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Jetzt kostenlos anmeldenYou may know that countries are sometimes classified as developed, developing, or emerging. But what does this classification mean? How is a country's development measured? This explanation will cover economic development and how economists measure it.
As an economics student, you are must be definitely familiar with economic growth. But what is economic development? Is it the same as economic growth?
No, they don't mean the same thing.
Economic development is the process of improving the standard of living and well-being of the people in an economy.
Fundamentally, economic development is about the expansion of people's capabilities (people development) over time. Therefore, economic development goes beyond increasing the income and output associated with economic growth and also takes into account poverty reduction and income redistribution.
Economic growth is important for economic development: the more goods and services produced, the more likely the standard of living is to improve. Nevertheless, there is no guarantee that an economy experiencing economic growth will also experience economic development.
There are a few developmental measures. They are:
Just as there are indicators to measure and quantify economic growth, the same is true for economic development.
Economic development indicators are used to measure the well-being of people by considering factors that influence the standard of living in an economy.
The measurement of economic development can be done through the human development index (the HDI).
This is the most used index to measure economic development. It takes the following three factors into account:
In determining the HDI, each component has an equal weighting of 33%. The closer the HDI is to 1, the more developed the country is.
The table below shows the top five countries with the highest HDI ranking with their GDP and GDP per capita rankings.
HDI rank | Country | HDI score | GDP rank | GDP per capita rank |
1 | Norway | 0.957 | 32nd | 4th |
2 | Ireland | 0.955 | 27th | 3rd |
3 | Switzerland | 0.955 | 20th | 2nd |
4 | Hong Kong | 0.949 | 40th | 15th |
5 | Iceland | 0.949 | 110th | 7th |
Table 1. HDI, GDP and GDP per capita ranking.
As you can see, despite these countries having the highest ranking in terms of economic development, they do not maintain the highest ranking in GDP, and there is a disparity in GDP per capita which is an indicator of economic growth. This illustrates how a country's level of income and output does not directly translate to a high level of economic development.
As the HDI is the most commonly used measure of economic development, it has many strengths:
These are the main weaknesses of the Human Development Index as a measure of development:
The hidden economy involves economic statistics that are not measured by the government and ignore government regulations and rules.
The hidden economy includes legal activities that avoid paying taxes, illegal activities (the sale of stolen goods or drug trafficking), and non-market activities (like having your own fishery).
The hidden economy is also called the underground economy, black market, and shadow economy.
Some other criticisms that the HDI as a development measure has received are:
A long-life expectancy is not equivalent to a high quality of life.
Someone with a high life expectancy could be working a high-risk job for less than average pay.
The number of years people spend in school doesn't accurately measure the quality of the education they receive.
The HDI alone does not measure the extent of inequality in a country. It is possible to have a satisfactory HDI rank and a huge income gap between the very wealthy and the very poor.
The HDI fails to give an account of whether the development is sustainable.
Country Y might be experiencing economic growth and improved living standards, but issues such as pollution and corruption remain.
The Genuine Progress Indicator builds off GDP as an economic indicator by including measures of the impact of economic growth on the environment as well as various social factors. The GPI takes GDP into consideration while also measuring the negative impacts of growth.
In this measurement, resource depletion and degradation are subtracted from the positive impacts of growth to determine the level of development. The GPI tries to get a bigger picture of the average quality of life by measuring information such as housework, parenting, the costs of crimes, and the value of volunteering work.
The Human Poverty Index complements the HDI as it is an indication of the standard of living in an economy. It considers the level of poverty and deprivation of a community in a country. The HPI uses two indices:
The HPI has limited utility as it combines the average deprivation levels of each dimension and it can’t be linked to any particular group of people.
The MPI replaced the HPI in 2010. It differs from the HPI as it assesses poverty at the individual level.
If one person is deprived of a third or more of ten (weighted) indicators, the global index identifies them as 'MPI poor'. The extent of poverty is measured by the percentage of deprivation a person is experiencing.
Can be happiness linked to economic growth? In economics, measuring happiness is very subjective. This would involve the evaluation of a wide range of factors that affect wellbeing, quality of life, and self-reported levels of happiness.
Some of these factors are:
Despite the number of factors that impact happiness and how subjective it is, there is an index that economists use to measure happiness: the Gross Domestic Happiness (GDH) index.
From the neoclassical economic perspective, higher income levels correlate with higher levels of utility and economic welfare, as a person is more able to purchase the goods and services (food, shelter, healthcare, and education) that would improve their quality of life.
‘Happiness’ is a complicated concept to quantify for measuring purposes, but many economists claim 'psychological surveys' can give a reliable measure of the level of happiness or satisfaction people are experiencing in their lives.
As for the relationship between happiness and economic growth, the Easterlin Paradox pokes a hole at it. Upon attaining a certain level of per capita income developed countries failed to increase happiness according to the national happiness polls.
According to this paradox, it would seem that a person's absolute income whilst living in a rich country is not as important as their relative income. Therefore, people were more concerned with being 'comparatively better off than those around them' than simply having money.
In 2008, Betsey Stevenson and Justin Wolfers refuted this paradox, claiming that there was in fact a genuine connection between GDP per capita and happiness.
Other reasons why a rising GDP may not lead to increased happiness include the fact that the allocation of resources for the purpose of economic growth may bring about negative costs to society, which will impact its happiness levels.
A country could achieve economic growth thanks to mining, but if they're mining in their natural parks, this will be detrimental to society in the future: people will have fewer natural places to visit and pollution will increase. This, in turn, will affect their health in the long run.
The indicators for measuring development include openness of the economy to international trade, political stability and security, malnutrition levels, GDP per capita, GNI per capita, unemployment levels, exchange rates etc.
Some of the most used indices are:
The indices of measuring developments are, The Human development index
The Human poverty index
The Genuine Progress Indicator index
The Multidimensional poverty index
The most used index measuring development is the Human Development Index (HDI). It consists of three components: health, education, and standard of living. Each component has an equal weighting of 33%.
Development is measured by considering the social and economic factors that affect the standard of living of people in a country. For example, real GDP per capita, literacy rates, access to safe water, and political stability and security.
Measuring development refers to the use of various human economic indicators, development indices, correlations, and statistics in order to compare the level of social and economic freedom between countries.
Developmental measures include:
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