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New growth perspectives on spillovers and poverty January 1999 by William Easterly
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Over very long run, poor countries stay trapped in poverty
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A puzzle: even if national policy incentives explain national growth differences, Why do we observe persistently poor areas within a given country?
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If “people respond to incentives” why don’t the poor respond to the same incentives as the rich? Proposed thesis: poor people stay poor because their incentives to grow are poor; their incentives are poor because of spillovers from other poor people.
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Outline u Direct evidence of poverty traps and spillovers between people u Theory of Increasing Returns (poverty traps) versus Diminishing Returns (no poverty traps) u More Testing predictions of increasing versus diminishing returns models
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Testing predictions of diminishing versus increasing returns models Diminishing returns: u Wealth and poverty depend on individual characteristics; there is no reason to expect concentrations of wealth and poverty Increasing returns: u Wealth and poverty are concentrated in particular areas
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Direct evidence for spillovers u Rauch 1991 found that identical workers have higher wages in US cities with high average human capital than in cities with low average human capital. u Borjas 1994 found that identical workers have different wages if they belong to different immigrant groups (average human capital of ethnic group = “ethnic capital”)
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Direct evidence for spillovers Households in the Tangail/Jamalpur district of Bangladesh have 47 percent lower real consumption than identical households in Dhaka.
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Anecdotes of poverty concentrations u Where are the poorest all-white counties in the US? u 18 of the 20 all-white counties with the worst poverty rates are in Southeastern Kentucky. u The poorest county, Owsley, has 52 percent of the population under the poverty line and only 35 percent are high school graduates.
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The poor in Southeastern Kentucky remain poor because they are surrounded by other poor people Southeastern Kentucky
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Anecdotes of poverty concentrations Indigenous Mexicans have a poverty rate of 81 percent; non-indigenous Mexicans 18 percent
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Anecdotes of poverty concentrations In China, 5 percent of the population are below the poverty line in Guangdong while Guangxi has 37 percent below the poverty line.
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Anecdotes of poverty concentrations u In Malaysia, non-Bumiputras (Indians/ Chinese) earn 68 percent more than Bumiputras u Poor remain poor because they associate mainly with other poor people.
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High income is also concentrated in space u The most economically dense 10 percent of global land area produces 54 percent of global GDP; the least dense 50 percent of land area produces 11 percent of global GDP u The most economically dense 2 percent of US land area produces 50 percent of US GDP; the least dense 50 percent of the land produces 2 percent of GDP
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High income is concentrated in space u US metropolitan counties are $3300 richer per capita than rural counties. u Metropolitan counties in the BosWash corridor are $5874 richer per capita than other metropolitan areas (2.4 standard deviations). Boston- Washington corridor
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High income is concentrated in space u Even within the Washington DC metropolitan area there are huge differences across space. u Wealth concentrations are reinforced because rich associate with each other u Poverty concentrations are reinforced because poor associate with each other
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A journey through the DC area Andrews AFB Potomac
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High income is concentrated in space
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Still see mild divergence with more recent data:
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Theory of Increasing versus Diminishing Returns u Diminishing Returns Production Function: y=Ak a u k is individual’s own physical capital, y is individual’s own output u a<1 u Increasing Returns Production Function: y=Ak a h b u k is individual’s own broadly defined capital, h is average level of broad capital in society u in equilibrium, k=h u a + b > 1
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Incentives with Diminishing vs Increasing Returns
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Ingredients of Increasing Returns Knowledge spills over between people (Desh Garments story)
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Ingredients of Increasing Returns Technology is only as strong as its weakest link (Kremer ’s O-ring theory)
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Ingredients of Increasing Returns u “Weakest link” theory implies strong complementarity between people u Your productivity is higher if you work with other high productivity people u High human capital people tend to segregate themselves into an exclusive group, leaving low human capital people to associate with other low human capital people
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Incentives with Diminishing vs Increasing Returns
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Testing predictions of diminishing versus increasing returns models Diminishing returns: u Poor catch up to rich Increasing returns: u Country poverty traps
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Incentives with Diminishing vs Increasing Returns
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Testing predictions of diminishing versus increasing returns models Diminishing returns: u Initial conditions don’t matter Increasing returns: u Initial conditions matter
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Incentives with Diminishing vs Increasing Returns
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Over very long run, poor countries stay trapped in poverty
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The rank correlation across 36 countries of income per capita in 1820 and income per capita in 1992 is.85 The poor nations stay poor because individual incentives are poor; individuals’ incentives are poor because they associate with other poor individuals.
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Testing predictions of diminishing versus increasing returns models Diminishing returns: u Capital flows to poor areas Increasing returns: u Capital flows to rich areas
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Incentives with Diminishing vs Increasing Returns
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Portfolio capital gross inflows per person, annual average 1970-94 u Annual inflow to poorest quintile of countries: six cents per person u Annual inflow to richest quintile of countries: $189 per person
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Total gross capital inflows, 1990 u The richest 20 percent of world population received 88 percent of gross capital inflows u The poorest 20 percent of world population received 1 percent of gross capital inflows
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Testing predictions of diminishing versus increasing returns models Diminishing returns: u National policies have weak effect Increasing returns: u National policies have strong effect
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Incentives with Diminishing vs Increasing Returns
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How strong are policy effects? They are strong, as we have seen in previous presentations
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Caveats u “Conditional convergence” seems to contradict increasing returns, although the two can be made consistent u Causality is an open question about strength of policy effects u Failure to find spillovers from FDI in firm- level studies u Growth rates can’t increase without bound
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Conclusions u Most of the evidence supports the existence of spillovers between people and increasing returns. u Poverty itself creates poor incentives for the poor with increasing returns: the poor are poor because they get spillovers only from other poor people.
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Policy implications u Need to subsidize return to physical capital, human capital, and technology adaptation in poor areas. u Have subsidy increase as poor raise their incomes, not decrease. u Market-friendly government policies matter even more under increasing returns than under diminishing returns.
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