Development Economics / Edition 1

Development Economics / Edition 1

by Debraj Ray
ISBN-10:
0691017069
ISBN-13:
9780691017068
Pub. Date:
02/01/1998
Publisher:
Princeton University Press
ISBN-10:
0691017069
ISBN-13:
9780691017068
Pub. Date:
02/01/1998
Publisher:
Princeton University Press
Development Economics / Edition 1

Development Economics / Edition 1

by Debraj Ray
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Overview

A landmark textbook on development economics

The study of development in low-income countries is attracting more attention around the world than ever before. Yet until now there has been no comprehensive text that incorporates the recent huge strides made in the subject. Development Economics does precisely that in a clear, rigorous, and elegant fashion.

Debraj Ray, one of the most accomplished theorists in development economics today, presents in this book a synthesis of recent and older literature in the field and raises important questions that will help to set the agenda for future research. He covers such vital subjects as theories of economic growth, economic inequality, poverty and undernutrition, population growth, trade policy, and the markets for land, labor, and credit. A common point of view underlies the treatment of these subjects: that much of the development process can be understood by studying factors that impede the efficient and equitable functioning of markets. Diverse topics such as the new growth theory, moral hazard in land contracts, information-based theories of credit markets, and the macroeconomic implications of economic inequality come under this common methodological umbrella.

The book takes the position that there is no single cause for economic progress, but that a combination of factors—among them the improvement of physical and human capital, the reduction of inequality, and institutions that enable the background flow of information essential to market performance—consistently favor development. Ray supports his arguments throughout with examples from around the world. The book assumes a knowledge of only introductory economics and explains sophisticated concepts in simple, direct language, keeping the use of mathematics to a minimum.

Development Economics will be the definitive textbook in this subject for years to come. It will prove useful to researchers by showing intriguing connections among a wide variety of subjects that are rarely discussed together in the same book. And it will be an important resource for policy-makers, who increasingly find themselves dealing with complex issues of growth, inequality, poverty, and social welfare.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780691017068
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Publication date: 02/01/1998
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 872
Product dimensions: 7.00(w) x 10.00(h) x (d)

About the Author

Debraj Ray is the Julius Silver Professor of Economics at New York University. He is the author of A Game-Theoretic Perspective on Coalition Formation and a coeditor of Contemporary Macroeconomics, Readings in the Theory of Economic Development, and Theoretical Issues in Development Economics.

Read an Excerpt

Chapter 1
Introduction

I invite you to study what is surely the most important and perhaps the most complex of all economic issues: the economic transformation of those countries known as the developing world. A definition of "developing countries" is problematic and, after a point, irrelevant.1 The World Development Report (World Bank [1996]) employs a threshold of $9,000 per capita to distinguish between what it calls high-income countries and low- and middle-income countries: according to this classification, well over 4.5 billion of the 5.6 billion people in the world today live in the developing world of "low- and middle-income countries.'' They earn, on average, around $1,000 per capita, a figure that is worth contrasting with the yearly earnings of the average North American or Japanese resident, which are well above $25,000. Despite the many caveats and qualifications that we later add to these numbers, the ubiquitous fact of these astonishing disparities remains.
There is economic inequality throughout the world, but much of that is, we hope, changing. This book puts together a way of thinking about both the disparities and the changes.
There are two strands of thought that run through this text. First, I move away from (although do not entirely abandon) a long-held view that the problems of all developing countries can be understood best with reference to the international environment of which they are a part.2 According to this view, the problems of underdevelopment must first and foremost be seen in a global context. There is much that is valid in this viewpoint, but I wish to emphasize equally fundamental issues that are internal to the structure of developing countries. Although a sizeable section of this book addresses international aspects of development, the teacher or reader who wishes to concentrate exclusively on these aspects will not find a comprehensive treatment here.
The second strand is methodological: as far as possible, I take a unified approach to the problems of development and emphasize a recent and growing literature that takes a level-headed approach to market failure and the potential for government intervention. It is not that markets are intrinsically bad or intrinsically good: the point is to understand the conditions under which they fail or function at an inefficient level and to determine if appropriate policies grounded in an understanding of these conditions can fix such inefficiencies. These conditions, I argue, can be understood best by a serious appreciation of subjects that are at the forefront of economic theory but need to permeate more thoroughly into introductory textbooks; theories of incomplete information, of incentives, and of strategic behavior. Few people would disagree that these considerations lie at the heart of many observed phenomena. However, my goal is to promote a student's understanding of such issues as a commonplace model, not as a set of exceptions to the usual textbook paradigm of perfect competition and full information.
Because I take these two strands to heart, my book differs from other textbooks on development in a number of respects. Most of these differences stem from my approach to exposition and choice of subject matter. Although I do not neglect the historical development of a line of research or inquiry, I bring to bear a completely modern analytical perspective on the subject. Here are some instances of what I mean.
(1) The story of economic underdevelopment is, in many ways, a story of how informal, imaginative institutions replace the formal constructs we are accustomed to in industrialized economies. The landlord lends to his tenant farmer, accepting labor as collateral, but a formal credit market is missing. Villagers insure each other against idiosyncratic shocks using their greater information and their ability to impose social sanctions, but a formal insurance market is missing. Institutions as diverse as tied labor, credit cooperatives, and extended families can be seen as responses to market failure of some sort, precipitated in most cases by missing information or by the inability of the legal system to swiftly and efficiently enforce contracts. This common thread in our understanding is emphasized and reemphasized throughout the book.
(2) The absence or underfunctioning of markets gives rise to two other features. One is the creation of widespread externalities. Proper classification of these externalities provides much insight into a variety of economic phenomena, which appear unconnected at first, but which (in this sense) are just the common expression of a small variety of external effects. So it is that simple concepts from game theory, such as the Prisoners' Dilemma or the coordination game, yield insights into a diverse class of developmentrelated problems. Again, the common features of the various problems yield a mental classification system---a way of seeing that different phenomena stem from a unified source.
(3) A fundamental implication of missing markets is that inequality in the distribution of income or wealth plays a central role in many development problems. It isn't that inequality has not received attention in treatises on development; it certainly has. However, what has recently begun to receive systematic analytical treatment is the functional role of inequality: the possibility that inequality, quite apart from being of interest in its own right, has implications for other yardsticks of economic performance such as the level of per capita income and its rate of growth. The emphasis on the functional role of inequality runs through the book.
(4) It is necessary to try to integrate, in an intuitive and not very abstract way, recent theoretical and empirical literature with the more standard material. This isn't done to be fashionable. I do this because I believe that much of this new work has new things to teach us. Some important models of economic growth, of income distribution and development, of coordination failures, or of incomplete information are theories that have been developed over the last decade. Work on these models continues apace. Although some of the techniques are inaccessible to a student with little formal training, I do believe that all the ideas in this literature that are worth teaching (and there are many) can be taught in an elementary way. In this sense this book coincides with existing texts on the subject: the use of mathematics is kept to a minimum (there is no calculus except in an occasional footnote).
Partly because other development texts have been around for a good while, and perhaps in part because of a different approach, this text departs significantly from existing development texts in the points cited in the preceding text and indeed in its overall methodological approach.
Combining the complementary notions of incomplete information, a weak legal structure (so far as implementation goes), and the resulting strategic and economic considerations that emerge, we begin to have some idea of what it is that makes developing countries somehow "different.'' Economic theorists never tire of needling their friends with questions in this regard. Why is the study of developing countries a separate subject? Why can't we just break it up into separate special cases of labor economics, international trade, money, and finance, and so on? Certainly, they have a point, but that's only one way to cut the cake. Another way to do so is to recognize that developing countries, in their different spheres of activity, display again and again these common failures of information and legal structures, and therefore generate common incentive and strategic issues that might benefit from separate, concentrated scrutiny.
This approach also serves, I feel, as an answer to a different kind of objection: that developing countries are all unique and very different, and generalizations of any kind are misleading or, at best, dangerous. Although this sort of viewpoint can be applied recursively as well within countries, regions, districts and villages until it becomes absurd, there is some truth to it. At the same time, while differences may be of great interest to the specialized researcher, emphasizing what's common may be the best way to get the material across to a student. Therefore I choose to highlight what's common, while trying not to lose sight of idiosyncrasies, of which there are many.
A final bias is that, in some basic sense, the book is on the theory of economic development. However, there is no theory without data, and the book is full of empirical studies. At the same time, I am uninterested in filling up page after page with tables of numbers unless these tables speak to the student in some informative way. So it is with case studies, of which there will be a number in the text.3 I try to choose empirical illustrations and case studies throughout to illustrate a viewpoint on the development process, and not necessarily for their own sake.
I started off writing a textbook for undergraduates, for the course that I have loved the most in my fourteen years of teaching. I see that what emerged is a textbook, no doubt, but in the process something of myself seems to have entered into it. I see now that the true originality of this book is not so much the construction of new theory or a contribution to our empirical knowledge, but a way of thinking about development and a way of communicating those thoughts to those who are young, intelligent, caring, and impressionable. If a more hard-bitten scholar learns something as a by-product, that would be very welcome indeed.
My commitment as the author is the following: armed with some minimal background in economic theory and statistics, and a healthy dose of curiosity, sympathy, and interest, if you study this book carefully, you will come away with a provocative and interesting introduction to development economics as it is practiced today. Put another way, although this book offers (as all honest books in the social sciences do) few unambiguous answers, it will teach you how to ask the right questions.

FOOTNOTES:

1 The Third World, a group of low-income countries united by common economic characteristics and often a common history of colonialism, is just as much a political as an economic concept. Narrower economic classifications are employed by several international organizations such as the World Bank. A composite index that goes beyond per capita income is described in Human Development Report (United Nations Development Programme [1995]). There is substantial agreement across all these classifications.
2 This view includes not only the notion that developing countries are somehow hindered by their exposure to the developed world, epitomized in the teachings of dependencia theorists, but also more mainstream concerns regarding the central role of international organizations and foreign assistance.
3 Case studies, which are referred to as boxes, will be set off from the text by horizontal rules.

Table of Contents

Preface



Chapter 1: Introduction



Chapter 2: Economic Development: Overview

2.1. Introduction

2.2. Income and growth

2.2.2. Historical experience

2.2.1. Measurement issues

2.3. Income distribution in developing countries

2.4. The many faces of underdevelopment

2.4.1. Human development

2.4.2. An index of human development

2.4.3. Per capita income and human development

2.5. Some structural features

2.5.1. Demographic characteristics

2.5.2. Occupational and production structure

2.5.3. Rapid rural—urban migration

2.5.4. International trade

2.6. Summary

Exercises



Chapter 3: Economic Growth

3.1. Introduction

3.2. Modern economic growth: Basic features

3.3. Theories of economic growth

3.3.1. The Harrod—Domar model

3.3.2. Beyond Harrod—Domar: Other considerations

3.3.3. The Solow model

3.4. Technical progress

3.5. Convergence?

3.5.1. Introduction

3.5.2. Unconditional convergence

3.5.3. Level convergence: Evidence or lack thereof

3.5.4. Unconditional convergence: A summation

3.5.5. Conditional convergence

3.5.6. Reexamining the data

3.6. Summary

Appendix

3.A.1. The Harrod—Domar equations

3.A.2. Production functions and per capita magnitudes

Exercises



Chapter 4: The New Growth Theories

4.1. Introduction

4.2. Human capital and growth

4.3. Another look at conditional convergence

4.4. Technical progress again

4.4.1. Introduction

4.4.2. Technological progress and human decisions

4.4.3. A model of deliberate technical progress

4.4.4. Externalities, technical progress, and growth

4.4.5. Total factor productivity

4.5. Total factor productivity and the East Asian miracle

4.6. Summary

Appendix: Human capital and growth

Exercises



Chapter 5: History, Expectations, and Development

5.1. Introduction

5.2. Complementarities

5.2.1. Introduction: QWERTY

5.2.2. Coordination failure

5.2.3. Linkages and policy

5.2.4. History versus expectations

5.3. Increasing returns

5.3.1. Introduction

5.3.2. Increasing returns and entry into markets

5.3.3. Increasing returns and market size: Interaction

5.4. Competition, multiplicity, and international trade

5.5. Other roles for history

5.5.1. Social norms

5.5.2. The status quo

5.6. Summary

Exercises



Chapter 6: Economic Inequality

6.1. Introduction

6.2. What is economic inequality?

6.2.1. The context

6.2.2. Economic inequality: Preliminary observations

6.3. Measuring economic inequality

6.3.1. Introduction

6.3.2. Four criteria for inequality measurement

6.3.3. The Lorenz curve

6.3.4. Complete measures of inequality

6.4. Summary

Exercises



Chapter 7: Inequality and Development: Interconnections

7.1. Introduction

7.2. Inequality, income, and growth

7.2.1. The Inverted-U hypothesis

7.2.2. Testing the inverted-U hypothesis

7.2.3. Income and inequality: Uneven and compensatory changes

7.2.4. Inequality, savings, income, and growth

7.2.5. Inequality, political redistribution, and growth

7.2.6. Inequality and growth: Evidence

7.2.7. Inequality and demand composition

7.2.8. Inequality, capital markets, and development

7.2.9. Inequality and development: Human capital

7.3. Summary

Appendix: Multiple steady states with imperfect capital markets



Chapter 8: Poverty and Undernutrition

8.1. Introduction

8.2. Poverty: First principles

8.2.1. Conceptual issues

8.2.2. Poverty measures

8.3. Poverty: Empirical observations

8.3.1. Demographic features

8.3.2. Rural and urban poverty

8.3.3. Assets

8.3.4. Nutrition

8.4. The functional impact of poverty

8.4.1. Poverty, credit, and insurance

8.4.2. Poverty, nutrition, and labor markets

8.4.3. Poverty and the household

8.5. Summary

Appendix: More on poverty measures

Exercises



Chapter 9: Population Growth and Economic Development

9.1. Introduction

9.2. Population: Some basic concepts

9.2.1. Birth and death rates

9.2.2. Age distributions

9.3. From economic development to population growth

9.3.1. The demographic transition

9.3.2. Historical trends in developed and developing countries

9.3.3. The adjustment of birth rates

9.3.4. Is fertility too high?

9.4. From population growth to economic development

9.4.1. Some negative effects

9.4.2. Some positive effects

9.5. Summary

Exercises



Chapter 10: Rural and Urban

10.1. Overview

10.1.1. The structural viewpoint

10.1.2. Formal and informal urban sectors

10.1.3. Agriculture

10.1.4. The ICRISAT villages

10.2. Rural—urban interaction

10.2.1. Two fundamental resource flows

10.2.2. The Lewis model

10.3. Rural—urban migration

10.3.1. Introduction

10.3.2. The basic model

10.3.3. Floors on formal wages and the Harris—Todaro equilibrium

10.3.4. Government policy

10.3.5. Comments and extensions

10.4. Summary

Exercises



Chapter 11: Markets in Agriculture: An Introduction

11.1. Introduction

11.2. Some examples

11.3. Land, labor, capital, and credit

11.3.1. Land and labor

11.3.2. Capital and credit



Chapter 12: Land

12.1. Introduction

12.2. Ownership and tenancy

12.3. Land rental contracts

12.3.1. Contractual forms

12.3.2. Contracts and incentives

12.3.3. Risk, tenancy, and sharecropping

12.3.4. Tenancy forms: Other considerations

12.3.5. Land contracts, eviction, and use rights

12.4. Land ownership

12.4.1. A brief history of land inequality

12.4.2. Land size and productivity: Concepts

12.4.3. Land size and productivity: Empirical evidence

12.4.4. Land sales

12.4.5. Land reform

12.5. Summary

Appendix 1: Principal—agent theory and its applications

12.A.1. Risk, moral hazard, and the agency problem

12.A.2. Tenancy contracts revisited

Appendix 2: Screening and sharecropping

Exercises



Chapter 13: Labor

13.1. Introduction

13.2. Labor categories

13.3. A familiar model

13.4. Poverty, nutrition, and labor markets

13.4.1. The basic model

13.4.2. Nutrition, time, and casual labor markets

13.4.3. A model of nutritional status

13.5. Permanent labor markets

13.5.1. Types of permanent labor

13.5.2. Why study permanent labor?

13.5.3. Permanent labor: Nonmonitored tasks

13.5.4. Permanent labor: casual tasks

13.6. Summary

Exercises



Chapter 14: Credit

14.1. Introduction

14.1.1. The limits to credit and insurance

14.1.2. Sources of demand for credit and insurance

14.2. Rural credit markets

14.2.1. Who provides rural credit?

14.2.2. Some characteristics of rural credit markets

14.3. Theories of informal credit markets

14.3.1. Lender's monopoly

14.3.2. The lender's risk hypothesis

14.3.3. Default and fixed-capital loans

14.3.4. Default and collateral

14.3.5. Default and credit rationing

14.3.6. Informational asymmetries and credit rationing

14.3.7. Default and enforcement

14.4. Interlinked transactions

14.4.1. Hidden interest

14.4.2. Interlinkages and information

14.4.3. Interlinkages and enforcement

14.4.4. Interlinkages and creation of efficient surplus

14.5. Alternative credit policies

14.5.1. Vertical formal—informal links

14.5.2. Microfinance

14.6. Summary

Exercises



Chapter 15: Insurance

15.1. Basic concepts

15.2. The perfect insurance model

15.2.1. Theory

15.2.2. Testing the theory

15.3. Limits to insurance: Information

15.3.1. Limited information about the final outcome

15.3.2. Limited information about what led to the outcome

15.4. Limits to insurance: Enforcement

15.4.1. Enforcement-based limits to perfect insurance

15.4.2. Enforcement and imperfect insurance

15.5. Summary



Chapter 16: International Trade

16.1. World trading patterns

16.2. Comparative advantage

16.3. Sources of comparative advantage

16.3.1. Technology

16.3.2. Factor endowments

16.3.3. Preferences

16.3.4. Economies of scale

16.4. Summary

Exercises



Chapter 17: Trade Policy

17.1. Gains from trade?

17.1.1. Overall gains and distributive effects

17.1.2. Overall losses from trade?

17.2. Trade policy: Import substitution

17.2.1. Basic concepts

17.2.2. More detail

17.3. Export promotion

17.3.1. Basic concepts

17.3.2. Effect on the exchange rate

17.3.3. The instruments of export promotion: More detail

17.4. The move away from import substitution

17.4.1. Introduction

17.4.2. The eighties crisis

17.4.3. Structural adjustment

17.5. Summary

Appendix: The International Monetary Fund and the World Bank



Chapter 18: Multilateral Approaches to Trade Policy

18.1. Introduction

18.2. Restricted trade

18.2.1. Second-best arguments for protection

18.2.2. Protectionist tendencies

18.2.3. Explaining protectionist tendencies

18.3. Issues in trade liberalization

18.3.1. Introduction

18.3.2. Regional agreements: Basic theory

18.3.3. Regional agreements among dissimilar countries

18.3.4. Regional agreements among similar countries

18.3.5. Multilateralism and regionalism

18.4. Summary



Appendix 1: Elementary Game Theory

A1.1. Introduction

A1.2. Basic concepts

A1.3. Nash equilibrium

A1.4. Games over time



Appendix 2: Elementary Statistical Methods

A2.1. Introduction

A2.2. Summary statistics

A2.3. Regression



References

Index

What People are Saying About This

Amartya Sen

An elegant, insightful, and extremely effective textbook on development economics. It combines astute theoretical reasoning with a firm grip on empirical circumstances, including institutional possibilities and limitations. There is real originality here without sacrificing usefulness and accessibility.
Amartya Sen, Winner of the 1998 Nobel Prize for Economics, Harvard University

From the Publisher

"An elegant, insightful, and extremely effective textbook on development economics. It combines astute theoretical reasoning with a firm grip on empirical circumstances, including institutional possibilities and limitations. There is real originality here without sacrificing usefulness and accessibility."—Amartya Sen, Nobel Prize–winning economist

Recipe

"An elegant, insightful, and extremely effective textbook on development economics. It combines astute theoretical reasoning with a firm grip on empirical circumstances, including institutional possibilities and limitations. There is real originality here without sacrificing usefulness and accessibility."—Amartya Sen, Winner of the 1998 Nobel Prize for Economics, Harvard University

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