Theme 4: Emerging and Developing Economies Flashcards
What is the Human Development Index?
Developed by the United Nations to measure and rank countries’ levels of social and economic development. Used to gain a fuller picture about the quality of life in a country.
What are the 3 components to the HDI?
- Health- life expectancy
- Education- average and expected years in schooling
- Standard of Living- real GNI per capita using PPP
Advantages of using the HDI to compare levels of development between countries/over time?
- Data is easy to collect and is standardised across nations
- Easily track levels of development over time
- HDI gains an insight into well-being, which is a growing concern
Disadvantages of using the HDI to compare levels of development between countries/over time?
- Long life expectancy is not the same as high quality of life. Western nations may live longer but may have greater levels of stress and mental illness.
- Number of years in school is a poor indicator of the quality of the education.
- HDI does not measure the level of inequality in a nation.
- Two countries can achieve the same HDI but have very different profiles.
What is primary product dependency?
Many developing nations are dependent on primary products that are extracted from the earth. The demand for most commodities is price elastic, therefore any changes in global demand will have a significant impact on price.
So any economies reliant on these industries may find it more difficult to encourage economic development.
What factors create a disincentive for investment in primary industries?
- Value added on primary products is low- farmers and miners make little profit when exporting
- Agricultural products can be easily damaged by natural disasters.
- Volatility of commodity prices means incomes fluctuate, therefore earnings are uncertain.
What is the Harrold-Domar Model
Growth rate of an economy is directly linked to:
- The levels of saving in an economy
- The efficiency with which capital in an economy can be deployed
What is the savings gap?
In many low income countries, high levels of poverty make it almost impossible to generate sufficient savings to make fund investment projects. This increases reliance on high interest borrowing to finance capital investment.
Foreign currency gap and what causes it?
When capital outflows from a country are greater than capital inflows.
Caused by:
- Dependency on exports of primary products (low value added) and import of manufactured goods (high value added).
- High proportion of income servicing debt (borrowing instead of saving for investment.)
Overall, low income countries receive less for their exports and have to pay a premium for the goods they import
What is capital flight and what are the reasons for it?
Capital flight refers to the problem of people moving their savings abroad instead of holding them domestically.
This might occur because:
- Lower tax rates and/or higher interest rates abroad.
- Political instability
- Absence of property rights- without clear laws and legal controls, property rights may be uncertain.
What is the impact of capital flight?
- Governments don’t receive taxes from savings abroad
- People less willing to risk investment
- Lower levels of development.
What topic does the savings gap and level of investment link to?
Propensity to save
What topic does the foreign currency gap link to?
The circular flow of income, as foreign currency gap is an example of a leakage or a withdrawal from the circular flow of income.
What demographic factors have a significant impact on the development in a country and why?
Fast growing population- As an increase in the number of children puts pressure on the education system and fewer children may receive a good education.
Aging population- Greater proportion of dependants vs the working population putting a pressure on social benefits and healthcare.
Poverty- As many children have to go to work rather than go to school.
Why might international debt have an impact on growth and development?
International debt becomes a flow of money out on an economy. If the currency used to take the loan appreciates in value then the country might struggle to pay it back and therefore cannot invest money in their economy but rather on paying back the loan.
How can access to credit and banking impact an economy’s growth?
In developed countries people have more access to saving and borrowing mechanisms. So they can grow their investments and borrow money on good terms.
In developing countries these may not be available or may be harder to access and therefore restrict the opportunities for savings, investment and growth.
Investment in ………. can help economic growth such as roads, ………….
Infrastructure
Eg ports, airports, railways, utilities and broadband
What are 4 non-economic factors that may also restrict the levels of development in a country?
- War
- Geographical
- Corruption
- Disease