
Economics of Development
by Perkins, Dwight H.; Radelet, Steven; Lindauer, David L.; Block, Steven A.-
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Summary
Table of Contents
Preface | p. xv |
International Development Resources on the Internet | p. xxiii |
Development and Growth | |
Patterns of Development | p. 3 |
Three Vignettes | p. 3 |
Malaysia | p. 3 |
Ethiopia | p. 5 |
Ukraine | p. 6 |
Development and Globalization | p. 8 |
Rich and Poor Countries | p. 10 |
Growth and Development | p. 13 |
Diversity in Development Achievements | p. 15 |
Approaches to Development | p. 16 |
The Study of Development Economics | p. 18 |
Organization | p. 19 |
Summary | p. 20 |
Measuring Economic Growth and Development | p. 23 |
Measuring Economic Growth | p. 24 |
Measuring GDP: What Is Left Out? | p. 25 |
Exchange-Rate Conversion Problems | p. 27 |
Economic Growth around the World: A Brief Overview | p. 32 |
tared diamond: guns, germs, and steel | p. 34 |
Economic Growth, 1970-2010 | p. 36 |
What Do We Mean by Economic Development? | p. 38 |
Measuring Economic Development | p. 40 |
Human Development Defined | p. 41 |
Why Use Logarithms? | p. 43 |
What Can We Learn from the Human Development Index? | p. 44 |
Millennium Development Goals | p. 46 |
Targets of the Millennium Development Goals | p. 47 |
Is Economic Growth Desirable? | p. 50 |
Summary | p. 53 |
Economic Growth: Concepts and Patterns | p. 55 |
Divergent Patterns of Economic Growth since 1960 | p. 56 |
Botswana's Remarkable Economic Development | p. 59 |
Factor Accumulation, Productivity, and Economic Growth | p. 60 |
Calculating, Future Values, Growth Rates, and Doubling Times | p. 61 |
Saving, Investment, and Capital Accumulation | p. 64 |
Sources of Growth Analysis | p. 66 |
Characteristics of Rapidly Growing Countries | p. 74 |
Macroeconomic and Political Stability | p. 75 |
Investment in Health and Education | p. 77 |
Effective Governance and Institutions | p. 79 |
Institutions, Governance, and Growth | p. 80 |
Favorable Environment for Private Enterprise | p. 82 |
Trade, Openness, and Growth | p. 83 |
Favorable Geography | p. 84 |
Summary | p. 87 |
Theories of Economic Growth | p. 89 |
The Basic Growth Model | p. 91 |
The Harrod-Domar Growth Model | p. 94 |
The Fixed-Coefficient Production Function | p. 94 |
The Capital-Output Ratio and the Harrod-Domar Framework | p. 96 |
Strengths and Weaknesses of the Harrod-Domar Framework | p. 98 |
Economic Growth in Thailand | p. 101 |
The Solow (Neoclassical) Growth Model | p. 103 |
The Neoclassical Production Function | p. 103 |
The Basic Equations of the Solow Model | p. 104 |
The Solow Diagram | p. 108 |
Changes in the Saving Rate and Population Growth Rate in the Solow Model | p. 109 |
Population Growth and Economic Growth | p. 112 |
Technological Change in the Solow Model | p. 113 |
Strengths and Weaknesses of the Solow Framework | p. 116 |
Diminishing Returns and the Production Function | p. 117 |
Explaining Differences in Growth Rates | p. 118 |
The Convergence Debate | p. 121 |
Beyond Solow: New Approaches to Growth | p. 125 |
Summary | p. 127 |
States and Markets | p. 129 |
Development Thinking after World War II | p. 130 |
Market Failure | p. 133 |
Fundamental Changes in the 1970s and 1980s | p. 137 |
Ghana After Independence | p. 139 |
The Declining Effectiveness of Government Intervention in the Market: Korea, 1960s-2010 | p. 143 |
Structural Adjustment, the Washington Consensus, and the End of the Soviet Model | p. 144 |
Soviet Command Model to Market Economies: The Great Transition | p. 148 |
Was the Washington Consensus a Success or Failure? | p. 153 |
Summary | p. 159 |
Distribution and Human Resources | |
Inequality and Poverty | p. 165 |
Measuring Inequality | p. 166 |
Patterns of Inequality | p. 172 |
Growth and Inequality | p. 174 |
What Else Might Cause Inequality? | p. 177 |
Why Inequality Matters | p. 178 |
Measuring Poverty | p. 180 |
Poverty Lines | p. 181 |
National Poverty Lines in Bangladesh, Mexico, and the United States | p. 183 |
Wily $1.25 a Day? | p. 186 |
Dissenting Opinions on the Extent of Absolute Poverty | p. 191 |
Who is Not Poor? | p. 192 |
Poverty Today | p. 192 |
Who Are the Poor? | p. 193 |
Living in Poverty | p. 195 |
Strategies to Reduce Poverty | p. 197 |
Growth is Good for the Poor | p. 198 |
Sometimes Growth May Not Be Enough | p. 200 |
Pro-Poor Growth | p. 201 |
Why Should Development Strategies Have a Poverty Focus? | p. 202 |
Improving Opportunities for the Poor | p. 205 |
Income Transfers and Safety Nets | p. 206 |
Global Inequality and the End of Poverty | p. 208 |
Summary | p. 214 |
Population | p. 217 |
A Brief History of World Population | p. 218 |
The Demographic Transition | p. 220 |
The Demographic Situation Today | p. 224 |
Total Fertility Rates | p. 225 |
The Demographic Future | p. 227 |
Population Momentum | p. 229 |
The Causes of Population Growth | p. 231 |
Thomas Malthus, Population Pessimist | p. 232 |
Why Birth Rates Decline | p. 233 |
Population Growth and Economic Development | p. 236 |
Population and Accumulation | p. 237 |
Population Growth, Age Structure, and Dependency Ratios | p. 239 |
Population and Productivity | p. 241 |
Population and Market Failures | p. 243 |
Population Policy | p. 245 |
Family Planning | p. 246 |
Authoritarian Approaches | p. 249 |
Missing Girls, Missing Women | p. 251 |
Population Issues for the Twenty-First Century | p. 253 |
Summary | p. 254 |
Education | p. 257 |
Trends and Patterns | p. 258 |
Stocks and Flows | p. 259 |
Boys versus Girls | p. 263 |
Schooling versus Education | p. 264 |
Education as an Investment | p. 267 |
The Rate of Return to Schooling | p. 269 |
Estimated Rates of Return | p. 272 |
First-Generation Estimates | p. 273 |
Estimating Rates of Return from Wage Equations | p. 275 |
Second-Generation Estimates | p. 276 |
Puzzles | p. 278 |
Returns to Schooling and Income Opportunities | p. 279 |
Making Schooling More Productive | p. 281 |
Underinvestment | p. 282 |
Misallocation | p. 282 |
Improving Schools | p. 286 |
Reducing the Costs of Going to School | p. 287 |
Mexico's Progresa | p. 288 |
Inefficient Use of Resources | p. 290 |
It Is about More than the Money | p. 293 |
Combating Teacher Absence | p. 294 |
Summary | p. 298 |
Health | p. 299 |
What Is Health? | p. 302 |
Life Expectancy | p. 305 |
Transitions in Global Health | p. 307 |
The Epidemiologic Transition | p. 308 |
The Determinants of Improved Health | p. 310 |
Health, Income, and Growth | p. 313 |
Income and Health | p. 314 |
How Beneficent is the Market? A Look at the Modern History of Mortality | p. 318 |
Health and Productivity | p. 319 |
Health and Investment | p. 320 |
Three Critical Diseases | p. 321 |
Malaria, Yellow Fever, and the Panama Canal | p. 322 |
HPV/AIDS | p. 323 |
HIV/AIDS, Malaria, and Tuberculosis: Some Basics | p. 324 |
Malaria | p. 329 |
Making Markets for Vaccines | p. 330 |
Tuberculosis | p. 333 |
What Works? Some Successes in Global Health | p. 335 |
Preventing HIV/AIDS in Thailand | p. 336 |
Controlling Tuberculosis in China | p. 336 |
Eradicating Smallpox | p. 337 |
Eliminating Polio in Latin America | p. 338 |
Preventing Deatlis from Diarrheal Disease | p. 340 |
Lessons Learned | p. 342 |
Health Challenges | p. 343 |
Summary | p. 344 |
Macroeconomic Policies for Development | |
Investment and Savings | p. 349 |
Using Investment Productively: Cost-Benefit Analysis | p. 351 |
Present Value | p. 351 |
Opportunity Costs | p. 355 |
Shadow Prices | p. 355 |
Welfare Weights | p. 356 |
Barriers to Productive Public and Private Investment | p. 357 |
Barriers to Doing Business | p. 359 |
Foreign Direct Investment | p. 363 |
FDI Patterns and Products | p. 364 |
Benefits and Drawbacks of FDI | p. 365 |
FDI and Growth | p. 369 |
Policies Toward Foreign Direct Investment | p. 370 |
Savings | p. 374 |
Household Saving and Consumption | p. 376 |
Corporate Saving | p. 379 |
Government Saving | p. 380 |
Foreign Saving | p. 384 |
Summary | p. 388 |
Fiscal Policy | p. 391 |
Government Expenditures | p. 393 |
Categories of Government Expenditures | p. 394 |
Reining in Fiscal Decentralization in Brazil and China | p. 398 |
Government Revenue and Taxes | p. 399 |
Tax Rates and Smuggling: Colombia | p. 401 |
Taxes on International Trade | p. 401 |
Sales and Excise Taxes | p. 402 |
Personal and Corporate Income Taxes | p. 404 |
New Sources of Tax Revenues | p. 404 |
Changes in Tax Administration | p. 405 |
Fundamental Tax Reform | p. 405 |
Tax Administration in India and Bolivia in the 1980s | p. 406 |
Indonesian Tax Reform | p. 407 |
Taxes and Income Distribution | p. 411 |
Personal Income Taxes | p. 412 |
Taxes on Luxury Consumption | p. 413 |
Corporate Income and Property Taxes: The Incidence Problem | p. 414 |
Economic Efficiency and the Budget | p. 417 |
Sources of Inefficiency | p. 417 |
Neutrality and Efficiency: Lessons from Experience | p. 418 |
Summary | p. 420 |
Financial Development and Inflation | p. 421 |
The Functions of a Financial System | p. 423 |
Money and the Money Supply | p. 423 |
Financial Intermediation | p. 426 |
Transformation and Distribution of Risk | p. 426 |
Stabilization | p. 427 |
Inflation | p. 427 |
Inflation Episodes | p. 428 |
Hyperinflation in Peru, 1988-90 | p. 431 |
Monetary Policy and Price Stability | p. 432 |
Monetary Policy and Exchange-Rate Regimes | p. 433 |
Sources of Inflation | p. 435 |
Controlling Inflation through Monetary Policy | p. 438 |
Reserve Requirements | p. 439 |
Credit Ceilings | p. 439 |
Interest-Rate Regulation and Moral Suasion | p. 440 |
International Debt and Combating Recessions | p. 441 |
Financial Development | p. 442 |
Shallow Finance and Deep Finance | p. 443 |
Shallow Financial Strategy | p. 444 |
Deep Financial Strategy | p. 447 |
Informal Credit Markets and Micro Credits Does Micro Credit Reduce Poverty? | p. 451 |
Summary | p. 453 |
Foreign Debt and Financial Crises | p. 455 |
Advantages and Disadvantages of Foreign Borrowing | p. 458 |
Debt Sustainability | p. 459 |
Debt Indicators | p. 460 |
From Distress to Default | p. 463 |
A Short History of Sovereign Lending Default | p. 465 |
The 1980s Debt Crisis | p. 466 |
Causes of the Crisis | p. 467 |
Impact on the Borrowers | p. 469 |
Escape from the Crisis, for Some Countries | p. 470 |
The Debt Crisis in Low-Income Countries | p. 473 |
Debt Reduction in Low-Income Countries | p. 474 |
The Heavily Indebted Poor Country Initiative | p. 475 |
Odious Debt | p. 476 |
Debt Relief in Uganda | p. 479 |
Emerging Market Financial Crises | p. 480 |
Domestic Economic Weaknesses | p. 482 |
Short-Term Capital Flows | p. 484 |
Creditor Panic | p. 486 |
Model of Self-Fulfilling Creditor Panics | p. 486 |
Stopping Panics | p. 489 |
Lessons from the Crises | p. 494 |
Summary | p. 496 |
Foreign Aid | p. 499 |
Donors and Recipients | p. 501 |
What Is Foreign Aid? | p. 501 |
Who Gives Aid? | p. 503 |
The Marshall Plan | p. 503 |
The Commitment to Development Index | p. 507 |
Who Receives Foreign Aid? | p. 512 |
The Motivations for Aid | p. 514 |
China's Foreign Aid | p. 515 |
Aid, Growth, and Development | p. 518 |
View 1. Although Not Always Successful, on Average, Aid Has a Positive Impact on Economic Growth and Development | p. 520 |
Controlling River Blindness in Sub-Saharan Africa | p. 524 |
View 2. Aid Has Little or No Effect on Growth and Actually May Undermine Growth | p. 526 |
Food Aid and Food Production | p. 528 |
View 3. Aid Has a Conditional Relationship with Growth, Stimulating Growth Only Under Certain Circumstances, Such as in Countries with Good Policies or Institutions | p. 533 |
Donor Relationships with Recipient Countries | p. 535 |
The Principal-Agent Problem | p. 536 |
Conditionality | p. 537 |
Improving Aid Effectiveness | p. 540 |
Summary | p. 543 |
Managing Short-Run Crises in an Open Economy | p. 545 |
Equilibrium in a Small, Open Economy | p. 546 |
Internal and External Balance | p. 547 |
Real Versus Nominal Exchange Rates | p. 550 |
The Phase Diagram | p. 553 |
Equilibrium and Disequilibrium | p. 556 |
Pioneering Stabilization: Chile, 1973-84 | p. 559 |
Stabilization Policies | p. 560 |
Applications of the Australian Model | p. 564 |
Dutch Disease | p. 564 |
Recovering from Mismanagement: Ghana, 1983-91 | p. 566 |
Debt Repayment Crisis | p. 567 |
Stabilization Package: Inflation and a Deficit | p. 569 |
The Greek Debt Crisis of 2010-12 | p. 571 |
Drought, Hurricanes, and Earthquakes | p. 574 |
Summary | p. 575 |
Appendix to Chapter 15: National Income and the Balance of Payments | p. 576 |
Agriculture, Trade, and Sustainability | |
Agriculture and Development | p. 583 |
Unique Characteristics of the Agricultural Sector | p. 584 |
Structural Transformation | p. 587 |
Two-Sector Models of Development | p. 590 |
The Labor Surplus Model | p. 591 |
Surplus Labor in China | p. 598 |
The Neoclassical Two-Sector Model | p. 599 |
Debates Over Surplus Labor | p. 602 |
Evolving Perspectives on the Role of Agriculture in Economic Growth and Poverty Alleviation | p. 604 |
Agriculture and Economic Growth | p. 604 |
The Nutrition Linkage to Economic Growth | p. 608 |
Agriculture and Poverty Alleviation | p. 610 |
Agricultural Growth as a Pathway out of Poverty | p. 613 |
Summary | p. 617 |
Agricultural Development: Technology, Policies, and Institutions | p. 619 |
Characteristics of Traditional Agriculture and Agricultural Systems | p. 620 |
Agricultural Systems | p. 621 |
Diagnosing the Constraints to Agricultural Development | p. 622 |
Raising the Technical Ceiling | p. 627 |
The Green Revolution | p. 628 |
Recent Trends in Agricultural Productivity | p. 632 |
A Model of Induced Technical Change in Agriculture | p. 635 |
Raising the Economic Ceiling | p. 637 |
Food Production Analysis | p. 638 |
What to Produce? The Product-Product Decision | p. 638 |
How to Produce It? The Factor-Factor Decision | p. 641 |
How Much to Produce? The Factor-Product Decision | p. 643 |
Fertilizer Subsidies in Malawi | p. 645 |
Market Access | p. 651 |
Cell Phones and Agricultural Development | p. 651 |
Institutions for Agricultural Development | p. 653 |
Land Reform | p. 656 |
The World Food Crisis of 2005-08 | p. 658 |
Causes of the Crisis | p. 659 |
Consequences of the Crisis | p. 661 |
Summary | p. 663 |
Trade and Development | p. 665 |
Trade Trends and Patterns | p. 667 |
Who Trades? | p. 671 |
Comparative Advantage | p. 674 |
The Benefits of Trade | p. 677 |
Winners and Losers | p. 681 |
Trading Primary Products | p. 683 |
Empirical Evidence on Primary Export-Led Growth | p. 687 |
Export Pessimism | p. 688 |
Declining Terms of Trade? | p. 690 |
Dutch Disease | p. 693 |
Dutch Disease: A Geometric Presentation | p. 697 |
Nigeria: A Bad Case of Dutch Disease | p. 700 |
Indonesia: Finding a Cure | p. 702 |
The Resource Trap | p. 703 |
Breaking the Resource Curse | p. 705 |
Summary | p. 707 |
Trade Policy | p. 709 |
Import Substitution | p. 711 |
Protective Tariffs | p. 713 |
Import Quotas | p. 714 |
Effective Rates of Protection | p. 715 |
Trade Protection and Politics | p. 718 |
The Two-Country Model with a Tariff | p. 719 |
Production Subsidies | p. 720 |
Exchange-Rate Management | p. 722 |
Outcomes of Import Substitution | p. 724 |
Export Orientation | p. 725 |
Removing the Bias against Exports | p. 727 |
Favoring Exports | p. 728 |
Building Export Platforms | p. 730 |
Is China's Exchange-Rate Policy Unfair? | p. 731 |
Trade Strategy and Industrial Policy | p. 734 |
Trade, Growth, and Poverty Alleviation | p. 736 |
Trade Reforms and Poverty Alleviation | p. 739 |
Key Issues on the Global Trade Agenda | p. 741 |
Increased Global Competition and the Rise of China (and India) | p. 741 |
Does Outward Orientation Create Sweatshops? | p. 743 |
Labor Activists and Labor Outcomes in Indonesia | p. 746 |
Expanding Market Access | p. 747 |
Multilateral Trade Negotiations and the WTO | p. 750 |
Temporary Migration: Another Dimension of International Trade | p. 753 |
Summary | p. 755 |
Sustainable Development | p. 757 |
Will Economic Growth Save or Destroy the Environment? | p. 759 |
Concept and Measurement of Sustainable Development | p. 761 |
Saving for a Sustainable Future | p. 765 |
The Malthusian Effect of Population Growth on Adjusted Net Savings in Ghana | p. 768 |
Market Failures | p. 769 |
Externalities and the Commons | p. 770 |
Policy Solutions | p. 773 |
Property Rights | p. 773 |
Government Regulation | p. 774 |
Taxes, Subsidies, and Payments for Environmental Services | p. 776 |
Taxing Water Pollution in Colombia | p. 777 |
Marketable Permits | p. 779 |
Informal Regulation | p. 781 |
Policy Failures | p. 782 |
Policy Failures and Deforestation in Indonesia | p. 783 |
Poverty-Environment Linkages | p. 785 |
Global Climate Change | p. 792 |
Summary | p. 800 |
Index | p. 803 |
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