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ECONOMIC GROWTH

Economic growth; refers to an increase in the capacity


of the economy to produce goods and services over
time.
Economic growth is the single most powerful engine for
generating long-term increases in standards of living
than the removal of recessionary gaps, unemployment,
or inefficiencies because growth can go indefinitely.

In economic theory terms, it involves a shifting


outwards of the production possibility frontier,
showing that the economy as a whole can produce
more goods and services than it could previously.
WHAT CAUSES THE CURVE TO SHIFT

1. Technology can increase the economy’s


production capabilities.
2. Improvements in and greater stocks of
land, labor, and capital can shift out the
production possibilities curve.
3. Another way of saying that economic
growth has shifted the production
possibilities curve out is to say that
growth has increased potential output.
TYPES OF ECONOMIC GROWTH
Real Economic Growth; is the increase in real
GDP as a result of using previously
unemployed resources, re-allocating existing
resources to more productive sectors or using
new or improved resources.

Potential Economic Growth; is the increase in


the productive capacity of the economy thus in
the ability of the economy to produce goods.
This occurs as a result of an increase in the
quality and quantity of resources.
DETERMINANTS OF ECONOMIC GROWTH
• Re-allocate resources from low productivity
to high productivity activities/sectors- for
instance from defence to health care
• Growth in the labour force- growth in the
population or participation rates in proportion to the
total population.
• Investment in human capital- HC is the
knowledge and skill embodied in people including
formal education and on-the-job training. It involves
improvement of health and longevity of the population,
technical training depending on the current knowledge
and literacy rates and contribution to growth and
innovation..
• Technological changes- these are brought by
innovations that introduce new products and new ways
of producing existing products. Technological progress
can be divided into; capital saving technology, labour
saving technology and neutral technical advance.

• Investment in physical capital- such as


factories, machines, transportation and communication
facilities.

• It must be government policy – government


must formulate policies aimed at promoting
efficient and effective use of the available
natural resources for economic growth to occur.
COURSE WORK 1
1 (a) What is Economic growth? Examine the
factors for economic growth.

(b) Critically examine Rostow’s stages of


Economic growth citing the criticisms/
limitations at each stage.

Due date: Wednesday 15th June 2011


NB: (Font- Verdana, font size – 12, spacing – 1.5, not less
than 5 pages + an extra page for references)
THE BENEFITS OF GROWTH
Increased levels of consumption; Provided economic
growth outstrips population growth, it will lead to
higher real income per head. This can lead to higher
levels of consumption of goods and services. If human
welfare is related to the level of consumption, then
growth provides an obvious gain to society.
It can help avoid other macroeconomic problems;
People have aspirations of rising living standards.
Without a growth in productive potential, people’s
demands for rising incomes are likely to lead to higher
inflation, balance of payments crises (as more imports
are purchased), industrial disputes, etc. Growth in
productive potential helps to meet these aspirations
and avoid macroeconomic crises.
It can make it easier to redistribute incomes to the
poor; If incomes rise, the government can redistribute
incomes from the rich to the poor without the rich
losing. For example, as people’s incomes rise, they
automatically pay more taxes. These extra revenues for
the government can be spent on programmes to
alleviate poverty. Without a continuing rise in national
income the scope for helping the poor is much more
limited.
Society may feel that it can afford to care more for
the environment; As people grow richer, they may
become less preoccupied with their own private
consumption and more concerned to live in a clean
environment. The regulation of pollution tends to be
tougher in developed countries than in the developing
world.
THE COSTS OF GROWTH
In practice, more consumption may not make people happier; economies
may be no less crisis riden; incomes may not be redistributed more
equally; the environment may not be better protected. More than this,
some people argue that growth may worsen these problems and create
additional problems besides. Some of the costs include;

The current opportunity cost of growth; To achieve faster growth,


firms will probably need to invest more. This will require financing.
The finance can come from a higher saving rate or higher taxes.
Either way, there must be a cut in consumption. In the short run,
therefore, higher growth leads to less consumption, not more.

Growth may simply generate extra demands; ‘The more people


have, the more they want.’ If this is so, more consumption may not
increase people’s happiness at all. (It is often observed that rich
people tend to be miserable!)
social effects; Many people claim that an excessive
pursuit of material growth by a country can lead to a
more greedy, more selfish and less caring society. As
society becomes more industrialised, violence, crime,
loneliness, stress-related diseases, suicides, divorce
and other social problems are likely to rise.

Environmental costs; A richer society may be more


concerned for the environment, but it is also likely to
do more damage to it. The higher the level of
consumption, the higher is likely to be the level of
pollution and waste. What is more, many of the
environmental costs are likely to be underestimated
due to a lack of scientific knowledge. Acid rain and the
depletion of the ozone layer have been two examples.
Non-renewable resources; If growth involves using a greater
amount of resources, rather than using the same amount of
resources more efficiently, certain non-renewable resources
will run out more rapidly. Unless viable alternatives can be
found for various minerals and fossil fuels, present growth
may lead to shortages for future generations.

Effects on the distribution of income; While some people


may gain from a higher standard of living, others are likely
to lose. If the means to higher growth are greater incentives
(such as cuts in higher rates of income tax), then the rich
might get richer, with little or no benefits ‘trickling down’ to
the poor. Growth involves changes in production: both in
terms of the goods produced and in terms of the techniques
used and the skills required. The more rapid the rate of
growth, the more rapid the rate of change. People may find
that their skills are no longer relevant. Their jobs may be
replaced by machines. People may thus find themselves
unemployed, or forced to take low-paid, unskilled work.
LIMITATIONS OF GROWTH
1. Resource exhaustion
2. Renewable resources
3. Pollution
4. Conflicts between many policies of
government
5. External trade influences through
improvements and deteriorations in the
terms of trade.
PROBLEMS OF GROWTH IN LDCs
1. Low per capita income
2. Poverty –reduces quality to save
3. Inefficient allocation of resources
4. Increasing rate of population growth
5. Lo quality land and labour
6. Abundant and untrained population
7. Lack of entrepreneur enterprise
8. Evasion of taxes
9. A tropical climate
10.Inefficient banking system- failure to mobilise
savings
11.Wide spread under employment
PRIVATE STUDY
1. Chenery’s patterns of Development(the ten
basic development processes that describe
the dimensions of structural transformation
of LDCs.)
• Chenery and colleagues examined patterns of
development for developing countries at different
percapita income levels during the post-war period.
• Major hypothesis is that development is an
identifiable process of growth and change whose main
features are similar in all countries.
• The empirical studies identified several characteristic
features of economic development:
– Shift from agriculture to industrial production
– Steady accumulation of physical and human
capital
– Change in consumer demands
– Increased urbanization
– Decline in family size
– Demographic transition
MEANING AND CHARACTERISTICS OF
MODERN ECONOMIC GROWTH (MEG)
Modern Economic Growth (MEG) is the term applied by
Simon Kuznets to describe the economic epoch of the
last 250 years, distinguished by the pervasive
application of science-based technology to production.

Professor Simon Kuznets defines MEG as; a long-term


rise in capacity to supply increasingly diverse
economic goods to its population, this growing
capacity based on advancing technology and the
institutional and ideological adjustments that it
demands.
MEG simply refers to the development of the developed
countries of Western Europe, the USA, Canada,
Australia, China, Korea, Hong Kong and Japan among
others.
COMPONENTS OF MODERN
ECONOMIC GROWTH
This definition brings forth 3 components
1.That Economic Growth is identified by the
sustained increase in the supply of goods
2.That advancing technology is the permissive
factor in Economic Growth which determines
the growth of capacity in supplying a diverse
range of good to the population.
3.That for an efficient and wide use of technology
and its development, institutional and
ideological adjustments must be made to effect
the proper use of innovations generated by
advancing stock of human knowledge.
CHARACTERISTICS OF MODERN
ECONOMIC GROWTH
There are 6 characteristics identified by Prof. Kuznets.
2 of which are Quantitative (relating to national output
and population)
• High rates of growth of per capita and population
• The rise in productivity
2 relate to Structural transformation
• High rate of structural transformation
• Urbanisation
2 relate to the International spread
• The outward expansion of developed countries
• International flows of men, goods and capital
High rates of growth per capita product and population;
modern growth is characterised by high rates of increase
in per capita product accompanied by substantial rates of
population growth. That MEG meant a striking
accelerated rise not only in product per capita but also in
population does not imply that the latter was a necessary
condition fro the former. In some countries, high rates of
growth in per capita product were accompanied by high
rates of population increase and in other low rates.

The rise in productivity; MEG is characterised by a rise in


the rate per capita product due to improvements in the
quality of inputs which has led to greater efficiency or rise
in the productivity per unit. Increase in efficiency implies
greater output per unit of input. According to Kuznets we
find that the rate of increase in productivity is large
enough to account for almost the entire growth of product
per capita in the developed countries.
High rate of structural transformation; structural
transformations in MEG include, a shift away from
agriculture to non agricultural activities an from
industry to services, an increase in scale of productive
units, shifts in organization (personal enterprises -
impersonal) and a corresponding change in the
occupational the status of labor, shifts in the structure
of consumption among others. These intersectoral shifts
were accompanied by growth in the sacla of firma and
changes in the type of organisation within sectors such
as manufacturing or trade from incorporated firms to
the large corporate units with rapid shifts in industrial
structure and rapid changes in technology. There were
also rapid shifts in the allocation of products among
types and sizes of producing firms and consequently in
the allocation of the labour force from blue-white collar
jobs, from less to more skilled occupations and from
small to large organs
Urbanisation ; MEG is characterised by the movement of an
increasing proportion of the population in developed countries
from rural to urban areas. This is largely a product of
industrialisation. However the changes in conditions of life
suggested by "urbanization" clearly involves a variety of costs and
returns that are not now included in economic measurement.
Internal migration, from the countryside to the cities represents
substantial costs in the pulling up of roots and the adjustment to
the anonymity and higher costs of urban living. According to
Kuznets, urbanisation affects the consumer expenditure in 3
ways:
1. Urbanisation led to an increasing division of labour, growing
specialisation, and a shift of many activities from non market
oriented to specialised market oriented firms.
2. It made the satisfaction of an increasing number of wants more
costly i.e. urban life became costlier because of congestion and
overcrowding.
3. The demonstration effect of the city life led to imitation of
consumption patterns by the large immigrants which led to
increased consumer expenditure.
The outward expansion of developed countries; the
economically developed countries, by means of the
increased power of technology, particularly in transport
and communication (both peaceful and warlike), have the
propensity to reach out to the rest of the world - thus
making for one world. Growth of developed countries has
been uneven i.e. it occurred in some nations earlier than
it did in others. This was largely due to the differences in
Historical background for instance the industrial
revolution first occurred in England the later spread to
other countries in Europe. The outward expansion of
developed countries with their European origin has bee
primarily due to the technological revolution in
transportation and communication. This led to more
direct dominance over colonies, the opening up of
previously closed areas like Japan and the partition of
undivided areas like sub Saharan Africa.
International flows of men, goods and
capital; the international flows of men,
goods and capital increased from the 2nd
quarter of the 19th century. It was
charaterised by migration (international
migrations), flows of goods and flows of
capital across the world. It also involved
extended application of science to
problems of economic production and
Politics.

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