DE Group 03
DE Group 03
DE Group 03
on developing economies
Team 03
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Registration Number Name
2018MS8001 P. A. Athapaththu
2018MS8027 D. A. Basnayaka
2018MS8058 E. A. N. R. De Silva
2018MS8081 L. D. S. Dinusha
2018MS8401 R. A. T. S. Ratnayake
2018MS8477 Y. N. Tennakoon
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01. Objectives of the Study
• While using condensed international comparative statistics, evaluating developing economies' current
economic level and growth potential by considering the large statistical errors and biases in
international comparisons.
• Building industrial policies to foster domestic industries towards a viable model that can withstand
international competition.
• Identifying the role of foreign capital import as a support to capital formation in developing economies.
• Identifying the population pressure on natural resources and relationship between population growth
and food supply.
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• Economic Development
Average GDP per capita represents the levels of economic development.
• What is GDP?
An aggregate of goods and services produced within the domestic economy of a nation. It
measures the level of market-based production activities in the domestic economy, which
represents the level of economic welfare enjoyable by the residents from the consumption of
goods and services produced from those activities.
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Limitations of national account statistics across
countries in different stages of economic
development
Goods and services like yarn spun and cloth woven by a housewife are not included in national income when
consumed at home and sold outside the home
Theoretically considered capital formation activities, the use of family labor by small peasants to plant trees
and improve pasture are not included in national income
More subsistence-oriented economies are, the stronger the tendency is for their income levels and
investments to be underestimated relative to market-oriented economies
Income gap between high-income economies and the poorest ones has
been widening further.
Laggard economies tend to grow faster by closing their productivity gap with
the more advanced through technology borrowing.
Problem emerge with how appropriate the national account statistics such
as average GDP per capita are to represent the levels of economic
development for the sake of comparisons across countries.
It is important to compare data series between HDI and GDP per capita to see if different conclusions might be
implied between the two series. According to broad comparisons among seventeen selected countries,
• Spearman's rank correlation coefficients between HDI and GDP per capita are extremely high (0.96 with both of the two
series of GDPs converted by exchange rates and converted by PPPs). Rank correlations are even higher for all the 85
countries for which HDIs are calculated for 2000 (0.99 with both of the two GDP series).The high correlation between the
HDI and the GDP series is naturally expected, because both life expectancy and educational level are highly correlated with
GDP per capita the use of HDI instead of GDP might affect some conclusions in comparing countries with similar income
levels but such broad comparisons across countries in different development stages are unlikely to be affected to any
significant extent. 8
• This table shows how the share of GDP
Changes in industrial structure changed from 1965 to 2000 between the
three major sectors of agriculture,
industry, and services.
• In high-income economies, both the
agricultural and industrial sectors have
reduced their share of GDP, signaling a
major expansion of the services sector.
• The export share of manufactured goods is higher than the gross domestic
product of the industry and retains the inverse of Latin American countries
rich in natural resources.
• From the 1970s to the early 1980s, Indonesia and Nigeria experienced oil
booms, and with major unexpected gains in government revenue and
foreign exchange earnings, with which governments implemented
ambitious development plans to promote modern industries such as
petrochemicals.
• East Asia has continued to expand its industrial sector since the 1980s in
line with the increasing competitiveness of its industry as measured by the
UNIDO Index.
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03. Capital formation and Savings in economic
growth
Capital
Tangible Intangible
capital capital
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External debt and inflation
Domestic saving
Domestic capital
formation
Foreign capital import
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• following graph represent the net
capital import as measured by the
I-S gap relative to per capital GDP
for the period of 1965-1980 and
1981-2000 each selected
countries.
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• How capital import different between two economies?
• Poorer countries more heavily they rely on capital import for financing their capital formation.
• High income economies characterized by large saving related to domestic investment opportunity to low-income
economies with high investment opportunities relative to their saving capacity.
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• In theory term,
• Development economies to rely on external credit to finance their domestic investment.
• If borrowed fund utilized effectively would contribute to reduction import and expansion on export
• If the external debt could be paid back by foreign exchange thus saved or earned, no serious
accumulation of external debt would arise.
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• However, under hyper inflation period who are induced to use available funds for short-run
speculation rather than long term investment, causing a serious negative effect on their
economic growth.
• Furthermore, as the rate of inflation rises, the risk increases for foreign investors of
incurring loss from devaluation of local currency. This should result in a reduction in
foreign capital flow, and, thereby, increase the need for government to printing money.
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04. Accumulation of Human Capital
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Measurement of Human Capital
• Direct measures of human capital and its formation are not available for
international comparison over a wide range of countries.
• Cross-country comparison is based on two proxies which are
considered to reflect the level of human capital accumulation.
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2 Proxies
Formal Health
Education condition
of the country of the country
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• In 1965-2000 time period, African, South
Asian, East Asian, Latin American and
high-income countries like France, UK,
USA and Japan have shown an increase in
their average schooling and average life
expectancy.
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Correlation of proxies with per capita GDP
(Cross-sectional)
Positive correlation
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Correlation of proxies with per capita GDP
(Time-series)
Positive correlation
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Major dilemma faced by low-income economies
• As they are so poor, their future discount rates must be very high.
• If returns to investment in education are so low in the short run, is it appropriate to allocate a large
share of affordable investment to education?
• Unless education is strengthened to a sufficient level for borrowing advanced foreign technology.
Don’t
Invest
Invest
Cannot be acquired
Return is low in short
advance foreign
run
technologies
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05. Population, Natural Resources and
Foods
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Population
Pressure on
Natural Resources
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• The average number of persons per square kilometer of surface area in a nation's territory used as a rude proxy
for relative scarcity of natural resources.
• Territorial land area is such a poor proxy for natural resource endowments which consist not only of physical area
but also of many factors, including soil fertility, rainfall, mineral deposits, etc.
• Can be argued that endowments of natural resources represent an overriding constraint on economic growth.
Ex:- Japan with much poorer natural resources endowments than the USA was able to reach about the same per
capita income level as the USA.
• In history, some economies were able to achieve a high-income level through exploitation of natural resources,
but their growth was temporary and not sustainable if they continued to rely solely on natural resource
exploitation.
• The columns 2 and 3 reveals the tendency towards faster population growth in low-income economies.
• Some Asian economies were successful in significantly curtailing population growth rates from the 1965-80 to the
1980-2000 period.
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Population growth vs. food supply
• Increased population pressure on natural resources, which may make low-income economies unsustainable.
• Traditionally, developing economies have responded to population growth by opening new lands for cultivation.
Yet, expansion in agricultural land area has failed to keep up with rapid population growth.
Ex :- in Africa, the average population growth rate for 1965-2000 was nearly 3% per year while agricultural
land increased at less than 1 %, which result that agricultural land endowment per capita decreased at the rate of
more than 2% per year
• Decreases in per capita food production in Africa indicate a failure to compensate for the negative effects of
decreases in per capita endowments in natural resources.
• That failure was not the inevitable consequence of high population growth.
Ex:- low-income economies in Asia, such as India and Pakistan, were able to achieve significant increases in
food production per capita despite decreases in agricultural land area per capita at magnitudes comparable with
Africa.
• In low-income economies in which the agricultural sector has a dominant weight, stagnation in agricultural
production as expressed by decreases in per capita food production has a major adverse effect on overall
economic development.
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International comparison of the average annual growth rates of per capita GDP
from 1965 to 2000 and percentage increases in food production per capita from
1965 to 2000
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THANK YOU
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