The Phases of Economic Development
The Phases of Economic Development
The Phases of Economic Development
ECONOMIC
DEVELOPMENT
for Organization and Management
Senior High School (ABM)
Quarter 1 / Week 5
LEARNING COMPETENCY: Differentiating the
phases of economic development and its impact to
business environment (ABM_AOMII-Ic-d-8)
I. What Happened
Walt Whitman Rostow, also known as W.W. Rostow,
was an economist in the Lyndon B. Johnson administration
from 1966-1969. He also published articles and developed
models on economic development. One of his most prominent
ideas was the five stages of economic development. In this
model, he suggests that societies go through five stages of
economic development as they develop and grow.
II. What You Need to Know
DISCUSSION
Although material wealth accumulation is among the concerns
of genuine economic development, its greater concern is the total
improvement of the quality of people’s lives. This is in relation to
sustainable economic development, which ensures that the present
needs of a particular generation are fully met without endangering
the ability of future generations to fully meet their own needs.
Economic development and its causes have been the
focus of study by economists for centuries largely
because it has the potential to reduce or remove poverty,
improve the standard of living, help achieve social
goals such as education and healthcare and substantially
improve the quality of life of the people.
Economic development
●The action taken by the policy makers to raise the standard of living
of general public by developing human capital, critical infrastructure,
health, security, literacy/education, regional competitiveness, social
institution, and any other initiatives for the welfare of public as a
whole.
● When the preconditions for take-off are met, a society can take
off. Educated individuals start inventing new processes and tools,
and access to capital through financial markets and banks make it
possible to produce goods and services on a larger scale. This
requires a different type of skill set from human laborers, so the
economy shifts from agriculture to production. This increases
wages for everyone, taking the economic structure from a structure
of kings and servants to a wealthy class, middle class, and lower
class. A lower class still exists at this stage, either because of social
norms that discriminate against people or simply because the
number of middle class jobs are fewer than the total number of
people.
● Rostow describes this stage as a short period of intensive
growth, in which industrialization begins to occur, and
workers and institutions become concentrated around a new
industry. This is where the societies move toward full
industrialization in certain specific ways, such as technological
innovations, urbanization, production of secondary goods such
as textiles, and intense growth in specific sectors.
4. Drive to Maturity