International economic development

Similar documents
International economic development

Development Microeconomics

Prerequisites: Microeconomic Theory and Policy; and Econometrics.

Department of Economics Boston College EC 887: Topics in Development Economics Fall 2018

LSE-UCT July School 2018 LCS-DV202: Poverty and Development

Harris School of Public Policy Studies The University of Chicago. PPHA Poverty and Economic Development Fall 2013

Lahore University of Management Sciences. ECON 4410 Issues in Economic Policy

Paul Castañeda Dower office pdower(at)nes.ru Ekaterina Zhuravskaya office ezhuravskaya(at)nes.ru Office hours by appointment

Econ 730 Economic Development I Fall 2006

14.74 Foundations of Development Policy. Syllabus

Development Economics University of Maryland Professor: Sebastian Galiani Spring, 2015

DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS (EC307)

How We Can Save Africa

American University in Cairo Department of Economics ECON : The Economic Setting for Development-Fall 2011

Economics 469 Economics of Global Health and Population Spring 2008 [preliminary]

ECON 542 DISCUSSION TOPICS FALL 2013

Economics 361. Political economy and economic development

TOPICS IN DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS. Dilip Mookherjee. Course website:

Development Economics II: Micro Issue in Development Economics. Summer Term 2014

Albert O. Hirschman Prize Ceremony

Lecture notes on corruption. Rajeev Dehejia

DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS: MACROECONOMIC AND POLITICAL ECONOMIC ISSUES

15U025 Topics in Applied Economics III: Development

Development Economics I and II, Fall 2013

Econ 83: Empirical Development Economics OVERVIEW: PREREQUISITES: NON- ECON CREDIT:

Economics 361/524. Political economy and economic development

Development Microeconomics

Employing the Ultra-Poor in Ghana

University of California, Berkeley Spring Semester Phone: office: 625 Evans office hours: Tuesdays 10-11:30AM

Class Meetings, Readings and Assignments:

Econ 242: Economic Development Spring 2010

Measuring Corruption: Myths and Realities

a) The first one discusses the global nature of inequality b) The second section will focus on poverty and anti-poverty policies pursued in Europe and

Does Elite Capture Matter? Local Elites and Targeted Welfare Programs in Indonesia

How do microfinance programs contribute to poverty reduction?

ECON 471: Economics of Labor Markets and Human Capital Syllabus. University of Southern California Spring 2016

PA 388K - The Politics and Policy of International Development Spring 2016

Development Economics Lecture 1

The Chronicle Review. Poverty Under the Microscope. Once the rage, scientific approaches to development economics now encounter skeptics.

Introduction to International Development

Political Science 351 Political Economy of Development Fall 2014

EC 591. INTERNATIONAL ECONOMICS Professor R Lucas: Fall 2018 Monday and Wednesday ROOM CAS 227

ECON WORLD POVERTY AND INEQUALITY ACROSS NATIONS

Econ Empirical Political Economy. Spring, 2012 University of Maryland, College Park

Development Economics II: Micro issues of economic development

Economics 270B: Graduate Development Economics Professor Edward Miguel ) SPRING 2013 SYLLABUS

Nutritional Sciences 457: HEALTH, POVERTY AND INEQUALITY: A GLOBAL PERSPECTIVE. Spring 2008

Challenges of World Poverty

Experiments, Science, and the Fight Against Poverty

SWITZERLAND SYLLABUS

Politics of Development (PSCI 7092) Department of Political Science University of Colorado at Boulder Spring 2008

Connections: UK and global poverty

12P007. Political Economy 3 ECTS. Overview and Objectives. Course Outline (* is recommended reading)

INTERNATIONAL TRADE POLICY MODULE INFORMATION. Module code: ECON632D This is a 20-credit module Year:

ECON WORLD POVERTY AND INEQUALITY ACROSS NATIONS

The political economy of African development Syllabus

Political Economy Research Seminar

POL 3410 (2): The Politics of Economic Inequality in the USA and Europe Fall 2011 Tu/Th 2:30-3:45 Anderson 350 Course Outline

Economics 731 Economic Development. Chris Udry Spring

INCLUSIVE GROWTH AND POLICIES: THE ASIAN EXPERIENCE. Thangavel Palanivel Chief Economist for Asia-Pacific UNDP, New York

STUTI KHEMANI H Street, NW, Washington, DC 20433, USA Tel: (202) , Fax: (202) ,

INTA : The Politics of Development in South Asia Fall 2016 Time: Tues. 4:35-7:20 Location: Allen 1055

Response to the Evaluation Panel s Critique of Poverty Mapping

Introduction to Development Economics. Prerequisites Permission of the Instructor. No course requirements.

Credit is not a right September 14, John Gershman Jonathan Morduch. New York University

POL SCI 231 THE WEALTH AND POVERTY OF NATIONS: PROSPERITY AND DISTRIBUTION IN THE LONG RUN Spring 2016

BOSTON COLLEGE ECONOMICS DEPARTMENT EC375: ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT

AEC 643: Advanced Topics in Development Economics Department of Applied Economics Oregon State University. Winter 2018

Full file at

Globalization, Inequality and Poverty

Issues in Third World Development Fall 2011 GOV 365N (38805) Tues/Thurs 3:30 5: Parlin Hall

Economics 731 Economic Development

INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS 198 Politics of the Global Economy (IR 222 Political Economy of North-South Relations)

Professor Lawrence J. Lau Spring Economics 121: The Macroeconomics of Economic Development with Special Reference to East Asia

Turnover in India. October participants and particularly Torsten Persson, for extremely helpful comments. Filipa Jorge, Jetsada Chuenchoojit

Conditional Cash Transfers: Learning from Impact Evaluations. Ariel Fiszbein Chief Economist Human Development Network World Bank

Economics 731a Economic Development I

ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT

STUTI KHEMANI H Street, NW, Washington, DC 20433, USA Tel: (202) , Fax: (202) ,

In September 2000, the world s leaders met at the Millennium Summit at

Economics 2520 Comparative Institutions Professor Daniel Berkowitz Fall

POL SCI 468 THE WEALTH AND POVERTY OF NATIONS: PROSPERITY AND DISTRIBUTION IN THE LONG RUN Fall 2016

ECON WORLD POVERTY AND INEQUALITY ACROSS NATIONS

List of Themes for Master Theses

Openness and Poverty Reduction in the Long and Short Run. Mark R. Rosenzweig. Harvard University. October 2003

$50 Billion to End Poverty in Sri Lanka and Uganda. Shyenne Horras. Dr. Jessica Lin ECON 351H. 13 May 2015

A poverty-inequality trade off?

EC 591. INTERNATIONAL ECONOMICS Professor R Lucas: Fall 2012 Monday & Wednesday SSW 315

Prof. Pritchett made a distinction between "linear philanthropy" and "transformative philanthropy":

Advanced Development Economics Selected Topics, Summer- 2018

EVALUATION NOTE. Evaluating Trickle Up s Graduation Programs in India. Findings from a quasi-experimental evaluation in West Bengal and Jharkhand.

Pos 500 Seminar in Political Theory: Political Theory and Equality Peter Breiner

Policies, Politics Rethinking Development Policy

Outline: Poverty, Inequality, and Development

Economic Development

RPOS 395: International Political Economy

Curriculum Vitae June 2018 ABHIJIT VINAYAK BANERJEE

POLS 260: INTRODUCTION TO COMPARATIVE POLITICS Department of Political Science Northern Illinois University Tuesday & Thursday 11-12:15 pm DU 461

building stable livelihoods for the ultra-poor

SEMESTER AT SEA COURSE SYLLABUS University of Virginia, Academic Sponsor

Transcription:

International economic development P11.2230 Fall 2010 NYU Wagner Graduate School of Public Service New York University Wednesday, 4:55-6:35 pm. Silver 711. Jonathan Morduch The Puck Building, Room 3028, (212) 998-7515 jonathan.morduch@nyu.edu Office hour: 3:30-4:30 p.m. Wednesday While some countries have achieved unprecedented rates of economic growth in the past half century, other countries have experienced set-backs. For those that have seen rapid growth, economic changes have not always translated into proportional social changes and sometimes rapid social changes have occurred in the absence of economic growth. This course takes up issues of economic growth and social change in a comparative perspective. The course begins by reviewing the relationships between poverty, inequality, and economic growth. In that context, attention then turns to the role of markets, with a focus on local financial markets. In the second part of the semester, attention turns to policy interventions to improve education, confront rapid population growth, reduce the burden of disease, and confront corruption. We will use the following texts: Julie Schaffner. (Work in Progress.) Development Economics: Theory, Empirical Research and Policy Analysis. Daryl Collins, Jonathan Morduch, Stuart Rutherford, Orlanda Ruthven. 2009. Portfolios of the Poor: How the World s Poor Live on $2 a Day. Princeton University Press. Beatriz Armendáriz and Jonathan Morduch, The Economics of Microfinance, MIT Press, 2005. The texts will be supplemented by additional readings. 1

Course Requirements The course requirements are a mid-term examination, a final examination, and two problem sets. Grades will be calculated according to: Class Participation 10% Problem sets 5% Mid-Term Exam 35% Final Examination 50% Schedule 1. 9/8: Introduction to theories of development. Global trends and the scope of challenges. 2. 9/15: Foreign Aid. 3. 9/22: Defining poverty and inequality. Relationships between poverty, inequality, and economic growth. 4. 9/29: Coping with risk. Safety nets. 5. 10/6: Informal markets: Access to finance. (To be re-scheduled.) 6. 10/13: Microfinance: a new policy paradigm? Problem set due 7. 10/20: Saving and asset-building 8. 10/27: Mid-term exam (in class) 9. 11/3 : Gender and the intra-household allocation of resources 10. 11/10: Population and growth 11. 11/17: Health 12. 11/24: Education Problem set due 13. 12/1: Corruption 14. 12/8: Social Business 12/15: Final exam (take-home) due 2

Readings > Recommended reading 1. Introduction to theories of development. Global trends and the scope of challenges. Development Economics is a relatively young field, arising just after World War II, as many colonies were gaining independence from Europe. We begin by setting out early debates and the current state of the world. Schaffner. Chapter 1 Introduction. [See pp. 1-7 for data on the scope of challenges. The balance of the chapter describes the definition of development and provides an overview of the UN Millennium Development Goals.] Besley, Timothy and Robin Burgess, 2003. Halving Global Poverty. Journal of Economic Perspectives 17 (3), Summer: 3-22. > Millenium Development Goals. See www.developmentgoals.org 2. Economic Growth and Foreign Aid Why do some countries grow richer while others don t? Historically, patterns of economic growth have been driven by much more than just levels of investments and human resources. Recent evidence shows the roles of legal systems, political institutions, trade and tax policy, and geography, among other forces. Schaffner. Chapter 3 Growth. The first part of the chapter (pp. 1-8) is the key focus. It discusses what is growth, how do we measure growth, and gives facts on growth (e.g. the rule of 72 ). The rest of the chapter describes sources of growth and production functions, providing useful background. Schaffner, Chapter 4 Theories of economic growth. The chapter gives a good introduction to the theory of economic growth. We ll discuss, in particular, the Harrod-Domar model (pp. 4-7). Skim the material up to pp. 26-29 on poverty traps, which provides a transition into the next class William Easterly, The Quest for Growth: How we wandered the tropics trying to figure out how to make poor countries rich, William Easterly, 2003. Can Foreign Aid Buy Growth? Journal of Economic Perspectives 17 (3), Summer: 23 4. The blackboard site has additional readings on aid, some critical of Easterly s position, some supportive. Also see the Sachs-Easterly debate in The Washington Post. 3

3. Defining poverty and inequality. Relationships between poverty, inequality, and economic growth. Before considering the relationship between economic growth and poverty, we need to be clearer about measurement issues. There is no perfect way to measure poverty and inequality, but there is consensus about key principles. The most appropriate method will often depend on the questions that we are asking. Portfolios of the Poor yields quite different answers about what it means to be poor. Measuring poverty Jonathan Morduch, Concepts of Poverty, forthcoming as chapter 2 of United Nations Handbook of Poverty Statistics. New York: United Nations. Forthcoming, 2009. > Jonathan Morduch, Poverty Measures, forthcoming as chapter 3 of United Nations Handbook of Poverty Statistics. New York: United Nations. Forthcoming, 2009. How the World s Poor Live on $2 a Day. Chapter 1 >Schaffner. Pages 1-18, Chapter 5 Poverty, inequality and vulnerability. The first half (to page 18) gives another account of material covered by Morduch s UN volume chapters. Poverty and growth Does economic growth comes at the expense of the poor? How does economic growth affect poverty and inequality? How can patterns of inequality affect levels of growth? The World Bank s World Development Report highlights the translation of debate into action, but The Economist faults it for papering over Dollar s and Kraay s findings. Quantity and Quality, The Economist (Economics Focus), 2000. Schaffner. Pages 22-30, Chapter 5 Poverty, inequality and vulnerability. This reading nicely covers inequality, poverty, and growth. Recommended > David Dollar and Aart Kraay, Growth is good for the poor, The World Bank, working paper. [http://econ.worldbank.org/files/1696_wps2587.pdf] > Howard White and Edward Anderson (1992). Growth versus Distribution: Does the pattern of growth matter? Institute of Development Studies, University of Sussex, Working paper. [http://www.ids.ac.uk/ids/pvty/pdf-files/growth.pdf] > Angus Deaton, Is World Poverty Falling? Finance and Development 39 (2), June 2002. [http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/fandd/2002/06/deaton.htm]. For a related interview with Deaton see http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/survey/2002/070802.pdf. > Voices of the Poor The World Bank. [www.worldbank.org/poverty/voices/index.htm] > Blackboard also has short pieces on poverty measurement. 4

4. Coping with risk. Safety nets. Is there a role for the government in supporting these informal coping mechanisms? Can informal insurance effectively patch the safety net? Some argue that the lack of good ways to save and insure are as critical as difficulties in borrowing. These papers take up debates and describe constraints and opportunities. Jonathan Morduch (1998), Between the State and the Market: Can Informal Insurance Patch the Safety Net? World Bank Research Observer 14(2), August, 187-202. Jonathan Morduch, Microinsurance: The Next Revolution? in Understanding Poverty, edited by Abhijit Banerjee, Roland Benabou, and Dilip Mookherjee. Oxford University Press, 2006. How the World s Poor Live on $2 a Day. Chapter 3. >Schaffner. Chapter 2 Well-being. Pages 16-23: Responding to Predictable and Unpredictable Fluctuations in Income and Needs >Schaffner. Chapter 5 Poverty, inequality and vulnerability. Pages 18-22 covers vulnerability. > World Bank resources on safety nets: http://www.worldbank.org/poverty/safety/ >Jere Behrman and Emmanuel Skoufias (2006), Mitigating Myths about Policy Effectiveness: Evaluation of Mexico s Antipoverty and Human Resource Investment Program, The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 606, 244-275. http://ann.sagepub.com/cgi/reprint/606/1/244 5. Access to financial services (To be re-scheduled) Lack of insurance is part of a broader lack of access to financial services. This section shows how informational problems limit the scope of credit markets and restrict the role that the price mechanism plays to ration demand. This provides a framework with which to reevaluate standard policy prescriptions. Beatriz Armendáriz and Jonathan Morduch (2003), The Economics of Microfinance: Chapter 1: Rethinking banking Chapter 2: Why intervene in credit markets? How the World s Poor Live on $2 a Day. Chapter 2. > Debraj Ray, Credit, sections 14.1-14.3, pp. 529 561. > Rutherford, Stuart (1998), The Poor and their Money. Delhi: Oxford University Press, chapters 1 and 2. 5

6. Microfinance The root of credit market failures is lack of collateral. But new institutions like Bangladesh s Grameen Bank and Bolivia s BancoSol have shown that it is possible to secure high rates of repayment while lending to poor households. The key is a series of new mechanisms, most famously group-lending with joint liability. Yunus describes the early experience with Grameen, and Morduch s papers describe a range of other programs, as well as emerging opportunities and tensions in the movement. Mohammad Yunus (1995), The Grameen Bank: Experiences and Reflections. Dhaka: Grameen Bank. Beatriz Armendáriz and Jonathan Morduch (2003), The Economics of Microfinance: Chapter 4: Group lending Chapter 5: Beyond group lending Chapter 7: Gender Chapter 9: Subsidy and sustainability CGAP, Microcredit Interest Rates, Occasional Paper Number 1, August 1996 [Extract]. >Jonathan Morduch (2000), The Microfinance Schism, World Development, April. Robert Cull, Asli Demirgüç-Kunt, and Jonathan Morduch.2009. Microfinance Meets the Market. Journal of Economic Perspectives 23(1), Winter: 167-192. How the World s Poor Live on $2 a Day. Chapter 6. > Freedom from Hunger: www.freefromhunger.org > Pro Mujer: www.promujer.org > ACCION International: www.accion.org > Consultative Group to Assist the Poorest: www.cgap.org 7. Saving and Asset Accumulation Households use a great variety of strategies to cope with misfortune and build assets for the future. Some are very effective, while others are less so and none are costless. Beatriz Armendáriz and Jonathan Morduch (2003), The Economics of Microfinance: Chapter 6: Saving and insurance How the World s Poor Live on $2 a Day. Chapter 4. Dean Karlan, 2008. The Impacts of Savings. Financial Access Initiative Framing Note. January. http://financialaccess.org/sites/default/files/karlan_savings.pdf 6

8. Mid-term exam (In class) 9. Gender and the intra-household allocation of resources Schaffner. Chapter 7 Households. The chapter covers the debate between unitary and nonunitary theories, and it touches on occupational choice and gender. See in particular the discussion of how unitary theories address gender (pp. 22-27) and how non-unitary theories address gender (pp. 29-32). Duflo, Esther. Gender Inequality in Development. MIT Abdul Latif Jameel Poverty Action Lab. Jensen, Robert and Emily Oster. 2007. The Power of TV: Cable Television and Women s Status in India. Working paper. > Beatriz Armendáriz and Jonathan Morduch (2003), The Economics of Microfinance: Chapter 7: Gender 10. Population growth and the demographic transition T. Paul Schultz. 2006. Fertility and Income. Chapter 9 in Understanding Poverty, edited by Abhijit Banerjee, Roland Benabou, and Dilip Mookherjee. Oxford University Press. Grant Miller. 2007. Contraception as Development? New Evidence from Family Planning in Colombia. Stanford Medical School working paper, May. Eliana La Ferrara, Alberto Chong, and Suzanne Duryea. 2008. Soap Operas and Fertility: Evidence from Brazil. BREAD Working Paper No. 172, March. > Sudhir Anand and Jonathan Morduch (1998), Poverty and Population Pressure, chapter 2 in Massimo Livi-Bacci and Gustavo de Santis, eds., Population and Poverty in Developing Countries. Oxford University Press (Clarendon), 1998, pages 9 24. > The Population Council: www.popcouncil.org/ 11. Health Jishnu Das, Jeffrey Hammer, and Kenneth Leonard. 2008. The Quality of Medical Advice in Low-Income Countries. Journal of Economic Perspectives 22 (2). Spring: 93-114. Deon Filmer, Jeffrey Hammer, and Lant Pritchett, Health Policy in Poor Countries: Weak Links in the Chain, World Bank Policy Research Working Paper 1874, January 98, pp. 1 63. Deon Filmer, Jeffrey S. Hammer, and Lant H. Pritchett (2002). Weak Links in the Chain II: A Prescription for Health Policy in Poor Countries, World Bank Research Observer 2002 17: 47-66. [http://wbro.oupjournals.org/cgi/reprint/17/1/47.pdf] 7

>Miguel,Edward and Kremer,Michael (2004). Worms: Identifying Impacts on Education and Health in the Presence of Treatment Externalities, Econometrica, pp 159-217. >Abhijit Banerjee, Angus Deaton, and Esther Duflo, 2004. Wealth, health, and health services in rural Rajasthan, Poverty Action Lab Paper No. 8, May. Abhijit Banerjee, Angus Deaton, and Esther Duflo. http://www.povertyactionlab.com/papers/banerjee_deaton_duflo_2.pdf 12. Education Esther Duflo. Schooling and Labor Market Consequences of School Construction in Indonesia: Evidence from an Unusual Policy Experiment, American Economic Review 91(4), 2001, pp. 795-813 Rema Hanna and Esther Duflo. Monitoring Works: Getting Teachers to Come to School, NBER Working Paper No. 11880, 2005; BREAD Working Paper No. 103, 2005 Banerjee, Abhijit V., Shawn Cole, Esther Duflo, Leigh Linden "Remedying Education: Evidence from Two Randomized Experiments in India" Quarterly Journal of Economics 2007 122:3, 1235-1264 Kremer, Michael (2003). Randomized Evaluations of Educational Programs in Developing Countries: Some Lessons. American Economic Review Papers and Proceedings, 93(2), 102-106 In discussing evaluation methods, it may also be helpful to read the chapter on impact measurement in Armendáriz and Morduch, The Economics of Microfinance. > Public Report on Basic Education (PROBE) in India (1999), Oxford University Press. 13. Corruption Mauro, Paolo, 1995. "Corruption and Growth," The Quarterly Journal of Economics, MIT Press, vol. 110(3), pages 681-712, August. Bertrand, Marianne, Simeon Djankov, Rema Hanna and Sendhil Mullainathan. 2007. Obtaining a Driving License in India: An Experimental Approach to Studying Corruption." Quarterly Journal of Economics, November. Olken, Ben, 2007. Monitoring Corruption: Evidence from a Field Experiment in Indonesia, Journal of Political Economy 115 (2): 200-249. 14. Social Business Kremer, Michael and Edward Miguel. 2007. The Illusion of Sustainability. Quarterly Journal of Economics, August: 1007-1065. 8

Werker, Eric, and Faisal Z. Ahmed. 2008. "What Do Nongovernmental Organizations Do?" Journal of Economic Perspectives, 22(2): 73 92. Jonathan Conning and Jonathan Morduch. 2010. Social Finance, Hunter College and NYU, working paper. 9