Development Economics-Module 2ii
Development Economics-Module 2ii
Module 2 (ii)
Theories of Economic Development:
Structuralism
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Balanced Vs. Unbalanced Growth Models
• Hirschman begins with the assumption that the factor most lacking in
presently less developed countries is the ability to make investment
decisions.
• The technique of economic development is to create strategic
unbalances
• As Streeten puts it:
"the pressures created by lack of balance may render factors of production
and particularly entrepreneurial decisions more responsive to economic
incentives."
• Hirschman also admits the possibility of investing in advance of demand
in industries at a final or near-final stage in the production process,
where the pressure to restore the balance may be political in nature.
• Forward and backward linkage effects of
investment:
– High backward linkage will stimulate demand for products
at an earlier stage in the production process and thus
encourage investment at that stage.
– Forward linkage effects will increase the availability and
decrease the cost of the product at later stages in the
production process
– There is favor of unbalanced growth of those industries
with the maximum combination of effective linkage
effects which probably lie somewhere in the intermediate
stages of production
– The end result of a strategy of unbalanced growth may
well be characterized as balanced growth.
• The process of growth must proceed by
unbalanced steps.
• Streeten sums up the doctrine of unbalanced
growth as follows: Choose projects which
– while advancing some sectors, concentrate the
pressure of unbalance on sectors whose response to a
challenge is likely to be strongest
– while creating bottlenecks, also break them
– while providing new products and services also induce
new development to take place in other directions
– while providing a new product or service, require
consequential investments in other lines.
• Unbalance stimulates growth which leads to
new unbalances and further stimuli
• Such a strategy will often involve building
ahead of demand, running plant at less than
full capacity, and the temporary support of
unprofitable ventures.
Economic Development with Unlimited Supplies of Labor