zambia survive what many believe to be the end of the global commodity super price cycle? Main Weaknesses in their Economy 1/ Vulnerable to global slowdown / Zambia does not have a stabilisation fund / wealth fund to draw upon 2/ High secondary school drop-out ratio – disparity between expected and mean years of schooling 3/ Low tax revenues / big tax avoidance issues 4/ Weak currency / growing fiscal & BoP deficits 5/ Finance is under-developed / very high interest rates of 30-40% for small businesses / farmers Other Useful Contextual Knowledge • 40% child labour (14% in developing countries) • Zambia is too dependent on hydro-electricity – much goes to power the copper mines. Drought is leading to power shortages and affecting farming • The big threat facing Zambia is stagflation i.e. a sharp reduction in economic growth accompanied to double-digit rates of inflation fuelled by a severe depreciation of the currency. • Youth under employment is also a huge issue • Zambia’s economic growth has not translated into significant poverty reduction
  • 36. Main Strengths and Weaknesses for Mexico Economic / Competitive Strengths 1/ Low unit labour costs – attractive to FDI 2/ Large / growing population (market size) 3/ Competitive currency helping exports 4/ Many free trade agreements completed 5/ Low unemployment and government debt Other Notes • Mexico is developing a strong comparative advantage in manufacturing especially in industries such as vehicle manufacturing • Unemployment is low but there is significant under-employment in a dual economy • Fast growing middle class is attractive to FDI especially from service businesses • Rising consumption supports GDP growth • More than 90% of Mexican overseas trade now covered by free trade agreements Main Weaknesses in their Economy 1/ Concerns over violence and corruption 2/ Heavily dependent on oil revenues 3/ Informal labour market – dual economy 4/ High levels of income/wealth inequality 5/ Long tail of low productivity businesses Other Useful Contextual Knowledge • Mexico has over 4 million micro businesses that employ the majority of Mexicans – few have access to equity / loan finance which hampers finance for extra investment • Key industries in Mexico have been dominated by monopolies such as Mexico Telecom and Pemex (Oil). The lack of contestability keeps prices and high and limits capital investment and innovation
  • 37. Barriers to Economic Growth and Development