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Global South 2007 Lecture 4:October 12, 2007 Trade and Aid.

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Presentation on theme: "Global South 2007 Lecture 4:October 12, 2007 Trade and Aid."— Presentation transcript:

1 Global South 2007 Lecture 4:October 12, 2007 Trade and Aid

2 Case for Free Trade  David Ricardo; Milton Friedman; WTO; CATO Institute  Trade is mutually beneficial  There are always gains from trade although gains are not equal

3 Trade: David Ricardo

4 Comparative Advantage Ricardo's argument: there are gains from trade if each nation specializes completely in the production of the good in which it has a "comparative" cost advantage in producing, and then trades with the other nation for the other good.  Foreign trade may promote further accumulation and growth if wage goods (not luxuries) are imported at a lower price than they cost domestically -- thereby leading to a lowering of the real wage and a rise in profits. But the main effect, Ricardo noted, is that overall income levels would rise in both nations regardless

5 World Trade Organization Why the WTO is good for you http://www.wto.org/english/thewto_e/w hatis_e/10ben_e/10b00_e.htm Why the WTO is bad for you http://www.focusweb.org/wto-video- released.html?Itemid=36 http://www.focusweb.org/component/o ption,com_wrapper/Itemid,80/

6 Case Against Free Trade  National security; mercantilism  Infant industry argument  Beggar-thy-neighbour  One country can not indulge in free trade alone “we cannot force you to be free”

7 Can trade work differently?  International Trade is currently worth $10 million a minute. Who controls it?  Have you heard of fair trade?  What is fair trade?

8 Aid: Can aid help?  Disease (AIDS)  Disaster (Tsumani; Katrina)  Hunger and Famine (Niger, Mali, Ethiopia, Somalia, India…) What is aid? What power, if any does the aid recipient have?

9 Motivations behind Aid  Help; charity; altruism  Security concerns  Redistributive justice

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11 Is aid necessary? Average spending on health in low- income countries is $11 per capita. The cost of providing basic healthcare is estimated at $30 a person. For a country like Mali, where more than half the population lives on less than $1 a day, it would cost an additional $26 per person—or about 10% of GDP.

12 Mali’s options  What if Mali refused aid? What would happen? Who gains and who loses?  What if Mali takes aid? What happens then?

13 Which is true? We are hungry We have a food surplus

14 Famine, shortage or? Chronic hunger, malnutrition and vulnerability Causes: Landelessness, food insecurity, high and unpredictable food prices Unemployment Patriarchy ( Niger women 'banned from grain stores)‘ Can aid address these “structural” factors?

15 Is there humger in the north?  In 2004, 13.5 million households (or 11.9% of all U.S. households) were food insecure: 38 million people (13.2% of all Americans)  During the 12 months preceding the 2004 survey, 10.7 million adults and children lived in these households.

16 US (2)  In 2004, households with incomes below 130% poverty line had a food insecurity prevalence more than 3 times the national level. More than two-thirds of households reporting hunger had incomes under 185% of the poverty line.  Female-headed households and Black and Hispanic households had food insecurity at least 2.5 times those of other households.

17 Hunger in Canada  Hunger Count 2005 http://foodbank.duoweb.ca/documents/ hungerfacts-eng05.pdf

18 Aid and Disasters Tsunami and Indonesia: “Reeling under relief measures” http://www.yorku.ca/hdrnet/workshops /forum.asp?id=28

19 Aid and structural problems Underlying characteristics of aid  verticalism, or the process of transmission of decisions through a rigid power hierarchy.  sectoralism, or the dissipation of resources into a myriad of uncoordinated sectoral projects;  “assitentialism,” or forms of action that consider the poor as passive beneficiaries and not as active subjects who with appropriate support, can become autonomous; and finally,  bureaucratism, or the continous concentration of power in the hands of managers and bureaucrats, as well as the ever-increasing bureacratization of the mechanisms of development co-operation ”

20 Historical structures (Cox) Where does aid fit in? Social forces Forms of stateWorld Orders

21 Can aid work differently?


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