Chapter 4
Chapter 4
Chapter 4
Theories help to think systematically about how to organize efforts to help achieve development
as the most important goal to humanity.
This chapter deals with a sample of some of the most influential of the new models of economic
development. These models show that development is harder to achieve, in that it faces more
barriers than had previously been recognized. But greater understanding itself facilitates
improvements in development strategy, and the new models have already influenced
development policy and modes of international assistance.
The chapter concludes with a framework for appraising the locally binding constraints on the
ability of a developing nation to further close the gap with the developed world.
Binding constraint is the one limiting factor that if relaxed would be the item that accelerates
growth
(Or that allows a larger amount of some other targeted outcome).
problems of coordination
The new research has broadened considerably the scope for modeling a market economy in a
developing-country context. One of its major themes is incorporating problems of coordination
among economic agents. Economic agent is an economic actor—usually a firm, worker,
consumer, or government official—that chooses actions so as to maximize an objective.
The benefits an agent receives from taking an action depend positively on how many other
agents are expected to take the action or on the extent of those actions.
Respectively, there is a multiple equilibrium at the economy.
Other key themes, often but not always in conjunction with the coordination problem, include the
formal exploration of situations in which increasing returns to scale, a finer division of labor, the
availability of new economic ideas or knowledge, learning by doing, information externalities, and
monopolistic competition or other forms of industrial organization other than perfect competition
predominate.
All of these approaches depart to some degree from conventional neoclassical economics, at
least in its assumptions of perfect information, the relative insignificance of externalities, and the
uniqueness and optimality of equilibria
1- Underdevelopment as a Coordination Failure
The newer theories of the early years of the twenty-first century of economic
development have emphasized complementarities between several conditions
necessary for successful development.
An important example of a complementarity is the presence of firms using specialized skills and
the availability of workers who have acquired those skills. Firms will not enter a market or locate
in an area if workers do not possess the skills the firms need, but workers will not acquire the
skills if there are no firms
to employ them.
Even though all agents would be better off if workers acquired skills and firms invested, it might
not be possible to get to this better equilibrium without the aid of government.
Such coordination problems are also common in initial industrialization, as well as in upgrading
skills and technologies, and may extend to issues as broad as changing behavior to modern
“ways of doing things.” Such problems are further compounded by other market failures,
particularly those affecting capital markets.
Another example typical of rural developing areas concerns the commercialization of agriculture.
This coordination problem can leave an economy stuck in a bad equilibrium—that is, at a low
average income or growth rate or with a class of citizens trapped in extreme poverty. The result
can be an underdevelopment trap .
Underdevelopment trap is A poverty trap at the regional or national level in which
underdevelopment tends to perpetuate itself over time. When Underdevelopment
trap happens, a region remains stuck in subsistence agriculture.
the presence of complementarities creates a problem especially when there is a lag between
making an investment and realizing the return on that investment. In this case, even if, for some
reason, all parties expect a change to a better equilibrium, they will still be inclined to wait until
other parties have made their investments.
Thus, there can be an important role for government policy in coordinating joint investments,
such as between the workers who want skills that employers can use and the employers who
want equipment that workers can use.
Many development specialists look actively for cases in which government policy can still help,
even when government is imperfect, by pushing the economy toward a self-sustaining, better
equilibrium.
The new work expands the scope for potentially valuable government policy interventions, but it
does not take their success for granted. Rather, government itself is increasingly analyzed in
contemporary development models as one of the components of the development process that
may contribute to the problem as well as to the solution; government policy is understood as
partly determined by (endogenous to) the underdeveloped economy
Public policy–led effort to initiate or accelerate economic development across a broad spectrum
of new industries and skills
Nations must learn what activities are most advantageous to specialize in. this is a
complex task—and one prone to market failure.
So it is socially valuable to discover that the true direct and indirect domestic
costs of producing a particular product or service in a given country are low or can
be brought down to a low level. It is valuable in part because once an activity is
shown to be profitable, it can usually be imitated.
there will be too little searching for the nation’s comparative advantage—too much
time carrying on with business as usual and too little time devoted to “self-
discovery.”
Hausmann and Rodrik also point out another market failure: There can be too
much diversification after the point where the nation discovers its most
advantageous products to specialize in. This is because there may be an extended
period in which entry into the new activity is limited. In the face of these market
failures, government policy should counteract the distortions by encouraging
broad investments in the modern sector in the discovery phase. they also argue
that policy should in some cases work to rationalize production afterward,
encouraging movement out of higher-cost activities and into the lower-cost
activities, paring down industries to the ones with the most potential for the
economy.
graph
If a developing nation experiences a relatively low level of private investment and
entrepreneurship, what steps should it take?
First, poor geography such as tropical pests, mountains, and other physical
barriers, distance to world markets, and landlocked status may limit the ability of a
low-income country to initiate and sustain economic development.
When these constraints are most binding, development policy must initially focus
on strategies for overcoming them.
Second, low human capital— skills and education as well as health of workers—
are complementary with other factors in production, affecting the returns to
economic activity. For example, if economic returns are most affected by lack of
literacy and numeracy, this becomes a development policy priority.
Third, every developing nation must provide the vital infrastructure needed to
achieve and sustain a modern economy, beginning with basic physical structures
such as roads, bridges, railroads, ports, telecommunications, and other utilities.
With bad infrastructure, otherwise high-return economic activities may prove
unprofitable. In some countries, inadequate and imbalanced infrastructure is the
main factor preventing an acceleration of growth, and in such cases, policies
focusing on providing it would boost investment and growth the most.
1 b ) low appropriability,
First : government failures : In the HRV diagram, government failures are divided
between micro risks and macro risks.
Macro risks mean the failure of government to provide financial, monetary, and
fiscal stability.
Finally, strategies focusing on industrial policy can be most effective when private
returns are low, not because of what a government does (errors of commission),
but because of what a government does not do (errors of omission).
HRV illustrate their approach with case studies of El Salvador, Brazil, and
the Dominican Republic. They argue that each case exhibits a different “diagnostic
signal” of the most binding constraint, as seen in Box 4.3. HRV stress
that an approach to development strategy that determines one or two policy
priorities on this diagnostic basis will be more effective than pursuing a long
laundry list of institutional and governance reforms that may not be targeted
toward the most binding constraints.
One
implicit assumption is that development can be equated with growth, which in turn
is held back by investment.