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Bridging the Development Gap
Development Gap – The difference in income and quality of life in general between the richest and poorest countries in the world
Food CrisisBefore Cheap imports Low interest rates – cheaper property Food surpluses
After (2006) Price of rice rose by 70% between 2007/08 Poor harvests Growth of biofuels reducing land available Rising demand Hoarding of rise Rising oil prices Speculators predicting food futures Lead to several govts banning the export of rice
Philippines 1990s was self sufficient, by 2008, was worlds biggest importer,
due to urban development and population growth Troops had to distribute rice Restaurants advised to give half portions of rice
Identifying the Development GapNorth-South Divide 1981, the Brandt Report was created Showed the ‘North’ had 80% of wealth (1/3)
Measuring the DG GDP – value of products produced in a country over a year,
also can be changed into GDP per capita showing the average income
GNI – Shows the income from overseas investments, and profits from subsidiary overseas firms – many wealthy countries earn money this way
GDP/GNI do not show what per capita is worth in terms of spending power and taking into to account the cost of living
PPP – To show what per capita income would purchase when the cost of living is taken into consideration (Several currencies expressed in one currency)
HDI – Measures quality of life – life expectancy, education (literacy and length), GDP per capita
Below 0.5 = low level of development >0.8 means high level
Uganda
Green, fertile, rainy seasons, half population of UK, similar land area
Good resources HDI = 0.505, UK = 0.946 GDP per capita - $1454 (4.4% of UK) Based on export of primary products, meaning low income 24% of families undernourished Poorest 20% infant mortality – 106/1000 HIV/AIDS – average life expectancy – 49.5years 60% have access to clean water Now only 6% of population are HIV-positive due to awareness Education – 17% of girls attend primary, 1/30,000 students
allowed to uni
The Debt Crisis Before, several countries self-sufficient, stable and low debt Oil price rise meant OPEC received more money, put money in
banks Banks lent money out, but interest rate rises, increased
payments Several countries could not pay debt IMF helped refinance loans, but only if cuts in govt budgets were
made
Highly Indebted Poor Countries 38 countries, (32 in s-S Africa) Pressure for NGOs to reduce debt burdens 2005 -G8 met, and cancelled $40billion worth of loans from
18countries, as long as good financial management occurred, less corruption and money saved was spent on education, healthcare, and poverty reduction
2008 27/38 countries met conditions for debt relieve saving $85billion
Impacts of Debt Cancellation (Uganda) 20% increase in public services spending (40% on education,
70%health) Free primary schooling introduced 2.2 million have clean access to water HDI rise – 1985 -0.420, 2005 – 0.505
Core and Periphery Core areas drive the world economy, were first industrialised,
from investment from prosperous farm economy Peripheral lack capital, tend to export primary resources Core import, process and add value Global shifts to periphery due to cheap labour
Neo-liberalism Promotes free market theory and the private sector Reduced government influence However, in many developing countries, many feel that threats
such as poverty can only be helped by govt help
South Africa Large reserves of diamonds and gold, several tourists Income inequality rates are high – privatisation gave whites
chance to become richer Unemployment has reached 30% Over 18,000murders a year, crime rates are high New black political party, privatised several industries in 1994 to
attract investment Most economic growth was due to capital intensive Apartheid – segregation between blacks and whites 50% SA’s population under 18 Inflation between 14-20% Cuts in health spending Large regional and ethnic inequalities
Bangalore Specialises in IT, banking and finance Has 40% of IT workforce, attracting foreign investment –
outsourcing Hubs designated to firms such as Electronic City Tax breaks, low wage rates attract firms Has highest average incomes in India Caste system – Religious and social class system – defined by
birth and family – this discrimination has been made illegal, but still occurs
More housing needed, public transport, energy, airport
Trade or Aid Many countries donate 0.7% of GDP to developing countries However, trade may be more effective – multiplier effect
Uganda Uganda’s independence from Britain, lead to Idi Amin to take
over, and exported commodities such as cotton and tea dramatically decreased
Amin now left, growth is achieved but not filtered to the poor
Uganda lent money by IMF – if tariffs were removed Privatisation lead to unemployment as firms became more
efficient Cuts in govt spending Good economic growth average, reduced poverty Low average income, income inequality
Free trade or Fair Trade WTO put pressure on EU subsides on sugar NGOs such as Oxfam put pressure on rich countries Uganda must also remove trade barriers to gain access to EU
markets Uganda has fluctuating economic capacity Poor infrastructure Leaves Uganda vulnerable to global, more competitive
competition
Aid or Investment? Investing in large projects, this has the multiplier effect such as
creating jobs and getting money to the poor Top-down development can have a greater influence and larger
investment Bottom-up occurs on a community level – projects designed to
benefit them Aid – loans, agreements such as purchase of a countries exports Investment – firms locating in a country Projects combining aid and investment such as the Akosombo
Dam
Akosombo Dam(A&I)
Ghana’s
Electricity production – self sufficient, exported Many Ghanaians can not afford electricity Increased water transport inland 80,000 people forced to relocate due to flooded land Lead to increase in tourism and irrigation Decline in shrimp population meaning people have less
protein in their diets Increase in water-borne diseases
US firm Kaiser Aluminium built smelter in Ghana Ghana has several deposits Mined by a Ghanaian firm, 80% owned by US firms Electricity owned by Alcan – HEP plants Ghana’s added value Aluminium going overseas Govt bought smelter to increase control, but closed due
AluminiumSmelter(A&I)
The Pergau DamMalaysiaAid
UgandaBottom-up aid
Kingship ProjectAid
The Millennium Development Goals Eradicate poverty and hunger Achieve higher education Global partnerships for development Environmental sustainability Improve child mortality rates, HIV and AIDS
Progress? Increase in children at school More people receiving AIDS treatment Economic growth
US firm Kaiser Aluminium built smelter in Ghana Ghana has several deposits Mined by a Ghanaian firm, 80% owned by US firms Electricity owned by Alcan – HEP plants Ghana’s added value Aluminium going overseas Govt bought smelter to increase control, but closed due
Built with £234million of British Aid Deal was that Malaysia would purchase £1billion worth of
British built fight jets, despite laws not allowing The Dam was built and organised by British firms Lead to flooding of fertile land No long term benefit, cheaper to invest in gas station
Village of Barlonyo, experienced a 300kill massacre Support of NGOs allowed a democratically run
cooperative to be ran Farmers have equal say in decisions, females have more
power Cooperative allows better cooperation such as sharing
the costs of hiring a truck for harvests Extra income allows schooling for children NGOs have also invested in improving farm output
Run by a school, a club, and a Christian organisation 30% of Moldavians live in poverty Suffer from emigration Poor literacy, school attendance and health rates Community centre built – allowing food preparation,
showers, study area
980million still live on loess than a dollar a day Private sectors increasing NGOs, faith groups and professionals helping out
Critiscm