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October 15, 2015October 15, 2015October 15, 2015Introduction to Political Science1 “Less Developed” and “Newly Industrializing” Countries Frank H. Brooks.

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Presentation on theme: "October 15, 2015October 15, 2015October 15, 2015Introduction to Political Science1 “Less Developed” and “Newly Industrializing” Countries Frank H. Brooks."— Presentation transcript:

1 October 15, 2015October 15, 2015October 15, 2015Introduction to Political Science1 “Less Developed” and “Newly Industrializing” Countries Frank H. Brooks

2 October 15, 2015October 15, 2015October 15, 2015Introduction to Political Science2 Defining the Category  Formerly “Third World”  “developing” countries  Countries not central to Cold War conflict  “Less Developed” and “Newly Industrializing”  Developments since decolonization  Some have industrialized, many same or worse off  Political shifts, to and from democracy  Economic and political aspects  Political variation: authoritarian more common, shift to democracy?  Economic variation: political economic systems, level of development

3 October 15, 2015October 15, 2015October 15, 2015Introduction to Political Science3 Analytical Questions  Why so few established democracies among this group?  Why haven’t more of these countries developed economically?  Why have some (the “newly industrializing”) been more successful in economic development?  What are the connections between democratization and economic development?

4 October 15, 2015October 15, 2015October 15, 2015Introduction to Political Science4 Democratization and Political Development  Conditions for democracy  Social  Modernization (secularism, education)  development of “civil society”  Role of women  Political  Institutions, e.g. parties, presidential v. parliamentary  Rule of law; bureaucracy, public sector, corruption  Economic  Democracy correlated with national wealth  Which comes first?  Historical  Emergence of democracy for advanced democracies  Historical trajectories of less developed countries  Impact of imperialism and colonialism  Focus on general theory or specific cases?

5 October 15, 2015October 15, 2015October 15, 2015Introduction to Political Science5 Barriers to Democratization  National boundaries established under colonialism  Weak states  Nationalism and ethnic conflict  Poor political leadership  International interference (including “aid”)  Poverty  Corruption

6 October 15, 2015October 15, 2015October 15, 2015Introduction to Political Science6 No Preconditions?  Global reach of third wave democratization suggests that democracy can crop up anywhere  Optimistically rejects assumption that some countries “not ready for democracy”  Democracy as a universal value (Diamond)  even where its performance is shaky  even where democracies rare (e.g. Middle East)  If true, research and practical questions are:  Why are there holdouts?  What can be done to hasten democracy among the holdouts?  If not, issues are different:  Why does (re-)democratization emerge from authoritarian breakdown?  How are democracies consolidated?

7 October 15, 2015October 15, 2015October 15, 2015Introduction to Political Science7 Democracy “Drivers”  Economic development  Related to rising levels of education, middle class, vibrant civil society  Emergence of “a more questioning, assertive, pro-democratic political culture”  Economic performance  Authoritarian regimes often rest legitimacy on this  When it fails, they have no legitimacy  International actions and pressures  Especially U.S. emphasis on human rights and decline of Cold War  Also EU, election observers, human rights groups  Changing international norms  Democracy as a “human right”  Has made intervention easier, by NGOs and governments

8 October 15, 2015October 15, 2015October 15, 2015Introduction to Political Science8 Economic Development Challenges  Convergence v. Divergence  In theory, poorer countries should grow at faster rate and “converge”  In practice, most have grown more slowly  Recent convergence, e.g. Latin America Latin AmericaLatin America  Legacy of Imperialism and Colonialism  Focus on extraction of primary commodities  Industrial development suppressed  “terms of trade”, tax policy, “rent-seeking” “rent-seeking”  Foreign aid and foreign debt  Key issues  Relationship to international markets – trade, finance, investment  Infrastructure development – transport, communication, etc.  Human capital development – education, healthcare…  Agricultural sector – export? Subsistence? Political weight?

9 October 15, 2015October 15, 2015October 15, 2015Introduction to Political Science9 Strategies for Economic Development  Export-Oriented Industrialization  E.g. South Korea and other “Asian tigers”  Mercantilist strategy – state maintains low exchange rate, shapes “industrial policy”  Usually suppresses labor organizing to keep labor costs low  Recent examples: China, India?  Import substitution  Brazil a major example until 1990s  Focus on industrial production because of “terms of trade”  Sufficiently-large domestic market walled off from competition – leads to higher costs for manufactured goods (but also ancillary benefits?)  Tendency towards autarky  Structural adjustment policies  Aid and debt restructuring conditioned on market-oriented reforms  Liberalization of trade rules; reduction of public sector

10 October 15, 2015October 15, 2015October 15, 2015Introduction to Political Science10 Alternative Development Models  Socialism  Adopted/adapted in many developing countries  E.g. “African socialism” in Tanzania  Trading blocs rather than world market  “Small Is Beautiful”  E.F. Schumacher (1973) E.F. Schumacher E.F. Schumacher  Industrial-scale production unsustainable  “sustainable development”  Micro-credit, especially Grameen Bank in Bangladesh Micro-creditGrameen Bank Micro-creditGrameen Bank  In “developed” countries: local currencies, community land trusts

11 October 15, 2015October 15, 2015October 15, 2015Introduction to Political Science11 Democracy and Development  Correlation  Wealthy countries more likely to be democratic  Poor countries more likely to be authoritarian  Should poor countries strive to democratize in order to develop economies?  Yes: more accountable state will try to benefit public  No: demands for immediate consumption benefits will undermine necessary investment  Should they implement capitalism, assuming that democracy will follow?  Yes: typical model for advanced democracies  Yes: seems to have worked for “Asian tigers”  No: non-democratic governments not necessarily committed to capitalist reforms (can be kleptocracies)  Prezworski  In poorest countries, doesn’t matter whether regime is democratic or authoritarian (too few resources)  At “middle incomes,” slight advantage to non-democratic regimes in economic development

12 October 15, 2015October 15, 2015October 15, 2015Introduction to Political Science12 Sub-Saharan Africa  Particularly poor record on democratization and development  Some successes in Asia, head start in Latin America  Many have become poorer and less democratic; few have developed  Collier and Gunning  Focus on development  Are major problems domestic or external, policy or destiny?

13 October 15, 2015October 15, 2015October 15, 2015Introduction to Political Science13 Collier and Gunning  Domestic – Destiny  Poor health (tropical climate, AIDS)  High population growth  Poor soils  Low population density and high ethnic diversity  Many small countries (due to colonialism)  Domestic – Policy  Large public sector (ethnic conflict, chokes off private sector)  Poor public services (education, infrastructure)  Intrusive economic policy (price controls, regulation)  External – Destiny  Many landlocked countries (hinders trade)  Deterioration of terms of trade for primary commodities  Foreign aid (conditions; displacement of private investment)  External – Policy  High exchange rates and trade barriers  Large foreign debt


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