Lecture 3 Classical Theories of Economic Development
Lecture 3 Classical Theories of Economic Development
- series of successive stages of economic growth through which all countries pass
- savings, investment, foreign aid necessary
- development associated with rapid aggregate economic growth
- Rostow’s stages of growth, Harrod-Domar (AK) Growth Model
- developing countries beset by institutional, political and economic rigidities, both domestic
and international
- also caught up in a dependence and dominance relationship with rich countries
- Neocolonial dependence model; False-paradigm model; Dualistic-development thesis
1. traditional society
2. preconditions for take-off into self-sustaining growth
3. take-off
4. drive to maturity
5. age of high mass consumption
Inner logic and continuity constitute both a theory about economic growth and a more general, if
still highly partial, theory about modern history as a whole
- developed countries have passed take-off into self-sustaining growth and developing world
stuck at 1) or 2)
- key element is domestic and foreign savings needed to generate sufficient investment to
accelerate economic growth
Allows for endogenous growth – policies can influence the long run growth rate
Y = AK
Let A = 1/c, where c is defined as the capital-output ratio (units of capital required to produce a unit
of output over a given period of time)
- net saving (S) is some proportion, s, of national income, (Y) such that we have the simple
equation:
S = sY
- net investment (I) is defined as the change in the capital stock, (K) and can be represented as
such that:
I = ΔK
Total capital stock (K), bears a direct relationship to total national income (Y) as expressed by capital-
output ratio (c):
S=I
I = ΔK = cΔY
S = sY = cΔY = ΔK = I
Or simply that:
sY = cΔY
ΔY / Y = s / c
The above equation is also often expressed in terms of gross savings, in which case the growth rate
is given by:
ΔY / Y = ( sG / c )– δ
Key result: growth rate of an economy is an increasing function of the investment rate
Therefore government policies that increase the investment rate of the economy
permanently will increase the growth rate of the economy permanently
The parameter α measures the “curvature” of the sY curve
If α = 1 which is the limiting case – transition dynamics never end – Harrod-Domar (AK)
model generates growth endogenously
No need to assume anything in the model grows exogenously in order to generate per
capita growth – technology, population (all growth can be generated from within a country)
Harrod-Domar Model:
Policy implications:
Conclusion: higher the savings rate, the faster the rate of economic growth
- corruption, embezzlement
- incentives to spend money right away
- no good investment opportunities
Research shows only 17 out of 88 countries show a positive statistical association between aid and
investment
- among those 17 countries, only 6 passed the test that aims to establish a 1-1 relationship
between investment with aid (Easterly)
Investment to growth
Savings and investment necessary but not sufficient conditions for economic growth
Marshall Plan worked for Europe after WW2 because countries receiving aid possessed
necessary structural, institutional and attitudinal conditions necessary to convert new capital
into higher levels of output
insufficient focus on strategies to reduce capital-output ratio c and increase efficiency with
which investments generate extra output
“My model was intended to comment on an esoteric (niche/understood by few) debate on business
cycles, not to derive an empirically meaningful rate of growth. It is not a growth model”
Structural-change models:
- general theory of development process in surplus labour countries during 60s/70s – still
sometimes applied to study recent growth experience in China and labour markets in other
developing countries
Agricultural sector:
Total Product:TP A =f ( LA , Ḱ A , t́ A )
All rural workers share equally in output with real wage equal to the average product w A=TP A / L A
Under assumption of perfectly competitive markets, labour markets in modern sector, marginal
product curves are actual demand curves for labour MPLM = D (KM)
Demand for labour = added benefit one can get from employing extra labour (intuitive)
Assuming at an urban real wage wM above the rural real wage wA, modern sector employees can hire
as many workers as they want without rising wages (incentive to transfer always there): SL perfectly
elastic, wM = MPLM
Reinvestment of profits will increase the capital stock (from K M 1 → K M 2 → K M 3 ¿ which in turn
causes the total product curve to shift (from TP M ( K M 1 ) → TP M ( K M 2 ) → TP M ( K M 3 ) and labour
demand curves to rise (from D 1 ( K M 1 ) → D 2 ( K M 2 ) → D 3 ( K M 3 )
Structural-change models:
The labour supply curve becomes positively sloped as modern-sector wages and
employment continue to grow. The structural transformation of the economy will have
taken place with the balance of economic activity shifting from traditional agriculture to
more urban industry
People are employed more productively from agriculture (lower productivity) to industrial and
service sectors (higher productivity)
Rate of labour transfer and employment creation may not be proportional to rate of modern-sector
capital accumulation (this could be either a) more and more capital replacing potential labour-
operated jobs, or b) too little capital to allow for employment of more workers to operate said
capital)
- capitalist profits may be reinvested in more sophisticated labour saving capital equipment
- capitalist profits may even be reinvested abroad in the form of capital flight (model assumes
full capitalist reinvestment in country of revenue generation)
Competitive modern-sector labour market that guarantees continued existence of constant real
urban wages up to the point where supply of rural surplus labour is exhausted
- institutional factors – union labour bargaining – civil service wage scales – multinational
corporations hiring practises tend to negate competitive forces in modern-sector labour
markets in developing countries
Main hypothesis is that development is identifiable process of growth and change whose
main features are similar in all countries
Model does recognise that differences can arise among countries in pace and pattern of
development
- resource endowment and size
- government policies and objectives
- availability of external capital and technology
- international trade
Patterns of development can vary according to both domestic and international factors –
many of which lie beyond control of developing nation
However, certain patterns may be affected by developing country policy choices of
governments as well as international trade and foreign-assistance policies of developed
countries
Optimistic about development process
Challenging the Statist model: Free markets, public choice, and market-friendly approaches
Free market approach – approach emphasises that markets are efficient and any government
intervention is counterproductive
Public choice approach – or new political economy, the approach emphasises inherent government
failure and the self-interested behaviour of public officials
Market-friendly approach – recognises market imperfections, and hence a limited but important
role for government through nonselective interventions such as infrastructure, education, and
providing a climate for private enterprise
Main arguments:
Classical theories of development: Reconciling the differences (Possible conclusion for answer
regarding models for economic growth and development?)
- most interesting (perhaps?) is that they help explain anomalous international flows of capital
that exacerbate wealth disparities between developed and developing countries
Potential for high rates of return on investment in developing countries greatly eroded by lower
levels of complimentary investments in human capital, infrastructure of R&D
α 1−α β
Y i= AK i Li K̄
α +β 1−α
Y = AK L
N
g n
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Downloaded by Rabia Liaqat ([email protected])