Classic Theories of Economic Growth & Development

 Classic Theories of Economic Growth & Development

 

Classic Theories of Economic Development: Four Approaches

 • 1. The Linear-Stages of growth model 

• 2. Structural change pattern Theories

 • 3. International-Independence

 • 4. Neo-Classical (counter-revolution) Theory


1. Development as Growth and the Linear-Stages Theories

 • 1.1.Rostow’s stages of growth

 • 1.2. The Harrod-Domar growth model 

• 1.3. Obstacles and constraints

 • 1.4.Some criticisms of the stages model


Rostow Stages of Development 

• Different countries are at different stages of development. Rostow has classified the stages of economic development into five categories as follows:

 • Traditional Society

 • Precondition take-off • Take-off

 • Drive to Maturity or sustaining stage

 • The stage of the large scale of mass consumption


Traditional Society

 • Dominated by subsistence (defined as no economic surplus, meaning output being consumed by producers rather than traded);

 • Trade being carried out by barter, meaning goods being exchanged directly for other goods; 

• Agriculture is the most important industry; Production being labor-intensive using only limited quantities of capital.


Transitional Stage (the preconditions for takeoff)

 • Increased specialization starting to generate surpluses for trading.

 • an emergence of a transport infrastructure to support trade; External trade also occurs concentrating on primary products; Entrepreneurs emerge 

• savings and investment grow.


Take Off 

• Rapid Industrialization or Industrial Revolution 

• Growth concentrated in a few regions of the country and in one or two manufacturing industries. 

• The level of investment reaches over 10% of GNP.

 • The economic transitions are accompanied by the evolution of new political and social institutions that support industrialization.

 • The growth is self-sustaining: investment leads to increasing incomes in turn generating more savings to finance further investment.


Drive to Maturity

 • Industrial Diversification; producing a wide range of goods and services; reliance on exports and imports may start decreasing.

High Mass Consumption • Domestic Aggregate Demand is the major determinant of Business (Cycles) • Consumer durable industries; Service sector



1.2.The Harrod-Domar Model: 

(The idea that Capital and Saving is fundamental)

 S  sY I  

K (1.1)(1.2) 


1.2.The Harrod-Domar Model cont.

 S  I (1.3)

K  kY (1.4)

 sY  kY  K  I (1.5)

 sY  kY (1.6) 

k s Y Y   (1.7)


1.2.Harrod-Domar Growth Model 

• A model of “ capital fundamentalism”

 • Where s =savings ratio =S/Y, 

• and k= capital output ratio= K/Y

 • Yg =growth rate of GDP= s/k

 • Note: The more economies save and invest, the faster they grow.

 • e.g. If s=6%, and k=3.0, Yg =6%/3 =2%


Another way of deriving the Harrod-Domar Model 

• Let Y represent output, 

which equals income, and let K equal the capital stock. S is total saving, s is the savings rate, and I is an investment. δ stands for the rate of depreciation of the capital stock. The Harrod–Domar model makes the following a priori assumptions:


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