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- The world is divided between relatively rich and relatively poor
countries.
- Geographers try to understand the reasons for this division and learn
what can be done about it.
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- The Key Issues are:
- Why does development vary among countries?
- Where are more and less developed countries distributed?
- Where does level of development vary by gender?
- Why do less developed countries face obstacles to development?
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- Earth’s nearly 200 countries can be classified according to their level
of development, which is the process of improving the material
conditions of people through diffusion of knowledge and technology.
- The development process is continuous.
- For more developed regions, the economic challenge is to maintain a high
level of development at the new scale.
- For less developed countries, the challenge is to find connections to
the global economy that take advantage of local skills and resources.
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- Economic indicators of development
- Gross domestic product per capita
- Types of jobs
- Raw materials
- Consumer goods
- Social indicators of development
- Education and literacy
- Health and welfare
- Demographic indicators of development
- Life expectancy – Infant mortality rate
- Natural increase rate – Crude birth rate
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- The United Nation’s HDI includes one economic indicator of development:
gross domestic product per capita.
- Four other economic indicators distinguish more developed from less
developed countries:
- economic structure
- worker productivity
- access to raw materials
- and availability of consumer goods.
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- The typical worker receives $10 to $15 per hour in more developed
countries, compared to less than $0.50 per hour in less developed ones.
- Per capita income is a difficult figure to obtain
- Geographers substitute per capita gross domestic product, a more readily
available indicator, dividing the GDP by total population.
- The gross domestic product (GDP) is the value of the total output of
goods and services produced in a country, normally during a year.
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- Average per capita income is higher in MDCs because people typically
earn their living by different means than in LDCs.
- Jobs fall into three categories:
- primary (including agriculture),
- secondary (including manufacturing),
- and tertiary (including services).
- Workers in the primary sector directly extract materials from Earth.
- The secondary sector includes manufacturers.
- The tertiary sector involves the provision of goods and services,
retailing, banking, law, education, and government.
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- Productivity is the value of a particular product compared to the amount
of labor needed to make it.
- Workers in more developed countries produce more with less effort
because they have access to more machines, tools, and equipment to
perform much of the work.
- Productivity can be measured by the value added per worker, the gross
value of the product minus the costs of raw materials and energy.
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- Development requires access to raw materials, such as minerals and
trees, which can be fashioned into useful products.
- It also requires energy to operate the factories.
- The United Kingdom, the first country to develop in the eighteenth
century, had abundant supplies of coal and iron ore, used to make steel
for tools.
- European countries took advantage of domestic coal and iron ore to
promote industrial development during the nineteenth century.
- As they ran short of many raw materials, European countries began to
import them.
- The international flow of raw materials sustained development in Europe
but retarded it in Africa and Asia.
- Most former colonies still export raw materials and import finished
goods and services.
- The LDCs that possess energy resources, especially petroleum, have been
able to use revenues to finance development.
- Prices for other raw materials, such as cotton and copper, have fallen
because of excessive global supply and declining industrial demand.
- A country with abundant resources has a better chance of developing.
- Yet some countries that lack resources—such as Japan, Singapore, South
Korea, and Switzerland—have developed through world trade.
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- Part of the wealth generated in more developed countries goes for
essential goods and services (food, clothing, and shelter).
- But the rest is available for consumer goods and services.
- The wealth used to buy “nonessentials” promotes expansion.
- Among the thousands of things that consumers buy, three are particularly
good indicators of a society’s development:
- motor vehicles,
- telephones,
- and televisions.
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- The motor vehicle, telephone, and television all play important economic
roles.
- In contrast, in less developed countries, these products do not play a
central role in daily life.
- The number of individuals per telephone and motor vehicle exceeds 100 in
most LDCs.
- The number of persons per television set varies widely.
- The variation reflects the rapid diffusion of television in recent years
in LDCs.
- Most people in LDCs are familiar with these consumer goods, even though
they cannot afford them.
- The minority who have these goods may include government officials,
landowners, and other elites, whereas the majority who are denied access
to these goods may provoke political unrest.
- In many LDCs the “haves” are concentrated in urban areas; the
“have-nots” live in the countryside.
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- More developed countries use part of their greater wealth to provide
schools, hospitals, and welfare services.
- In turn, this well-educated, healthy, and secure population can be more
economically productive.
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- The U.N. HDI utilizes life expectancy as a measure of development.
- Other demographic characteristics that distinguish more and less
developed countries include infant mortality, natural increase, and
crude birth rates.
- Babies born today can expect to live into their early forties in less
developed countries compared to their mid-seventies in more developed
countries.
- The gap in life expectancy is greater for females than for males.
- With longer life expectancies, MDCs have a higher percentage of elderly
people who have retired and receive public support.
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- About 90 percent of infants survive. . . in less developed countries,
whereas in MDCs more than 99 percent survive.
- The infant mortality rate is greater in the LDCs for several reasons: .
. . malnutrition or lack of medicine. . . (or) poor medical practices.
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- The natural increase rate averages more than 2 percent annually in less
developed countries and less than 1 percent in more developed ones.
- Greater natural increase strains a country’s ability to provide services
that can make its people healthier and more productive.
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- Less developed countries have higher natural increase rates because they
have higher crude birth rates.
- The annual crude birth rate exceeds 40 per 1,000 in many LDCs, compared
to less than 15 per 1,000 in MDCs.
- More developed and less developed countries both have annual crude death
rates of about 10 per 1,000.
- Two reasons account for the lack of difference.
- First, diffusion of medical technology. has eliminated or sharply
reduced the incidence of several diseases in less developed countries.
- Second, MDCs have higher percentages of older people.
- The mortality rate for women in childbirth is significantly higher in
LDCs.
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- More developed regions
- Anglo-America – Western Europe
- Eastern Europe – Japan
- South Pacific
- Less developed regions
- Latin America – East Asia
- Southeast Asia – Middle East
- South Asia – Sub-Saharan Africa
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- Anglo-America, Western Europe, and Eastern Europe—plus Japan and the
South Pacific—are considered more developed.
- Language and religious patterns are less diverse in Anglo-America than
in other world regions.
- Cultural diversity generates some tensions in the region.
- However, Anglo-America’s relative homogeneity reduces the possibility
that a large minority will be excluded from participating in the
region’s economy on the basis of cultural characteristics.
- Anglo-America was once the world’s major producer. . . but in the past
quarter century Japan, Western Europe, and less developed countries have
eroded the region’s dominance. Americans remain the leading consumers.
- The region has adapted relatively successfully to the global economy, in
part because it is the leading provider of.. . high-tech services. . .
and services that promote use of leisure time.
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- On a global scale, Western Europe displays cultural unity.
- However, the diversity of individual languages and religious practices
has been a longtime source of conflict. . . especially when strong
national identities were forged.
- Competition among Western European nationalities caused many wars.
- Since the end of World War II. . . Western Europe has become much more
unified.
- Offsetting the increased cultural unity. . . is. . . migration of
Muslims and Hindus. . . in search of jobs.
- Immigrants are responsible for much of the region’s population growth,
and they have become scapegoats for the region’s economic problems.
- Within Western Europe the level of development is the world’s highest in
a core area.
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- Because the region’s peripheral areas—southern Italy, Portugal, Spain,
and Greece—lag somewhat in development, Western Europe as a whole has a
slightly lower development level than Anglo-America.
- To maintain its high level of development, Western Europe must import
food, energy, and minerals.
- Colonies on every continent. . . supplied many resources needed to
foster European economic development.
- Colonization also diffused Western European languages, religions, and
social customs worldwide.
- Now that most colonies have been granted independence, Western Europeans
must buy raw materials from other countries.
- To pay for their imports, Western Europeans provide high-value goods and
services.
- The elimination of most economic barriers within the European Union
makes Western Europe potentially the world’s largest and richest market.
- Most governments have been willing to sacrifice some economic growth in
exchange for protection of existing jobs and social services.
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- Eastern Europe has the dubious distinction of being the only region
where the HDI has declined significantly since the United Nations
created the index in 1990.
- In 1990 Eastern Europe. . . had an - HDI only slightly behind those of
Western Europe and Anglo-America.
- Eastern Europe’s rapidly declining HDI is a legacy of the region’s
history of Communist rule.
- Communist parties. . . achieved rapid development, especially during the
1950s and 1960s.
- Early Communist theorists.. . believed that communism would triumph in
more developed countries.
- Because few (Eastern European). . . states had modern industries. . .
the Communists had to. . . apply their theories to. . . poor,
agricultural societies.
- The Communists promoted development during the 1950s and 1960s through
economies directed by government officials rather than private
entrepreneurs.
- In the Soviet Union, for example, a national planning commission called
Gosplan developed five-year plans to guide economic development.
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- The five-year plans featured three main development policies.
- First—(emphasize) heavy industry, mining, electric power, and
transportation.
- Second—disperse production facilities. (Russia). . . had been
(frequently) invaded from the west.
- They wanted to reduce the vulnerability of their vital industries to
attack, (and). . . to promote equal development throughout the country.
- Third—locate manufacturing facilities near sources of raw materials
rather than near markets. Soviet planners gave lower priority to
producing consumer goods.
- Eastern European countries in the 1990s dismantled the economic
structure inherited from the Communists.
- Aside from the desire for freedom, the principal reason that Eastern
Europeans rejected communism was that central planning proved to be
disastrous at running national economies.
- For many Eastern Europeans, the most fundamental problem was that by
concentrating on basic industry, the Communists neglected consumer
products.
- Although restricted from visiting Western countries, many Eastern
Europeans could see on television the much higher level of comfort on
the other side of the Iron Curtain.
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- Anglo-America and Western Europe share many cultural characteristics.
- Anglo-America was colonized by European immigrants, so the regions share
language, religion, and other political, economic, and cultural
traditions.
- Japan, the third major center of development, has a different cultural
tradition.
- Japan’s development is especially remarkable because it has an extremely
unfavorable ratio of population to resources.
- The country has. . . one of the highest physiological densities.
- Although Japan is one of the world’s leading steel producers, it must
import virtually all the coal and iron ore needed for steel production.
- At first, the Japanese economy developed by taking advantage of the
country’s one asset, an abundant supply of people willing to work hard
for low wages.
- Having gained a foothold in the global economy by selling low-cost
products, Japan then began to specialize in high- quality, high-value
products.
- Japan’s dominance was achieved in part by concentrating resources in
rigorous educational systems and training programs to create a skilled
labor force.
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- The South Pacific has a relatively high HDI but is much less central to
the global economy because of its small number of inhabitants and
peripheral location.
- The HDIs of Australia and New Zealand are comparable to those of other
MDCs. The area’s remaining people are scattered among sparsely inhabited
islands that generally are less developed.
- Australia and New Zealand share many cultural characteristics with the
United Kingdom.
- Australia and New Zealand are net exporters of food and other resources,
especially to the United Kingdom.
- Increasingly, their economies are tied to Japan and other Asian
countries.
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- Six regions are classified as less developed. The level of development
varies widely among the six regions.
- Most Latin Americans speak one of two Romance languages—Spanish or
Portuguese—and adhere to Roman Catholicism. In reality the region is
culturally diverse.
- A large percentage of the population is descendants of inhabitants
living in the region prior to the European conquest, while others trace
their ancestors to African slaves.
- Latin Americans are more likely to live in urban areas than people in
other developing regions.
- The region’s population is highly concentrated along the Atlantic Coast.
- Large areas of interior rain forest are being destroyed to sell the
timber or to clear the land for settled agriculture.
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- The level of development is relatively high along the South Atlantic
Coast from Curitiba, Brazil, to Buenos Aires, Argentina. Mexico’s
development has been aided by proximity to the United States.
- Development is lower in Central America, several Caribbean islands, and
the interior of South America.
- Overall development in Latin America is hindered by inequitable income
distribution.
- Latin American governments encourage redistribution of land to peasants
but do not wish to alienate the large property owners, who generate much
of the national wealth.
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- China, the largest country in East Asia, ranks among the world’s
poorest.
- Within a few years China is projected to exceed the United States as the
world’s largest economy, although the U.S. economy would still be much
larger on a per capita basis.
- Traditionally, most Chinese farmers were forced to pay high rents and
turn over a percentage of their crops to a property owner.
- Exploitation of the country’s resources by Europe and Japan further
retarded China’s development.
- China’s watershed year was 1949, when the Communist party won a civil
war and created the People’s Republic of China.
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- To ensure the production and distribution of enough food, the Communist
government took control of most agricultural land.
- In recent years such strict control has been loosened.
- Individuals again are able to own land and control their own production.
Agricultural land must be worked intensively to produce enough food for
China’s large population.
- The Chinese government controls the daily lives of the citizenry more
than in other countries, and the people have difficulty obtaining some
goods.
- Because of government controls, China has a much lower natural increase
rate than other LDCs.
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- Southeast Asia’s most populous country, Indonesia, includes 13,667
islands.
- Nearly two-thirds of the population lives on the island of Java. Other
than Indonesia, Southeast Asia’s most populous countries are Vietnam,
Thailand, and the Philippines.
- The region has suffered from a half century of nearly continuous
warfare.
- Japan, the Netherlands, France, and the United Kingdom were all forced
to withdraw from colonies.
- The region’s tropical climate limits intensive cultivation of most
grains.
- Economic development is also limited in Southeast Asia by several
mountain ranges, active volcanoes, and frequent typhoons.
- This inhospitable environment traditionally kept population growth low.
- But the injection of Western medicine and technology resulted in one of
the most rapid rates of increase.
- Rice. . . is exported in large quantities from some countries, such as
Thailand and Vietnam, but. . . imported to other countries. . . such as
Malaysia and the Philippines.
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- Because of distinctive vegetation and climate, farmers in Southeast Asia
concentrate on harvesting products that are used in manufacturing.
- Southeast Asia also contains a large percentage of the world’s tin as
well as some petroleum reserves.
- Development has been rapid in. . . Thailand, Singapore, Malaysia, and
the Philippines.
- The region (is) a major manufacturer of textiles.
- Thailand (is) the region’s center for. . . automobiles and.. . consumer
goods.
- Economic growth in the region slowed during the past decade.
- Funds for development were sometimes invested unwisely or stolen by
corrupt officials.
- To restore economic confidence among international investors, Southeast
Asian countries have been forced to undertake painful reforms that
reduce the people’s standard of living.
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- Much of the Middle East is desert that can sustain only sparse
concentrations of plant and animal life.
- Most products must be imported. Because of petroleum exports, the Middle
East is the only one of the nine major world regions that enjoys a trade
surplus.
- Government officials in Middle Eastern states, such as Saudi Arabia and
the United Arab Emirates, have used the billions of dollars generated
from petroleum sales to finance economic development.
- Many governments in the region have access to more money than they can
use to finance development.
- However, not every country in the region has abundant petroleum
reserves.
- Development possibilities are limited in countries that lack significant
petroleum.
- The large gap in per capita income between the petroleum-rich countries
and those that lack resources causes great tension in the Middle East.
People in poorer states held little sympathy for wealthy Kuwait when
Iraq invaded it in 1990.
- The challenge for many Middle Eastern states is to promote development
without abandoning the traditional cultural values of Islam.
- Many Middle Eastern countries . . . prevent diffusion of financial
practices that are considered incompatible with Islamic principles.
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- The low level of literacy among women is the main reason the United
Nations considers the development among these petroleum-rich states to
be lower than the region’s wealth would indicate.
- To shed more light on the Middle East’s lagging development record, the
United Nations uses a team of Arab social scientists to construct an
Alternative Human Development Index (AHDI).
- The AHDI points to three causes in the region’s relatively low HDI: lack
of political freedom, low education and literacy rates, and lack of
opportunities for women.
- The region also suffers from serious internal cultural disputes, as
discussed in Chapters 6 through 8.
- Most Middle Eastern states have refused to recognize the existence of
Israel.
- Money that could be used to promote development is diverted to military
funding and rebuilding war-damaged structures.
- The Middle East has also struggled with terrorism.
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- South Asia includes India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, and the
small Himalayan states of Nepal and Bhutan.
- The region has the world’s second-highest population and second-lowest
per capita income.
- India.. is the world’s leading producer of jute,.. . peanuts, sugarcane,
and tea.
- India has (multiple) mineral reserves.
- However, the overall ratio of population to resources is unfavorable.
- India is one of the world’s leading rice and wheat producers. The region
was a principal beneficiary of the Green Revolution.
- Agricultural productivity in South Asia also depends on climate.
- Agricultural output declines sharply if the monsoon rains fail to
arrive.
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- Despite these assets, sub-Saharan Africa has the least favorable
prospect for development.
- And economic conditions in sub-Saharan Africa have deteriorated in
recent years.
- Some of the region’s economic problems are a legacy of the colonial era.
- Mining companies and other businesses were established to supply
European industries with needed raw materials rather than to promote
overall economic development.
- Political problems have also plagued sub-Saharan Africa.
- European colonies were converted to states without regard for the
distribution of ethnicities.
- The fundamental problem in many countries of sub-Saharan Africa is a
dramatic imbalance between the number of inhabitants and the capacity of
the land to feed the population.
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- Gender-related development index
- Economic indicator of gender differences
- Social indicators of gender differences
- Demographic indicator of gender differences
- Gender empowerment
- Economic indicators of empowerment
- Political indicators of empowerment
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- Development through self-sufficiency
- Elements of self-sufficiency approach
- Problems with self-sufficiency
- Development through international trade
- Rostow’s development model
- Examples of international trade approach
- Problems with international trade
- Financing development
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- For most of the twentieth century, self-sufficiency, or balanced growth,
was the more popular of the development alternatives.
- The world’s two most populous countries, China and India, adopted this
strategy, as did most African and Eastern European countries.
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- According to the balanced growth approach, a country should spread
investment as equally as possible across all sectors of its economy, and
in all regions.
- Reducing poverty takes precedence over encouraging a few people to
become wealthy consumers.
- The approach nurses fledgling businesses by isolating them from
competition of large international corporations.
- Countries promote self-sufficiency by setting barriers that limit the
import of goods from other places.
- The approach also restricts local businesses from exporting to other
countries.
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- For many years India made effective use of many barriers to trade.
- Businesses were supposed to produce goods for consumption inside India.
- If private companies were unable to make a profit selling goods only
inside India, the government provided subsidies, such as cheap
electricity, or wiped out debts.
- The government owned not just communications, transportation, and power
companies, a common feature around the world, but also businesses such
as insurance companies and automakers, left to the private sector in
most countries.
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- The experience of India and other LDCs revealed two major problems with
self-sufficiency:
- Inefficiency: self-sufficiency protects inefficient industries.
Companies protected from international competition do not feel pressure
to keep abreast of rapid technological changes.
- Large bureaucracy: the second problem was the large bureaucracy needed
to administer the controls. A complex administrative system encouraged
abuse and corruption.
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- The international trade model of development calls for a country to
identify its distinctive or unique economic assets.
- According to the international trade approach, a country can develop
economically by concentrating scarce resources on expansion of its
distinctive local industries.
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- A pioneering advocate of this approach was W. W. Rostow, who in the
1950s proposed a five-stage model of development.
- Several countries adopted this approach during the 1960s, although most
continued to follow the self-sufficiency approach.
- According to the international trade model, each country is in one of
these five stages of development.
- 1. The traditional society.
- 2. The preconditions for takeoff.
- 3. The takeoff.
- 4. The drive to maturity.
- 5. The age of mass consumption.
- The model assumes that less developed countries will achieve development
by moving along from an earlier to a later stage.
- A country that concentrates on international trade benefits from
exposure to consumers in other countries. Concern for international
competitiveness in the exporting takeoff industries will filter through
less advanced economic sectors.
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- Two groups of countries chose the international trade approach during
the mid-twentieth century.
- One such group was along the Arabian Peninsula near the Persian Gulf;
- The others were in East and Southeast Asia.
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- This region was one of the world’s least developed until the 1970s, when
escalation of petroleum prices transformed these countries overnight
into some of the wealthiest per capita.
- Persian Gulf countries have used petroleum revenues to finance
large-scale projects.
- The landscape has been further changed by the diffusion of consumer
goods.
- Some Islamic religious principles, which dominate the culture of the
Middle East, conflict with business practices in more developed
countries.
- Women are excluded from holding most jobs and visiting public places.
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- Also among the first countries to adopt the international trade
alternative were South Korea, Singapore, Taiwan, and Hong Kong.
- Singapore and Hong Kong, British colonies until 1965 and 1997,
respectively, have virtually no natural resources.
- Both comprise large cities surrounded by very small amounts of rural
land.
- South Korea and Taiwan have traditionally taken their lead from Japan.
- Lacking natural resources, the four dragons promoted development by
concentrating on producing a handful of manufactured goods.
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- Three problems have hindered countries outside the Persian Gulf and the
four Asian dragons from developing through the international trade
approach:
- Uneven resource distribution
- Market stagnation
- Increased dependence on MDCs
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- Despite problems with the international trade approach, it has been
embraced by most countries as the preferred alternative for stimulating
development.
- During the past quarter century, world wealth (as measured by GDP) has
doubled, whereas world trade has tripled, a measure of the growing
importance of the international trade approach.
- India, for example, dismantled its formidable collection of barriers to
international trade during the 1990s.
- Countries converted from self-sufficiency to international trade during
the 1990s for one simple reason: overwhelming evidence that
international trade better promoted development.
- In the case of India, under self-sufficiency between 1960 and 1990, GDP
grew by 4 percent per year, much lower than in Asian countries that had
embraced international trade.
- After adopting the international trade alternative in the early 1990s,
India’s GDP grew 7 percent per year during the 1990s.
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- To promote the international trade development model, countries
representing 97 percent of world trade established the World Trade
Organization (WTO) in 1995.
- The WTO works to reduce barriers to international trade in two principal
ways.
- First, through the WTO, countries negotiate reduction or elimination of
international trade restrictions on manufactured goods and restrictions
on the international movement of money by banks, corporations, and
wealthy individuals.
- Second, the WTO promotes international trade by enforcing agreements.
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- The WTO has been sharply attacked by liberal and conservative critics.
- Liberal critics charge that the WTO is antidemocratic, because decisions
made behind closed doors promote the interest of large corporations
rather than the poor.
- Conservatives charge that the WTO compromises the power and sovereignty
of individual countries because it can order changes in taxes and laws
that it considers unfair trading practices.
- Protesters routinely gather in the streets outside high-level meetings
of the WTO.
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- Regardless of whether self-sufficiency or international trade is
preferred, less developed countries lack the money needed to finance
development.
- LDCs borrow money to build new infrastructure.
- The two major lenders are international lending organizations controlled
by the MDC governments—the World Bank and the International Monetary
Fund.
- Money is also lent by commercial banks in more developed countries.
- The theory behind borrowing money to build infrastructure is that new or
expanded businesses attracted to an area will contribute additional
taxes that the LDC uses in part to repay the loans and in part to
improve its citizens’ living conditions.
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- Often financial institutions in more developed countries refuse to make
further loans, so construction of needed infrastructure stops.
- The inability of many LDCs to repay loans also damages the financial
stability of banks in the more developed countries.
- MDCs have become more cautious in granting loans.
- International lending agencies require LDCs to adopt structural
adjustment programs, which are economic policies that create conditions
encouraging international trade.
- These programs can be unpopular with the voters and can encourage
political unrest.
- For their part, LDCs demand an increased role in loan-making decisions
made by international agencies.
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- A transnational corporation operates in countries other than the one in
which its headquarters are located.
- The net flow of investment from MDCs to LDCs made by private
corporations grew nearly tenfold during the 1990s.
- About one-half of the investment involved transfers within transnational
corporations.
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