Exam: Growth and Development Flashcards

1
Q

Qualitative/historical description of economical growth:

A
  • Traditional society
    (External trigger)
  • Preconditions for take-off
    (installation of infrastructure, organisation, social/political elite)
  • Take-off
    (Large investment in manufacturing, development of institutions)
  • Drive to maturity
    (Exploitation of advantages in international trade)
  • High mass consumption
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2
Q

Two ways to calculate

- Gross Domestic Product (GDP):

A

Expenditure approach:
GDP = C + G + I + (X-M)

C: Household consumption (products and services)
G: Government consumption
I: Investment (buildings, mines, factories, machinery etc.) (X-M): Export –Import

Not included:
(transactions between different parties)
-companies buying from other companies
-households buying from other households
-financial products (the stock market)
-informal sector (not taxed or monitored)

Product approach:
GDP = sum(value added)
over all production sectors

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3
Q

Mini-economy with two companies
Company (A): Potato producer Sells potatoes for 100 $ to consumers and 60 $ to company (B)

Company (B): Chips producer Sells chips for 90 $ to consumers What is the GDP?

Expenditure approach:
Product approach:

A

Expenditure approach:
C(100+90)+G(0)+I(0)+(X-M)(0)=190

Product approach: 
Value added:
Company A: 100+60 = 160
Company B: 90-60 = 30
Total: 190

But also you buy things to grow potatoes, you pay the people working there, and they might buy the potatoes/chips etc..

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4
Q

GDP
GDP/Capita
GDP(PPP)
GDP/Capita(PPP)

A

GDP : Gross Domestic Product

GDP/Capita : per person

PPP : Purchasing power parity
-to account for differences in price levels between countries
-based on the price of a ”basket of goods”
-countries with low prices get relatively higher GDP using PPP
(Comparing quality of life welfare)

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5
Q

Three measures of economic activity

A

Gross domestic product (GDP)
sv. Bruttonationalprodukt (BNP)
Economic activity within country boarders

Gross national income (GNI)
sv. Bruttinationalinkomst (BNI)
Value added from companies owned by a country’s citizens

Net domestic product (NDP)
sv. Nettonationalprodukt (NNP)
GDP minus depreciation of capital goods

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6
Q

50 years of global economic growth (1967-2017):

A

GDP:
x5.8 (+3.6%/yr)
(Increase of resource use)

GDP/capita:
x2.7 (+2.0%/yr)
(Development, quality of life)

Population:
x2.2 (+1.6%/yr)

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7
Q

Annual changes % (global 1967-2017)

Population and GDP

A

Population growth is slowing down

GDP growth is increasing

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8
Q

Drivers of economic growth (GDP/cap) :

A

• Hours worked:
Employment rate, Hours per employee
• Increased productivity:
Improvements in technology (in a wide sense) and trade (also systems, organisation, etc)
- More output per input of labour, capital or resources
- Drives down production costs and prices
- Stimulates demand - Increased output

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9
Q

“Beyond GDP” measures

A
  • Index of Sustainable Economic Welfare (ISEW)
  • Genuine Progress Indicator (GPI)

Net domestic product
+ value of services from domestic labour
(still a service, even if you do it yourself)
- “defensive consumption” (security, military)
- costs of environmental degradation
- depreciation of natural capital
(Costs that could be avoided in a “better world”)

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10
Q

GDP and environmental impact:

Environmental Kuznets Curve (EKC) hypothesis

A

Pre-industrial/industrializing economy:
- Environmental impact increase with income/capita growth

Industrial economy:
- Turning point. Environmental impact will stop increasing with increased income/capita growth

Post-industrial economy (service economy):
- Environmental impact now decrease with increased income/capita growth.

Does usually not correlate with reality, apart from chemical harmful emissions.

(Maybe we just haven’t reached the service phase yet)

CO2 emission growth closely related to GDP growth

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11
Q

Quality of Life

Two different approaches:

A
  1. Objective indicators, with domains
    - e.g. HDI, capabilities, needs
    (They can be measured, but someone stil have to decide what factors to use)
    - Instrumental values
    - Tend to increase with GDP
  2. Subjective indicators
    - Quality of life as a mental state Wellbeing (happiness)
    - Final values
    - Tends to not be directly linked to GDP
    (Habituation, happy or sad at first but then you get used to it)
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12
Q

Objective Quality-of-life index

A

(Economist Intelligence Unit, EIU)

Health (life expectancy at birth)
Family life (divorce rate)
Community life (church attendance, union membership) Material well being (GDP per cap, PPP)
Political stability and security (ratings)
Climate and geography
Job security (unemployment rate)
Political freedom (indexes of political and civil liberties) Gender equality (ratio of male and female earnings)

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13
Q

Subjective theories:

A

Quality of Life as a mental state

• Satisfaction of human needs are not absolute but depend on expectations, adaptationand comparisonto others.
(Habituation, happy or sad at first but then you get used to it)

Subjective Well-being (SWB): 
• Affective component: 
- To feel happy, to feel well 
• Cognitive component: 
- Life satisfaction 
These are used separately or together (hybrid theory) 

50 % :
Genetics and early upbringing (personality)

10 % :
Life circumstances Income, material possessions, physical environment

40 % :
Intentional activities Working towards our goals, socialising, exercising, meaningful work and leisure activities

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14
Q

Societies with high SWB
(Subjective Well-being)
have:

A
  • Functioning democracy and institutions
  • Trust
  • Economic equality
  • Gender equality
  • Low unemployment
  • Income level above some threshold

Similar to objective measurement

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15
Q

Utility maximization:

A

Concept within economics of humans as informed and narrowly self-interested actors with the ability to make optimal choices.
People’s consumption choices reveal their preferences. (Samuelson, 1938)

Utility maximization:

  • is not supported by research on actual choices (psychology)
  • but can be a useful simplification in models
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16
Q

Heuristics:

A

Methods of thought giving quick, good-enough answers

  • Despite the lack of relationship to the question,subjects “anchor” to the presented number.
17
Q

Consumption behavior:

A
  • “Limit 10 per customer” makes people buy more?
  • Almost any information can work its way into our judgment
  • Subjects typically do not believe they are influenced
  • External influence gets stronger under cognitive load
  • Preference is clearly not the only thing that explain choice
18
Q

Habits:

A

Habit formation is the process by which a behavior becomes automatic through regular repetition
- Unreflected, subconscious
- A way to rationalize choice
- Difficult to change
- Many resource intensive behaviors are habitual:
Commuting, food, energy use
“Ordinary consumption”

19
Q

Positional goods:

A

(Hirsch, 1977)
Consumption that gain value through a relative position

Status is in limited supply:

  • Positional consumption creates external costs for losers in the status race
  • Not beneficial for society as a whole
20
Q

Production-based accounting(territorial accounting)
vs
Consumption-based accounting

A

Production-based accounting(territorial accounting):
• Emissions that “leave the pipe” within national territory
• Method of the official National Emissions Inventories to the UNFCCC
• Calculated from fossil fuel usage and processes in industry/agriculture
• Transparent and proven system
• Fits national policy making
• Potential risk of “carbon leakage” (production moving abroad)
• May create illusion of “green growth”

Consumption-based accounting:
• Emissions tracked to the country of final consumption of products and services
• Includes emissions from domestic final consumption and those caused by the production of imports
• Complex measurement system
• More uncertain estimates of emissions
• Reflects the actual effects of our lifestyles

21
Q

Problems with emphasizing the role of changing consumer behavior:

A
  • No good historical examples where it has solved environmental problems
  • Behaviors are difficult to change (technological fix maybe easier)
  • The idea of “sacrificing” lifestyle is not appealing
  • Tend to focus on “environmental symbols”, rather than big changes
  • Move focus away from the need for political solutions?
22
Q

Reasons to emphasizing the role of changing consumer behavior:

A
  • The rate of technical change is not fast enough to reduce emissions. Climate targets may require both technology and behavioral change
  • Technical change to solve one problem often causes new problems (e.g. nuclear or bio-energy instead of fossil fuels)
  • Some pro-environmental lifestyles may also have other benefits (e.g. health benefits of commuting by bicycle or vegetarian diet)