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Uneven development - Dependency

DEPENDENCY SCHOOL, THEORY OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE. Uneven development - Dependency. THEORY OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE, NEOLIBERALISM. Post-war mainstream theories- MODERNIZATION SCHOOL AND DEPENDENCY PERSPECTIVE. Structure of the presentation. 1) theories of growth

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Uneven development - Dependency

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  1. DEPENDENCY SCHOOL, THEORY OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE Uneven development - Dependency

  2. THEORY OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE, NEOLIBERALISM Post-war mainstream theories- MODERNIZATION SCHOOL AND DEPENDENCY PERSPECTIVE

  3. Structure of the presentation • 1) theories of growth • 2) theories of international trade – neoclassical and its criticism • 3) structuralist perspective - Prebish • 4) new school of dependency studies • 5) world system theory - Wallerstein

  4. Production- possibility frontier • PPF shows the maximum amount of alternative combination of goods and services that a society can produce at a given time when there is full utilization of economics resources and technology • The PPF shifts outward over time as more resouces become availabe or technology is improved

  5. PRODUCTION-POSSIBILITY FRONTIER • Economic problem of limited production – explained by PPF • ECONOMIC GROWTH occurs when the economy´s productive capabilites increase • - growth depicted as an outward shift of PPF

  6. PPF and growth • When production is at its maximum, increased output of A requires reduced production of other goods, • there s opportunity cost to the increased production of A • Increasing opportunity costs – continous expansion in the production of A is secured by sacrificing increasing amount of other goods.

  7. Opportunity cost • = the benefits forgone when a specific decision is made • Of two options - the opportunity cost of the option chosen is the opportunity forgone for the other option • (accounting vs. economic theory OP)

  8. Increasing costs • Recourses are not homogenous - not equally efficient in the production of goods and services • Not equally productive when used to produce alternative good • This imperfect substitutability of recourses – due to differences in the skillds of labour, fertility of soil, specialized funcion of machinery, buildings etc.

  9. Post-war concepts of development • BINNS, T.: Dualistic and unilinear concepts of development pp. 91-95, in: companion_II.pdf. • Dualism or dichotomous nature of development • Advanced and modern sector of the economy coexisted alongside the traditional and backward sectors (Binns, 2008:82).

  10. „we must embark on a bold new program for making the benefits of our scientific advances and industrial progress available for the improvement and growth Truman´s presidential address, 1949

  11. Truman´s presidential address

  12. Arthur Lewis • 1954 : Economic Development with unlimited labour • Proponent of dualistic structure of underdeveloped economies • Goal - absorption of underempoyed labour force in susbsistence agriculture • Very influential in the 60s and 70s

  13. Arthur Lewis • Criticism: failed to appreciate the positive role of small agriculture • Some successes of Green revolution – raising productivity in the rural substistence sector - help development process rather then obstacle

  14. Dualism in geographical concepts • Early spation development models • Different qualities and potential of contrasting regions • Initial regional inequalities as a prerequisite for eventual overall development

  15. Unilinear models - WW Rostow

  16. Institutionalists - Gunnar Myrdal, Albert Hirschmann • Cumulative causation • Particular regions – by virtue of some initial advantages - moved ahead = new increments of activities and growth will be concentrated in those regions already ahead.

  17. Criticism of Rostow´s model (and similar ones) • 1) unilinear development - ´things can only get better´ x cf sub-Saharan countries and LA • Sub-Saharan worse off then at the independence • 2) eurocentic model – developing countries will imitate the development path in Europe and America • 3) development occurs in stages

  18. Neoliberalism, SAPs • Reading: SIMON, D. : Neoliberalism, stuctural adjustment and poverty reduction strategies, in : companion_II.pdf, pp. 86 • Dramatic oil price increases – 1973 and 1979 – triggered a slowdown, severe recession and debt crisis 1981-2

  19. Crisis of Keynesian model • Profound disillusionment - record of the state involvement in economic and social life • Keynesian state involvement - inefficient, bureaucratic, unnecessary drain on public coffers (Binns, 2008:87)

  20. Opportunity cost • = the benefits forgone when a specific decision is made • Of two options - the opportunity cost of the option chosen is the opportunity forgone for the other option • (accounting vs. economic theory OP)

  21. Dependency - readings • Conway, D.; Heynen N.: Dependency theories: from ECLA to André Gunder Frank and beyond, in. Companion_II.pdf • International division of labour • Based on Ricardo´s model of international trade • Factor endowment theory • Specialization on the production of good in which partricular country has comparative advantage

  22. FACTOR ENDOWMENT THEORY • Different countries – different factor endowments • Cf china, South Africa • Heckher Ohlin Hypothesis of international trade • Specialization according to the prevailing factor endowements • USA, UK – focus on what kind of goods? • Sierra Leone?

  23. Raul Prebish, Singer • LA historical marginalization and resultant underdevelopment – perpetuated by such unequal commercial arrangements • LA shoukd benefit from export strategies • Evidence showed oterwise • Structuralist economists – argued that core countries benefited at LA expense

  24. Frank – development of underdevelopment • Metropolis satellite relations occured not only among states bust also on region and sub-regional levels • Dependebcuy – perpetuated through global capitalims • Importance of historical significance and transformative impact of capitalism´s penetrartion into continents structures

  25. ISI • Import substitution industrialization • Prebish - insisted on major structural changes in development policy • Favoured switching to more domestic production under tariff protection • as a means of replacing industrial imports ISI • Capital goods, intermediate product and energy would be purchaised with national income revenue from export of primary commodities (Conway, Heynen, 2008:93)

  26. New forms of dependency • Multinational corporate power and authority over technology transfer anc capital investment emerged as a new form of dependency (Conway, Heynen, 2008:93).

  27. Fernando Cardoso • Associated dependent development • Triple alliance • Domestic elite in cooperation wt transnational corporation • ISI under authoritarian regimes, state policies favoured multinational capital at the expense of labour

  28. Theory of international trade • SAPSFORD, D.: Smith, Ricardo, and the world marketplace 1776-2007: back to the future?

  29. Smith on international trade

  30. Classical depencency school • LA – ECLA , Prebish – head of ECLA • Voices of the periphery • Prebish – criticized outdated international division of labour • LA – asked to produce raw materials for industrial centers

  31. André Gundar Frank • development of underdevelopment • Concepts of modernization school distilled from the categories derived from the Western world • Western categories are unable to guide an understanding of the problems facing 3W

  32. Frank • Modernization school ignores the historical experience of colonialism • Metropolis-satellite relationship explain how underdevelopment works • Replicated within countries • Calcuta

  33. Frank • Satellite flourishes when cut off from the centre • Industrialization during WWI WWII

  34. Social destruction. • Creation of client serving class • Extension of the colonial power • Corruption of local elites • Disintegration of communities, social conflicts

  35. Hegemony • Educational system • Did not enhance knowledge and technological advances • Ubiquous knowledge

  36. Baran – colonialism in India • Politics of de-industrialization • unfavorable terms of trade • Appropriation of 10% • Plus asymetry of power -

  37. Raul Prebish • Structuralist approaches • Critique of Ricardian theory of international trade - empirical evidence – did not prove • LA – growth during both wars • Close links with centers not beneficial to the growth of peripheries

  38. debt relief External indebtedness and

  39. The anatomy of structural adjustment programmes • (Simon, 2008:86) Structural Adjustment Programmes - designed to cut government expenditure, reduce the extent of state intervention in the economy and promote liberalization and international trade • SAPs explicit about the necessity of export promotion based on the Ricardian notion of comparative advantage

  40. Nature of international trade • International trade is unbalanced and unequitable

  41. initiatives connected with debt relief • the structural adjustment programmes (SAPs) of the 1980s, • the Heavily Indebted Poor Countries Initiatives (HIPCI) 1990s • Multilateral Debt Relief Initiative (MDRI) announced after the summit of the G-8 states in Gleneagles in 2005.

  42. Mexico • debt crisis broke out in August 1982 when Mexico, Brazil no longer able to service their debts – triggering panic • Developed countries advanced enormous commercial loans to the debtor countries • during the 1970s - Pearson Report to warn

  43. The Reasons of the Debt Crisis • The Reasons of the Debt Crisis • Developing countries - substantial economic growth in the 1960s (average of 6.6% between 1967 – 1973, see Todaro 1994:459) • the OPEC countries decided to increase oil prices. They rose four times (Pilbeam 1998:290), which started to cause problems in both the developed and the developing world as oil was needed everywhere.

  44. Debt crisis • Walt Whitman Rostow that all countries have potential to develop along the same trajectory, • the only obstacle being delay due to the lack of resources to promote rise of economic capacities of the “backward” states

  45. Debt crisis • The loans, even though very large, did not seem risky at first because of the relative strength of primary commodity prices in the 1970s (Mulhearn 1996:170). I • in addition, surplus of money on the international markets meant higher levels of inflation; interest rates were thus relatively low, which made borrowing even more attractive.

  46. Loans from commercial banks • Commercial lending boomed as countries were reluctant to borrow from institutions such as the IMF or the WB due to the required conditions - AAA rating

  47. IMF policies - SAPs • Geared to maximizing the propects for and amounts of repayment by the debtor countries • SAPs explicit about the necessity of export promotion based on the Ricardian model of comparative advantage • International trade is often unbalanced and unequitable

  48. Debt service payments tripled between 1975 and 1979 (Todaro 1994:463) but debtor countries managed to maintain the growth which made debt servicing possible.

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