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Edexcel A2 Economics Unit 4 Course Companion 2016
tutor2u www.tutor2u.net			 113	
17.Constraints	on	Growth	and	Development	
Economic	growth	and	human	development	progress	is	not	guaranteed	and	some	countries	struggle	to	maintain	the	
minimum	growth	rate	needed	to	bring	down	rates	of	extreme	poverty	and	sustain	a	chosen	development	path.		
Overview	of	some	of	the	key	limiters	on	growth	and	development	
	
	
	 	
Infrastructure Primary	Export	Dependency
Macro	Instability Conflict	and	Corruption
Human	Capital	Weaknesses Savings	and	Foreign	Exchange	Gap
Natural	Capital	Depletion Inequality
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What	Factors	Can	Limit	Growth	and	Development?	
Infrastructure	Gaps	
• Infrastructure	includes	physical	capital	such	as	critical	energy	power	and	water	supplies,	sanitation,	
telecommunications	&	transport	networks,	schools	and	hospitals	
• Evidence	shows	a	positive	correlation	between	a	country's	development	and	the	quality	of	its	road	network	
• Poor	infrastructure:	
o Causes	higher	supply	costs	and	delays	for	businesses	
o Reduces	labour	mobility	and	hurts	the	ability	of	exporters	to	get	products	to	global	markets.	
• According	to	the	World	Bank,	transport	costs	are	25-30%	of	product	costs	in	developing	countries	partly	
because	of	deficiencies	in	infrastructure	
Examples	of	infrastructure	deficiencies:		
1. India:	India’s	irrigation	system	is	not	properly	managed	and	this	has	made	it	difficult	to	sustain	food	grain	
production	when	rainfall	is	less	than	expected	–	as	was	the	case	in	2012.	This	has	led	to	a	surge	in	food	prices,	
which	hits	the	poorest	communities	hardest.	For	a	few	days	in	the	summer	of	2012,	much	of	northern	India	
was	plunged	into	darkness.	About	700	million	people	were	left	without	power,	a	situation	that	affected	
transport,	communication,	healthcare,	industries	and	farming.	India	needs	an	estimated	$400bn	investment	
in	the	power	sector	if	it	is	to	meet	their	development	goals.	About	half	of	India’s	roads	are	not	paved.	
2. Asia	-	in	Asia,	an	estimated	300m	people	have	no	access	to	clean	drinking	water	due	to	infrastructure	gaps	
3. Brazil:	Host	for	the	2014	World	Cup	and	the	2016	Olympics.	Brazil’s	growth	is	constrained	by	infrastructure	
weaknesses:	In	2011,	only	14%	of	her	roads	were	paved.	The	World	Economic	Forum	ranks	Brazil’s	quality	of	
infrastructure	104th	out	of	142	countries	surveyed,	behind	China	(69th),	India	(86th)	and	Russia	(100th).			
4. Sub-Saharan	Africa:	The	combined	power	generation	capacity	of	the	48	countries	of	Sub-Saharan	Africa	is	68	
gig	watts	–	no	more	than	Spain’s.	Poor	road,	rail	and	harbour	infrastructure	adds	30-40%	to	the	costs	of	
goods	traded	among	African	countries.	A	chronic	shortage	of	energy	-	with	firms	and	people	facing	acute	
shortages	of	power	–	is	a	major	barrier	to	growth	and	development.	According	to	the	Asian	Development	
Bank	Report	for	2013,	Africa	currently	invests	just	4%	of	its	GDP	in	infrastructure,	compared	with	China's	
14%.	Sub-Saharan	Africa	loses	2.1%	of	gross	domestic	product	from	blackouts	alone 	
One	limitation	to	infrastructure	investment	in	developing	countries	is	that	tax	revenues	are	low	or	come	from	a	
narrow	base	of	businesses.	Many	countries	will	need	to	increase	their	spending	on	infrastructure	in	the	years	ahead	to	
deal	with	the	consequences	of	climate	change.	According	to	the	United	Nations,	between	1901	and	1910	there	were	
eighty-two	recorded	natural	disasters,	but	between	2003	and	2012	there	were	more	than	4,000	
	
Exam	tip:	Examiners	report	that	students	are	not	good	at	explaining	exactly	how	improved	infrastructure	can	raise	
development.	Take	a	step-by-step	approach,	using	good	applied	examples	to	improve	your	marks.	
Primary	Product	Dependency	
• Many	nations	still	relying	on	specializing	in	and	exporting	low	value	added	primary	commodities	
• The	prices	of	these	goods	can	be	volatile	on	world	markets	
• When	prices	fall,	an	economy	will	see	a	sharp	reduction	in	export	incomes,	an	adverse	movement	in	their	
terms	of	trade,	risks	of	a	higher	trade	deficit	and	a	danger	that	a	nation	will	not	be	able	to	finance	state-led	
investment	in	education,	healthcare	and	core	infrastructure	
• Despite	being	rich	in	natural	resources,	for	many	countries	this	is	a	curse	rather	than	a	blessing	
Sub-Saharan	Africa	(SSA)	is	often	cited	as	a	region	where	primary	sector	dependence	is	high.	SSA’s	share	in	global	
manufacturing	trade	remains	extremely	low.	
	
Primary	Dependency	and	External	Economic	Shocks	
• Events	in	one	part	of	the	world	can	quickly	affect	many	other	countries	
• For	example,	the	global	financial	crisis	(GFC)	brought	about	recession	in	many	countries	and	financial	distress	
in	many	regions.	It	also	led	to	a	fall	in	FDI	flows	into	many	poorer	countries	and	pressure	on	governments	in	
rich	nations	to	cut	overseas	aid	budgets.
Edexcel A2 Economics Unit 4 Course Companion 2016
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• If	a	resource	rich	country	exports	the	resource,	it	exposes	itself	to	damaging	volatility	of	its	export	earnings	
• In	2010,	economists	Bruckner	and	Ciccone	found	that	a	10%	fall	in	income	due	to	falling	commodity	prices	
raises	the	likelihood	of	civil	war	in	sub-Saharan	Africa	by	around	12%.	
Land	Locked	Countries	
• Land	locked	economies	face	challenges	to	integrate	in	global	trade	–	without	good	infrastructure	and	
efficient	logistics	businesses	it	can	be	costly	and	slow	to	get	products	to	the	countries	of	trade	partners	
• Some	landlocked	countries	have	been	doing	well	especially	when	they	achieve	regional	economic	integration	
with	other	land-locked	nations.	Investment	in	air	transport	links	helps	to	overcome	this	development	trap	
The	Savings	Gap	
• Savings	are	needed	to	provide	finance	for	capital	investment.	In	many	smaller	low-income	countries,	high	
levels	of	poverty	make	it	almost	impossible	to	generate	sufficient	savings	to	provide	the	funds	needed	to	
fund	investment	projects.	This	increases	reliance	on	tied	aid.			
• This	problem	is	known	as	the	savings	gap.	In	Africa	for	example,	savings	rates	of	around	17	per	cent	of	GDP	
compare	to	31	per	cent	on	average	for	middle-income	countries.	Low	savings	rates	and	poorly	developed	or	
malfunctioning	financial	markets	make	it	more	expensive	for	African	public	and	private	sectors	to	get	funds	
for	investment.	Higher	borrowing	costs	impede	capital	investment	
Volatile	Incomes	and	Vulnerable	Employment	
• Volatility	can	be	disruptive	to	economic	health.	It	increases	the	risks	for	businesses	considering	capital	
investment,	it	raises	the	chances	of	people	falling	into	extreme	poverty	and	it	makes	a	nation’s	finances	more	
fragile	perhaps	lowering	the	scope	for	important	investment	in	public	goods.	
There	is	an	increasing	trend	towards	temporary	contracts	and	insecure	work	across	the	world,	according	to	the	
International	Labour	Organization	(ILO).	In	fact,	only	a	quarter	of	global	workers	are	on	permanent	contracts	while	the	
rest	are	unpaid	at	home,	self-employed,	working	informally	or	employed	on	a	temporary	contract
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Weaknesses	in	Management	
• Few	textbooks	give	emphasis	to	the	quality	of	business	management	as	a	constraint	on	growth	and	
subsequent	development.	A	fundamental	cause	of	poverty	is	low	wages	and	poverty	pay	is	linked	to	
relatively	low	productivity	(measured	in	different	ways	such	as	the	value	of	output	per	person	employed).		
• Economists	such	as	Nicholas	Bloom	from	Stanford	University	in	the	USA	have	been	studying	the	impact	of	
weak	management	in	some	developing	countries	including	India.	Bloom	has	argued	for	example	that	“In	India	
are	badly	managed:	equipment	is	not	looked	after,	materials	are	wasted,	and	theft	is	common	because	
inventory	is	not	monitored,	defects	keep	occurring.		In	a	recent	project	with	the	World	Bank,	we	found	that	
giving	management	advice	to	Indian	factories	increased	productivity	by	20%.”	
• Weaker	management	may	also	help	to	explain	why	many	poorer	countries	have	not	fully	and	intensively	
adopted	new	technologies.	Many	of	the	least	developed	countries	tend	to	use	technologies	less	intensively	-	
fewer	people	use	less	advanced	computers	less	often.	
Capital	Flight	
• Capital	flight	is	the	uncertain	and	rapid	movement	of	large	sums	of	money	out	of	a	country	
• There	could	be	several	reasons	-	lack	of	confidence	in	a	country's	economy	and/or	its	currency,	political	
turmoil	or	fears	that	a	government	plans	to	take	privately-owned	assets	under	state	control	
• Capital	flight	can	lead	to	a	loss	of	foreign	currency	reserves	and	put	downward	pressure	on	an	exchange	rate	
–	driving	the	prices	of	essential	imports	of	goods	and	services	higher.	
• Developing	countries	are	estimated	to	have	lost	$5.86	trillion	in	2001-2010	to	illicit	financial	flows	
Conflicts,	Corruption	and	Poor	Governance	
• Governance	refers	to	how	a	country	is	run	and	whether	the	exercise	of	authority	manages	scarce	resources	
well	improving	economic	outcomes	and	the	quality	of	life	for	a	country’s	people.		
• High	levels	of	corruption	and	bureaucratic	delays	can	harm	growth	by	inhibiting	inward	investment	
• Corruption	makes	it	likely	that	domestic	businesses	will	invest	overseas	rather	than	at	home.		
• According	to	the	United	Nations,	“Corruption	undermines	human	development	and	democracy.	It	reduces	
access	to	public	services	by	diverting	public	resources	for	private	gain.”	
	
Governments	need	a	stable	and	effective	legal	framework	to	collect	taxes	to	pay	for	public	services.	In	India	for	
example,	there	are	15	times	more	phone	subscribers	than	taxpayers.	If	a	legal	system	cannot	protect	private	property	
rights	then	there	will	be	less	research	and	development	&	innovation.	
	
Conflicts	–	there	have	been	an	estimated	150	conflicts	since	1945	with	28	million	deaths	(this	is	twice	the	toll	of	
WW1).	Conflicts	have	huge	collateral	damage	effects	–	for	example,	Angola	has	lost	80%	of	its	farmland	because	of	
Keeping	track	of	
election	promises
Low	transparency	of	
where	tax	revenues	
come	from
How	is	state	money	
spent	and	on	
whom?
Corruption
Is	the	government	
delivering	key	public	
services?
How	is	this	money	
spent?	Does	it	
deliver	good	
outcomes	per	$	
spent?
Is	spending	effective	
in	promoting	long	
run	growth?
Impact
Can	people	trust	
government	and	
institutions?
How	free	of	
corruption	is	the	
government?
Is	the	distribution	of	
spending	equitable?
Fairness
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landmines.	Most	conflicts	are	intra-state	i.e.	civil	war	and	reconstruction	can	take	decades	and	many	countries	
remain	aid-dependent.	About	1.5	billion	people	live	in	countries	suffering	waves	of	political	and	criminal	violence.	
	
A	recent	example	of	the	cost	of	conflict	comes	from	the	Ivory	Coast.	After	a	disputed	presidential	election	in	late	2010	
violence	erupted	and	the	country	descended	into	a	four-month	civil	war	that	killed	an	estimated	3000	and	displaced	
around	a	million	people.	The	war	could	only	be	ended	by	a	French	intervention	in	April	2011.	Since	then,	a	new	
government	under	President	Ouattara	has	struggled	to	re-establish	security	but	raids	against	army	and	policy	
installations	still	threaten	stability.	
	
Corruption	has	long	been	a	barrier	to	sustained	growth	and	development	in	Africa.	Conflict	has	had	terrible	
consequences;	over	one	third	of	economies	in	Africa	have	suffered	some	kind	of	warfare	from	Rwanda,	Sierra	Leone,	
Eritrea,	Uganda,	and	Somalia.	Corruption	can	cost	a	country	up	to	17%	of	its	GDP	according	to	the	United	Nations.	
	
That	said	encouraging	progress	has	been	made	in	building	democratic	institutions	in	many	African	countries.	
	
Economic	growth	can	collapse	and	go	into	reverse	when	states	fail	–	there	are	numerous	reasons	why	chronic	
government	failure	can	hamper	growth	and	development:	
• Failures	to	protect	property	rights	and	provide	sufficient	incentives	for	new	businesses	to	flourish	
• Forced	labour,	caste	labour	and	other	forms	of	discrimination	–	all	of	which	waste	scarce	human	resources	
not	least	limiting	the	roles	that	women	can	play	in	labour	markets	and	–	over	the	long	term	-	holding	back	
innovation	and	technological	progress	(two	key	drivers	of	growth)	
• Power	elites	controlling	an	economy	-	using	their	power	to	create	monopolies	that	keep	consumer	prices	
high	and	blocking	socially	useful	new	technologies	
• Stateless	areas	-	large	parts	of	the	world	are	still	dominated	by	stateless	societies	where	the	rule	of	law	
barely	exists	
• Public	goods	-	chronic	failures	to	provide	basic	and	effective	public	services	such	as	education,	health	and	
transport.	Many	of	the	world’s	least	developed	countries	have	not	built	effective	tax	systems	and	so	their	
revenue	base	is	inadequate	for	much	needed	capital	investment	and	the	annual	revenues	required	to	provide	
public	health	and	education	programmes	
Population	Decline,	Brain	Drains	and	/	or	an	Ageing	Population	
• A	falling	population	can	usually	be	attributed	to	emigration	and/or	death	rates	exceeding	birth	rates.	
• If	a	nation	loses	younger	workers,	this	can	have	a	damaging	effect	on	competitiveness	and	growth	
• The	changing	age-structure	of	a	population	also	matters,	leading	to	a	fall	in	the	ratio	of	workers	to	
dependants	i.e.	a	rise	in	the	age-dependency	ratio	
Demographic	change	is	important	to	many	of	the	fast	growing	countries	in	Asia.		
• Most	countries	in	East	Asia	are	expected	to	experience	a	decline	the	portion	of	their	working	age	population	
(15-64	years)	to	total	population	from	now	until	2025	
• Seven	countries	are	expected	to	see	declines	of	10	per	cent	or	more	(including	China,	Japan,	Thailand	and	
Vietnam)	while	three	will	see	declines	of	over	20	per	cent	(Hong	Kong	SAR	China,	Korea	and	Singapore)	
• Countries	such	as	Indonesia,	Mongolia,	Myanmar	and	Vietnam	are	forecast	to	see	a	decline	in	their	
population	size	due	to	a	combination	of	emigration	and	demographics
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Declining	populations	in	Eastern	Europe	
• Many	countries	in	Eastern	Europe	face	the	challenge	of	continued	population	decline.	Only	two	out	of	twelve	
countries	will	experience	population	growth	according	to	recent	estimates.		
• The	relationship	between	demographic	trends,	per-capita	income	and	economic	growth	is	complex.		
• Lower	per-capita	income	should	lead	to	higher	growth,	but	it	has	a	negative	impact	on	the	labour	supply.		
• Many	countries	in	Eastern	Europe	will	have	to	rely	on	capital	accumulation	and	productivity	growth	rather	
than	labour	force	growth	to	generate	future	economic	growth.	
Russia	–	is	experiencing	a	sustained	decline	in	their	population	and	their	active	labour	force.	High	levels	of	net	
migration,	rising	death	rates	linked	to	exceptionally	high	accident	rates	and	the	effects	of	alcohol	abuse	have	all	
contributed	to	a	fall	in	population	to	below	150	million.	
	
Globally	the	world’s	population	is	ageing.	Within	next	10	years,	there	will	be	1	billion	older	people	worldwide.	By	2050	
nearly	one	in	five	people	in	developing	countries	will	be	over	60	
	
Countries	with	the	lowest	fertility	rate	in	2014	
The	fertility	rate	is	the	average	number	of	children	born	per	woman	of	childbearing	age	in	a	country.	Usually,	a	
woman	aged	between	15	and	45	is	considered	to	be	in	her	childbearing	years	
	
Singapore	 0.80	
Macau	 0.93	
Taiwan	 1.11	
Hong	Kong	 1.17	
South	Korea	 1.25	
Lithuania	 1.29	
Ukraine	 1.30	
Romania	 1.32	
Poland	 1.33	
Slovenia	 1.33
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High	rate	of	Inflation	and	trade	deficits	
High	Inflation	
• Faster	growing	countries	may	experience	high	inflation	which	can	have	damaging	economic	consequences	
• Developing	countries	typically	have	higher	average	inflation	rates	than	advanced,	rich	nations	
• These	effects	of	high	inflation	in	particular	can	hit	growth	
o Falling	real	incomes	and	profits	together	with	higher	costs	
o The	threat	of	a	rise	in	extreme	poverty	for	the	most	vulnerable	in	a	nation’s	population	
o Reduced	planned	investment	by	businesses	
o Negative	effects	from	higher	interest	rates	used	to	combat	inflation	problems	
o Reduced	competitiveness	in	international	markets	leading	to	a	loss	of	export	sales	
Persistent	Trade	Deficits	
• Some	countries	may	experience	large	deficits	on	the	current	account	of	their	balance	of	payments.	This	
means	that	the	value	of	imported	goods	and	services	is	greater	than	the	value	of	exports	and	net	investment	
incomes	leading	to	an	outflow	of	money	from	their	economy.		
• High	trade	deficits	might	have	to	be	covered	by	foreign	borrowing	(increasing	external	debt)	or	a	reliance	on	
inflows	of	capital	investment	from	overseas	multinationals	
• Large	trade	gaps	can	eventually	lead	to	a	currency	crisis	and	possible	loss	of	investor	confidence.		
Over-extraction	of	the	Natural	Resource	Base	
• Despite	being	heavily	endowed	natural	resources,	Africa	has	the	highest	poverty	rate	in	the	world	
• Natural	resources	provide	a	source	of	wealth	for	many	lower-income	countries	and	when	world	prices	are	
high,	there	is	an	incentive	to	increase	extraction	rates	to	raise	short-term	export	earnings.	This	might	lead	to	
a	high	rate	of	extraction	that	damages	growth	potential	
• Deforestation	and	rapid	extraction	of	oceanic	fish	stocks	threaten	development.	The	World	Bank	finds	that	
350	million	jobs	are	linked	to	the	health	of	the	oceans	and	1	billion	of	the	poorest	people	in	the	world	depend	
on	fish	as	their	major	source	of	protein	
• Critical	water	scarcity	in	agriculture	is	a	major	problem.	The	MDG	for	drinking	water	was	met	in	2010,	yet	1	
billion	still	lack	access	to	clean	water.	The	number	suffering	with	water	scarcity	is	expected	to	rise	to	2.8	
billion	by	2025	
• Extreme	weather	events	are	becoming	more	frequent.	The	damaging	effects	of	these	extreme	climatic	
events	fall	most	heavily	on	the	poorest	and	most	vulnerable	communities	in	developed	and	developing	
countries.	
Low	Level	of	Investment	in	Human	Capital	
• To	sustain	growth	requires	improvements	in	productivity,	research	&	development	and	innovation.	Whilst	
physical	capital	such	as	technology	plays	a	role,	so	too	does	the	quality	of	the	human	input	into	production.		
• Growth	might	be	limited	by	skills	shortages	as	businesses	seek	to	expand	which	forces	up	labour	costs.		
• High	level	skills	and	qualifications	are	also	needed	to	help	businesses	to	move	up	the	value	chain	and	supply	
products	that	will	get	higher	prices	in	the	world	economy.		
• In	many	countries	there	are	acute	shortages	of	human	capital.	Although	primary	enrolment	rates	have	risen,	
secondary	enrolment	and	teacher	quality	is	poor	and	the	tertiary	education	sector	is	tiny	and	low	quality.		
• Higher	education	is	also	highly	important.	For	example,	university	enrolment	in	Africa	is	only	7%	of	the	
relevant	age	group	versus	a	world	average	of	30%	
• Some	countries	lose	some	of	its	limited	skilled	workforce	to	other	countries	through	a	brain	drain	
Inequality	of	Income	and	Wealth	
Although	two	decades	or	more	of	globalisation	has	strengthened	growth	rates	in	many	lower	and	middle-income	
countries,	it	has	brought	an	increase	in	inequalities	of	income	and	wealth.
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• There	are	many	possible	dangers	of	this	not	least	the	costs	of	social	tension	and	conflict	and	increasing	
spending	on	insurance,	law	and	order	systems	and	government	welfare	bills.		
• Recent	theoretical	work	finds	a	negative	correlation	between	income	inequality	and	economic	growth.	One	
book	-	The	Spirit	Level	(Kate	Pickett	and	Richard	Wilkinson)	finds	evidence	that	unequal	societies	may	
become	less	competitive	over	time.	
• An	IMF	paper	published	in	2013	economists	claimed	that	“inequality	can	undermine	progress	in	health	and	
education,	cause	investment-reducing	political	and	economic	instability,	and	undercut	the	social	consensus	
required	in	the	face	of	shocks,	and	thus	tends	to	reduce	the	pace	or	growth.”	
	
Economic	and	Human	Cost	of	Malnutrition	
High	rates	of	malnutrition	can	severely	impair	development	and	bring	untold	human	misery.	Poor	nutrition	can	have	
serious	negative	effects	on	development	prospects.	
• It	impairs	brain	development	–	nearly	one	in	five	under-5	children	in	the	developing	world	are	under-weight.	
165	million	children	under-5	suffer	from	stunting	
• It	is	responsible	for	half	of	all	child	deaths	–	38%	of	under-five	children	in	the	poorest	20%	of	families	in	
developing	countries	are	underweight	compared	to	14%	of	under-fives	in	the	wealthiest	20%	
• Under	nutrition	causes	45%	of	child	deaths	in	sub-Saharan	Africa	
• Of	44	countries	in	sub-Saharan	Africa,	all	but	two	have	child	stunting	levels	>	20%	
• It	increases	the	risks	of	HIV	infection	and	cuts	the	numbers	who	survive	outbreaks	of	malaria	
• Malnourished	children	are	more	likely	to	drop	out	of	school	and	suffer	reductions	in	their	lifetime	incomes	
• According	to	the	World	Bank,	“the	effects	of	this	early	damage	on	health,	brain	development,	educability,	and	
productivity	caused	by	malnutrition	are	largely	irreversible.”	
• Low		income	families	spend	a	higher	%	of	their	incomes	- inequalities	
depress	consumer	demand
• Investment	skewed	towards	preferences	of	the	rich
Consumption	and	mis-allocation	of	
resources
• Incentives	are	undoubtedly	needed	for	enterprise
• But	excessive	compensation	can	encourage	too	much	risk-taking	
especially	in	financial	markets
Risk-taking
• High	inequality	deprives	many	people	of	access	to	education		limiting	
human	capital	growth
• Many	of	the	poorest	pay	more	for	their	debt	
Market	failures
• Structural	unemployment	and	vulnerable	employment	increases	the	
burden	on	the	state
• Low	employment	damages	social	capital
Unemployment	and	social	cohesion	/	
upheaval
Edexcel A2 Economics Unit 4 Course Companion 2016
tutor2u www.tutor2u.net			 121	
	
	
There	has	been	progress	in	reducing	malnutrition	globally	but	high	prices	for	basic	foods	in	recent	years	have	become	
a	major	problem	in	the	fight	against	endemic	malnutrition.	Another	effect	is	that	high	food	prices	make	substitution	of	
unhealthy	calories	more	likely,	contributing	to	global	obesity	level.	
	
Policies	to	reduce	malnutrition	
1. Spending	on	nutrition	education	plus	direct	provision	of	micro-nutrient	supplements	and	fortified	foods	
2. Growth	monitoring	schemes	for	the	newly	born	and	infants	supplemented	with	vitamin	provision	from	
community	organisations	
3. Targeting	cultural	norms	–	in	some	countries,	girls	are	often	allowed	to	eat	only	after	their	brothers	
4. Cash	transfers	–	i.e.	consumer	subsidies	that	can	be	spent	on	certain	foods	
5. Government	subsidies	for	grain	prices	and	export	bans	on	domestically	produced	foods	
6. Higher	market	prices	paid	to	small-scale	farmers	
7. Opening	up	retail	markets	to	international	supermarkets	where	food	prices	might	come	down	through	
economies	of	scale	and	increased	competition	
8. Infrastructure	spending	to	improve	access	to	and	quality	of	sanitation	and	clean	water	supplies	
Gender	Inequalities	and	Discrimination	
The	unequal	opportunities	available	to	hundreds	of	millions	of	women	around	the	world	represent	one	of	the	biggest	
barriers	to	growth	and	development.	According	to	the	UN	Human	Development	Report:	“All	too	often,	women	and	
girls	are	discriminated	against	in	health,	education,	political	representation,	labour	market,	etc.	—	with	negative	
repercussions	for	development	of	their	capabilities	and	their	freedom	of	choice.”
Edexcel A2 Economics Unit 4 Course Companion 2016
tutor2u www.tutor2u.net			 122	
	
1) Just	over	half	of	the	world’s	female	population	aged	15-64	is	in	employment,	compared	to	more	than	8	out	of	
10	men.	But	the	proportion	of	economically	active	women	has	declined	in	the	last	20	years	
2) In	many	countries	women	are	subject	to	cultural	norms	preventing	them	playing	a	full	and	active	role	
a. According	to	the	World	Bank,	232	million	women	live	in	economies	where	they	can't	get	a	job	
without	their	husband's	permission	
b. Only	1	in	4	women	in	the	Arab	world	participate	in	the	labour	force	
c. Less	than	10%	of	credit	for	small	farmers	in	Africa	is	directed	to	women	
d. Without	ID,	women	can’t	access	a	bank	account,	vote,	claim	entitlements	or	inherit	property	
e. Women	make	up	70%	of	Africa’s	farmers	but	the	majority	are	locked	out	of	land	ownership	
f. In	only	two	countries,	Cuba	and	Rwanda,	does	the	share	of	women	in	parliament	match	or	exceed	
their	share	in	the	population	
3) Some	progress	is	being	made,	from	2009	to	2011,	39	developing	countries	made	legal	changes	towards	
gender	parity	–	but	only	38	out	of	141	nations	set	the	same	legal	rights	for	men	and	women	
4) Women	in	many	countries	have	a	substantial	role	in	the	informal	economy,	working	in	family	businesses,	
doing	domestic	work	and	producing	goods	for	self-consumption.	This	type	of	work	generally	offers	low,	
irregular	or	no	pay	and	little	or	no	access	to	social	security	or	legal	protection	
Savings	Gap	and	Foreign	Exchange	Gap	
	
Limited	Scales	and	Efficiency	of	Financial	Markets	
• Many	of	the	least	developed	countries	have	limited	financial	markets	such	as	banking,	money	and	credit	
systems,	insurance	markets	and	stock	markets.		
• Worldwide,	approximately	2.5	billion	people	do	not	have	a	formal	account	at	a	financial	institution.	Access	to	
financial	services	is	linked	to	overcoming	poverty,	reducing	income	disparities,	and	increasing	growth	
• These	are	essential	for	providing	long	term	capital	for	the	private	sector	and	helping	to	channel	savings	and	
provide	funds	for	investment	projects.
Edexcel A2 Economics Unit 4 Course Companion 2016
tutor2u www.tutor2u.net			 123	
• Some	progress	is	being	made	in	Sub-Saharan	Africa	–	there	are	now	19	stock	markets	in	operation	–	but	most	
of	these	are	small	by	international	standards.	The	Nigerian	stock	market	accounts	for	only	3%	of	Brazil	or	
India’s	stock	market	capitalization.	
Savings	Gaps	
• Many	poorer	countries	do	not	have	sufficient	domestic	savings	to	be	able	to	finance	the	required	rate	of	
capital	investment	to	promote	economic	growth	
• Many	developing	countries	also	suffer	from	a	shortage	of	foreign	exchange	that	can	be	used	to	finance	
imports	of	consumer	goods	and	services,	raw	materials	and	components	and	new	capital	inputs	
Deriving	the	savings	gap	and	the	foreign	exchange	gaps	
Thinking	back	to	introductory	national	income	accounting		
• Y	is	total	output	produced	in	a	given	year	(GDP)	
• C	is	private	consumption		
• I	stand	for	total	investment	
• G	is	government	consumption	
• X	denotes	exports	
• M	represents	imports	
• S	is	savings	
• T	stands	for	total	government	tax	revenue	
We	know	that	
• Y	(GDP)	=	C+I+G+X-M	
• Y	is	also	the	sum	of	C	+	S	+	T	
Rearranging	
• C+I+G+X-M	=	C+	S	+	T	
Therefore	
• S-I	=	(X-M)	+	(G-T)	
This	gives	us	an	equation	explaining	the	total	resource	gap	of	an	economy	into	internal	balance	(i.e.	the	government	
budget)	and	also	the	external	gap	(balance	of	trade)	
	
Overview	of	Financing	for	Development	
The	main	sources	of	finance	for	development	are:	
• Savings	from	the	domestic	private	sector	
• Revenues	of	developing	country	governments	themselves	
• Overseas	development	assistance	(otherwise	known	as	overseas	aid)	
• Loans	taken	out	by	(or	guaranteed	by)	developing	country	governments,	from	international	financial	
institutions	or	private	sources	
• Private	external	finance,	in	the	form	of	foreign	direct	investment	(FDI)	and	other	portfolio	flows	e.g.	into	
bond	and	stock	markets	
Without	question,	private	sector	financing	now	dominates	the	financial	flows	that	are	funding	development	projects	
in	most	of	the	world’s	lower	and	middle-income	countries.

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Constraints on economic development revision pack

  • 1. Edexcel A2 Economics Unit 4 Course Companion 2016 tutor2u www.tutor2u.net 113 17.Constraints on Growth and Development Economic growth and human development progress is not guaranteed and some countries struggle to maintain the minimum growth rate needed to bring down rates of extreme poverty and sustain a chosen development path. Overview of some of the key limiters on growth and development Infrastructure Primary Export Dependency Macro Instability Conflict and Corruption Human Capital Weaknesses Savings and Foreign Exchange Gap Natural Capital Depletion Inequality
  • 2. Edexcel A2 Economics Unit 4 Course Companion 2016 tutor2u www.tutor2u.net 114 What Factors Can Limit Growth and Development? Infrastructure Gaps • Infrastructure includes physical capital such as critical energy power and water supplies, sanitation, telecommunications & transport networks, schools and hospitals • Evidence shows a positive correlation between a country's development and the quality of its road network • Poor infrastructure: o Causes higher supply costs and delays for businesses o Reduces labour mobility and hurts the ability of exporters to get products to global markets. • According to the World Bank, transport costs are 25-30% of product costs in developing countries partly because of deficiencies in infrastructure Examples of infrastructure deficiencies: 1. India: India’s irrigation system is not properly managed and this has made it difficult to sustain food grain production when rainfall is less than expected – as was the case in 2012. This has led to a surge in food prices, which hits the poorest communities hardest. For a few days in the summer of 2012, much of northern India was plunged into darkness. About 700 million people were left without power, a situation that affected transport, communication, healthcare, industries and farming. India needs an estimated $400bn investment in the power sector if it is to meet their development goals. About half of India’s roads are not paved. 2. Asia - in Asia, an estimated 300m people have no access to clean drinking water due to infrastructure gaps 3. Brazil: Host for the 2014 World Cup and the 2016 Olympics. Brazil’s growth is constrained by infrastructure weaknesses: In 2011, only 14% of her roads were paved. The World Economic Forum ranks Brazil’s quality of infrastructure 104th out of 142 countries surveyed, behind China (69th), India (86th) and Russia (100th). 4. Sub-Saharan Africa: The combined power generation capacity of the 48 countries of Sub-Saharan Africa is 68 gig watts – no more than Spain’s. Poor road, rail and harbour infrastructure adds 30-40% to the costs of goods traded among African countries. A chronic shortage of energy - with firms and people facing acute shortages of power – is a major barrier to growth and development. According to the Asian Development Bank Report for 2013, Africa currently invests just 4% of its GDP in infrastructure, compared with China's 14%. Sub-Saharan Africa loses 2.1% of gross domestic product from blackouts alone  One limitation to infrastructure investment in developing countries is that tax revenues are low or come from a narrow base of businesses. Many countries will need to increase their spending on infrastructure in the years ahead to deal with the consequences of climate change. According to the United Nations, between 1901 and 1910 there were eighty-two recorded natural disasters, but between 2003 and 2012 there were more than 4,000 Exam tip: Examiners report that students are not good at explaining exactly how improved infrastructure can raise development. Take a step-by-step approach, using good applied examples to improve your marks. Primary Product Dependency • Many nations still relying on specializing in and exporting low value added primary commodities • The prices of these goods can be volatile on world markets • When prices fall, an economy will see a sharp reduction in export incomes, an adverse movement in their terms of trade, risks of a higher trade deficit and a danger that a nation will not be able to finance state-led investment in education, healthcare and core infrastructure • Despite being rich in natural resources, for many countries this is a curse rather than a blessing Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) is often cited as a region where primary sector dependence is high. SSA’s share in global manufacturing trade remains extremely low. Primary Dependency and External Economic Shocks • Events in one part of the world can quickly affect many other countries • For example, the global financial crisis (GFC) brought about recession in many countries and financial distress in many regions. It also led to a fall in FDI flows into many poorer countries and pressure on governments in rich nations to cut overseas aid budgets.
  • 3. Edexcel A2 Economics Unit 4 Course Companion 2016 tutor2u www.tutor2u.net 115 • If a resource rich country exports the resource, it exposes itself to damaging volatility of its export earnings • In 2010, economists Bruckner and Ciccone found that a 10% fall in income due to falling commodity prices raises the likelihood of civil war in sub-Saharan Africa by around 12%. Land Locked Countries • Land locked economies face challenges to integrate in global trade – without good infrastructure and efficient logistics businesses it can be costly and slow to get products to the countries of trade partners • Some landlocked countries have been doing well especially when they achieve regional economic integration with other land-locked nations. Investment in air transport links helps to overcome this development trap The Savings Gap • Savings are needed to provide finance for capital investment. In many smaller low-income countries, high levels of poverty make it almost impossible to generate sufficient savings to provide the funds needed to fund investment projects. This increases reliance on tied aid. • This problem is known as the savings gap. In Africa for example, savings rates of around 17 per cent of GDP compare to 31 per cent on average for middle-income countries. Low savings rates and poorly developed or malfunctioning financial markets make it more expensive for African public and private sectors to get funds for investment. Higher borrowing costs impede capital investment Volatile Incomes and Vulnerable Employment • Volatility can be disruptive to economic health. It increases the risks for businesses considering capital investment, it raises the chances of people falling into extreme poverty and it makes a nation’s finances more fragile perhaps lowering the scope for important investment in public goods. There is an increasing trend towards temporary contracts and insecure work across the world, according to the International Labour Organization (ILO). In fact, only a quarter of global workers are on permanent contracts while the rest are unpaid at home, self-employed, working informally or employed on a temporary contract
  • 4. Edexcel A2 Economics Unit 4 Course Companion 2016 tutor2u www.tutor2u.net 116 Weaknesses in Management • Few textbooks give emphasis to the quality of business management as a constraint on growth and subsequent development. A fundamental cause of poverty is low wages and poverty pay is linked to relatively low productivity (measured in different ways such as the value of output per person employed). • Economists such as Nicholas Bloom from Stanford University in the USA have been studying the impact of weak management in some developing countries including India. Bloom has argued for example that “In India are badly managed: equipment is not looked after, materials are wasted, and theft is common because inventory is not monitored, defects keep occurring. In a recent project with the World Bank, we found that giving management advice to Indian factories increased productivity by 20%.” • Weaker management may also help to explain why many poorer countries have not fully and intensively adopted new technologies. Many of the least developed countries tend to use technologies less intensively - fewer people use less advanced computers less often. Capital Flight • Capital flight is the uncertain and rapid movement of large sums of money out of a country • There could be several reasons - lack of confidence in a country's economy and/or its currency, political turmoil or fears that a government plans to take privately-owned assets under state control • Capital flight can lead to a loss of foreign currency reserves and put downward pressure on an exchange rate – driving the prices of essential imports of goods and services higher. • Developing countries are estimated to have lost $5.86 trillion in 2001-2010 to illicit financial flows Conflicts, Corruption and Poor Governance • Governance refers to how a country is run and whether the exercise of authority manages scarce resources well improving economic outcomes and the quality of life for a country’s people. • High levels of corruption and bureaucratic delays can harm growth by inhibiting inward investment • Corruption makes it likely that domestic businesses will invest overseas rather than at home. • According to the United Nations, “Corruption undermines human development and democracy. It reduces access to public services by diverting public resources for private gain.” Governments need a stable and effective legal framework to collect taxes to pay for public services. In India for example, there are 15 times more phone subscribers than taxpayers. If a legal system cannot protect private property rights then there will be less research and development & innovation. Conflicts – there have been an estimated 150 conflicts since 1945 with 28 million deaths (this is twice the toll of WW1). Conflicts have huge collateral damage effects – for example, Angola has lost 80% of its farmland because of Keeping track of election promises Low transparency of where tax revenues come from How is state money spent and on whom? Corruption Is the government delivering key public services? How is this money spent? Does it deliver good outcomes per $ spent? Is spending effective in promoting long run growth? Impact Can people trust government and institutions? How free of corruption is the government? Is the distribution of spending equitable? Fairness
  • 5. Edexcel A2 Economics Unit 4 Course Companion 2016 tutor2u www.tutor2u.net 117 landmines. Most conflicts are intra-state i.e. civil war and reconstruction can take decades and many countries remain aid-dependent. About 1.5 billion people live in countries suffering waves of political and criminal violence. A recent example of the cost of conflict comes from the Ivory Coast. After a disputed presidential election in late 2010 violence erupted and the country descended into a four-month civil war that killed an estimated 3000 and displaced around a million people. The war could only be ended by a French intervention in April 2011. Since then, a new government under President Ouattara has struggled to re-establish security but raids against army and policy installations still threaten stability. Corruption has long been a barrier to sustained growth and development in Africa. Conflict has had terrible consequences; over one third of economies in Africa have suffered some kind of warfare from Rwanda, Sierra Leone, Eritrea, Uganda, and Somalia. Corruption can cost a country up to 17% of its GDP according to the United Nations. That said encouraging progress has been made in building democratic institutions in many African countries. Economic growth can collapse and go into reverse when states fail – there are numerous reasons why chronic government failure can hamper growth and development: • Failures to protect property rights and provide sufficient incentives for new businesses to flourish • Forced labour, caste labour and other forms of discrimination – all of which waste scarce human resources not least limiting the roles that women can play in labour markets and – over the long term - holding back innovation and technological progress (two key drivers of growth) • Power elites controlling an economy - using their power to create monopolies that keep consumer prices high and blocking socially useful new technologies • Stateless areas - large parts of the world are still dominated by stateless societies where the rule of law barely exists • Public goods - chronic failures to provide basic and effective public services such as education, health and transport. Many of the world’s least developed countries have not built effective tax systems and so their revenue base is inadequate for much needed capital investment and the annual revenues required to provide public health and education programmes Population Decline, Brain Drains and / or an Ageing Population • A falling population can usually be attributed to emigration and/or death rates exceeding birth rates. • If a nation loses younger workers, this can have a damaging effect on competitiveness and growth • The changing age-structure of a population also matters, leading to a fall in the ratio of workers to dependants i.e. a rise in the age-dependency ratio Demographic change is important to many of the fast growing countries in Asia. • Most countries in East Asia are expected to experience a decline the portion of their working age population (15-64 years) to total population from now until 2025 • Seven countries are expected to see declines of 10 per cent or more (including China, Japan, Thailand and Vietnam) while three will see declines of over 20 per cent (Hong Kong SAR China, Korea and Singapore) • Countries such as Indonesia, Mongolia, Myanmar and Vietnam are forecast to see a decline in their population size due to a combination of emigration and demographics
  • 6. Edexcel A2 Economics Unit 4 Course Companion 2016 tutor2u www.tutor2u.net 118 Declining populations in Eastern Europe • Many countries in Eastern Europe face the challenge of continued population decline. Only two out of twelve countries will experience population growth according to recent estimates. • The relationship between demographic trends, per-capita income and economic growth is complex. • Lower per-capita income should lead to higher growth, but it has a negative impact on the labour supply. • Many countries in Eastern Europe will have to rely on capital accumulation and productivity growth rather than labour force growth to generate future economic growth. Russia – is experiencing a sustained decline in their population and their active labour force. High levels of net migration, rising death rates linked to exceptionally high accident rates and the effects of alcohol abuse have all contributed to a fall in population to below 150 million. Globally the world’s population is ageing. Within next 10 years, there will be 1 billion older people worldwide. By 2050 nearly one in five people in developing countries will be over 60 Countries with the lowest fertility rate in 2014 The fertility rate is the average number of children born per woman of childbearing age in a country. Usually, a woman aged between 15 and 45 is considered to be in her childbearing years Singapore 0.80 Macau 0.93 Taiwan 1.11 Hong Kong 1.17 South Korea 1.25 Lithuania 1.29 Ukraine 1.30 Romania 1.32 Poland 1.33 Slovenia 1.33
  • 7. Edexcel A2 Economics Unit 4 Course Companion 2016 tutor2u www.tutor2u.net 119 High rate of Inflation and trade deficits High Inflation • Faster growing countries may experience high inflation which can have damaging economic consequences • Developing countries typically have higher average inflation rates than advanced, rich nations • These effects of high inflation in particular can hit growth o Falling real incomes and profits together with higher costs o The threat of a rise in extreme poverty for the most vulnerable in a nation’s population o Reduced planned investment by businesses o Negative effects from higher interest rates used to combat inflation problems o Reduced competitiveness in international markets leading to a loss of export sales Persistent Trade Deficits • Some countries may experience large deficits on the current account of their balance of payments. This means that the value of imported goods and services is greater than the value of exports and net investment incomes leading to an outflow of money from their economy. • High trade deficits might have to be covered by foreign borrowing (increasing external debt) or a reliance on inflows of capital investment from overseas multinationals • Large trade gaps can eventually lead to a currency crisis and possible loss of investor confidence. Over-extraction of the Natural Resource Base • Despite being heavily endowed natural resources, Africa has the highest poverty rate in the world • Natural resources provide a source of wealth for many lower-income countries and when world prices are high, there is an incentive to increase extraction rates to raise short-term export earnings. This might lead to a high rate of extraction that damages growth potential • Deforestation and rapid extraction of oceanic fish stocks threaten development. The World Bank finds that 350 million jobs are linked to the health of the oceans and 1 billion of the poorest people in the world depend on fish as their major source of protein • Critical water scarcity in agriculture is a major problem. The MDG for drinking water was met in 2010, yet 1 billion still lack access to clean water. The number suffering with water scarcity is expected to rise to 2.8 billion by 2025 • Extreme weather events are becoming more frequent. The damaging effects of these extreme climatic events fall most heavily on the poorest and most vulnerable communities in developed and developing countries. Low Level of Investment in Human Capital • To sustain growth requires improvements in productivity, research & development and innovation. Whilst physical capital such as technology plays a role, so too does the quality of the human input into production. • Growth might be limited by skills shortages as businesses seek to expand which forces up labour costs. • High level skills and qualifications are also needed to help businesses to move up the value chain and supply products that will get higher prices in the world economy. • In many countries there are acute shortages of human capital. Although primary enrolment rates have risen, secondary enrolment and teacher quality is poor and the tertiary education sector is tiny and low quality. • Higher education is also highly important. For example, university enrolment in Africa is only 7% of the relevant age group versus a world average of 30% • Some countries lose some of its limited skilled workforce to other countries through a brain drain Inequality of Income and Wealth Although two decades or more of globalisation has strengthened growth rates in many lower and middle-income countries, it has brought an increase in inequalities of income and wealth.
  • 8. Edexcel A2 Economics Unit 4 Course Companion 2016 tutor2u www.tutor2u.net 120 • There are many possible dangers of this not least the costs of social tension and conflict and increasing spending on insurance, law and order systems and government welfare bills. • Recent theoretical work finds a negative correlation between income inequality and economic growth. One book - The Spirit Level (Kate Pickett and Richard Wilkinson) finds evidence that unequal societies may become less competitive over time. • An IMF paper published in 2013 economists claimed that “inequality can undermine progress in health and education, cause investment-reducing political and economic instability, and undercut the social consensus required in the face of shocks, and thus tends to reduce the pace or growth.” Economic and Human Cost of Malnutrition High rates of malnutrition can severely impair development and bring untold human misery. Poor nutrition can have serious negative effects on development prospects. • It impairs brain development – nearly one in five under-5 children in the developing world are under-weight. 165 million children under-5 suffer from stunting • It is responsible for half of all child deaths – 38% of under-five children in the poorest 20% of families in developing countries are underweight compared to 14% of under-fives in the wealthiest 20% • Under nutrition causes 45% of child deaths in sub-Saharan Africa • Of 44 countries in sub-Saharan Africa, all but two have child stunting levels > 20% • It increases the risks of HIV infection and cuts the numbers who survive outbreaks of malaria • Malnourished children are more likely to drop out of school and suffer reductions in their lifetime incomes • According to the World Bank, “the effects of this early damage on health, brain development, educability, and productivity caused by malnutrition are largely irreversible.” • Low income families spend a higher % of their incomes - inequalities depress consumer demand • Investment skewed towards preferences of the rich Consumption and mis-allocation of resources • Incentives are undoubtedly needed for enterprise • But excessive compensation can encourage too much risk-taking especially in financial markets Risk-taking • High inequality deprives many people of access to education limiting human capital growth • Many of the poorest pay more for their debt Market failures • Structural unemployment and vulnerable employment increases the burden on the state • Low employment damages social capital Unemployment and social cohesion / upheaval
  • 9. Edexcel A2 Economics Unit 4 Course Companion 2016 tutor2u www.tutor2u.net 121 There has been progress in reducing malnutrition globally but high prices for basic foods in recent years have become a major problem in the fight against endemic malnutrition. Another effect is that high food prices make substitution of unhealthy calories more likely, contributing to global obesity level. Policies to reduce malnutrition 1. Spending on nutrition education plus direct provision of micro-nutrient supplements and fortified foods 2. Growth monitoring schemes for the newly born and infants supplemented with vitamin provision from community organisations 3. Targeting cultural norms – in some countries, girls are often allowed to eat only after their brothers 4. Cash transfers – i.e. consumer subsidies that can be spent on certain foods 5. Government subsidies for grain prices and export bans on domestically produced foods 6. Higher market prices paid to small-scale farmers 7. Opening up retail markets to international supermarkets where food prices might come down through economies of scale and increased competition 8. Infrastructure spending to improve access to and quality of sanitation and clean water supplies Gender Inequalities and Discrimination The unequal opportunities available to hundreds of millions of women around the world represent one of the biggest barriers to growth and development. According to the UN Human Development Report: “All too often, women and girls are discriminated against in health, education, political representation, labour market, etc. — with negative repercussions for development of their capabilities and their freedom of choice.”
  • 10. Edexcel A2 Economics Unit 4 Course Companion 2016 tutor2u www.tutor2u.net 122 1) Just over half of the world’s female population aged 15-64 is in employment, compared to more than 8 out of 10 men. But the proportion of economically active women has declined in the last 20 years 2) In many countries women are subject to cultural norms preventing them playing a full and active role a. According to the World Bank, 232 million women live in economies where they can't get a job without their husband's permission b. Only 1 in 4 women in the Arab world participate in the labour force c. Less than 10% of credit for small farmers in Africa is directed to women d. Without ID, women can’t access a bank account, vote, claim entitlements or inherit property e. Women make up 70% of Africa’s farmers but the majority are locked out of land ownership f. In only two countries, Cuba and Rwanda, does the share of women in parliament match or exceed their share in the population 3) Some progress is being made, from 2009 to 2011, 39 developing countries made legal changes towards gender parity – but only 38 out of 141 nations set the same legal rights for men and women 4) Women in many countries have a substantial role in the informal economy, working in family businesses, doing domestic work and producing goods for self-consumption. This type of work generally offers low, irregular or no pay and little or no access to social security or legal protection Savings Gap and Foreign Exchange Gap Limited Scales and Efficiency of Financial Markets • Many of the least developed countries have limited financial markets such as banking, money and credit systems, insurance markets and stock markets. • Worldwide, approximately 2.5 billion people do not have a formal account at a financial institution. Access to financial services is linked to overcoming poverty, reducing income disparities, and increasing growth • These are essential for providing long term capital for the private sector and helping to channel savings and provide funds for investment projects.
  • 11. Edexcel A2 Economics Unit 4 Course Companion 2016 tutor2u www.tutor2u.net 123 • Some progress is being made in Sub-Saharan Africa – there are now 19 stock markets in operation – but most of these are small by international standards. The Nigerian stock market accounts for only 3% of Brazil or India’s stock market capitalization. Savings Gaps • Many poorer countries do not have sufficient domestic savings to be able to finance the required rate of capital investment to promote economic growth • Many developing countries also suffer from a shortage of foreign exchange that can be used to finance imports of consumer goods and services, raw materials and components and new capital inputs Deriving the savings gap and the foreign exchange gaps Thinking back to introductory national income accounting • Y is total output produced in a given year (GDP) • C is private consumption • I stand for total investment • G is government consumption • X denotes exports • M represents imports • S is savings • T stands for total government tax revenue We know that • Y (GDP) = C+I+G+X-M • Y is also the sum of C + S + T Rearranging • C+I+G+X-M = C+ S + T Therefore • S-I = (X-M) + (G-T) This gives us an equation explaining the total resource gap of an economy into internal balance (i.e. the government budget) and also the external gap (balance of trade) Overview of Financing for Development The main sources of finance for development are: • Savings from the domestic private sector • Revenues of developing country governments themselves • Overseas development assistance (otherwise known as overseas aid) • Loans taken out by (or guaranteed by) developing country governments, from international financial institutions or private sources • Private external finance, in the form of foreign direct investment (FDI) and other portfolio flows e.g. into bond and stock markets Without question, private sector financing now dominates the financial flows that are funding development projects in most of the world’s lower and middle-income countries.