Unit 9: Dependency Theory of Development
Unit 9: Dependency Theory of Development
UNIT STRUCTURE
9.1 Learning Objectives
9.2 Introduction
9.3 Emergence of Dependency Theory of Development
9.3. 1 The Basic Premises of Dependency Theory
9.4 Characteristics of Dependency
9.5 Approaches to Dependency
9.5.1 The Marxian Theory of Dependency
9.5.2 The Structuralist Theory of Dependency
9.6 Criticisms of Dependency Theory
9.7 A. G. Frank’s Theory of Underdevelopment
9.8 Let Us Sum Up
9.9 Further Reading
9.10 Answers to Check Your Progress
9.11 Model Questions
9.2 INTRODUCTION
needed to reduce their connectedness with the world market so that they
might pursue their own path, more in keeping with their own needs, and
less dictated by external pressures.
Hans Singer and Raul Prebisch, the prominent dependency
theorists, observed that the terms of trade for the underdeveloped countries,
relative to the developed countries, had deteriorated over time. The
underdeveloped countries were able to purchase fewer and fewer
manufactured goods from the developed countries in exchange for a given
quantity of their raw materials exports. This idea is known as the Singer-
Prebisch thesis. Prebisch, an Argentinean economist at the United Nations
Commission for Latin America (UNCLA), went on to conclude that the
underdeveloped nations must employ some degree of protectionism in trade
if they were to enter a self-sustaining development path. He argued that
Import Substitution Industrialization, but not a trade-and-export orientation,
is the best strategy for the underdeveloped countries.
The advocates of dependency theory believe that the theories of
Smith, Ricardo, and the other European classical economists are not suitable
for an analysis of the dualistic dependent structure of many nations such
as Brazil, Mexico, and India. According to the dependency theorists, the
less developed countries are to be understood as part of the global process.
Their fate is merely to provide inputs for the advanced nations. They provide
low wage manufacturing under adverse terms of trade. Dependency analysis
was built on the ideas of structuralists, more specifically, on the distinction
between the centre and the periphery made by Prebisch. The center is
viewed as the cause, and the periphery as the effect. Dependency theory
found the causes for the lack of development to be external to the
socioeconomic formations of the LDCs (Less Developed Countries). It does
not treat dysfunctional institutions of the LDCs as the cause of backwardness.
Internal institutional structures such as corruption levels, unproductive land
holdings, concentration of wealth, and unresponsive political systems are
never considered the causes of underdevelopment. Many dependency
theorists advocate social revolution as an effective means to reduce
economic disparities in the world system.
Sociology of Development (Block 2) 111
Unit 9 Dependency Theory of Development
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