Brown University
Economics 151 – Economic Development
Administrative details
Instructor: Andrew Foster
(email: afoster@brown.edu)
Office: 222 Blistein Hall
Office hours: Tues 1-3 pm
or by appointment.
Teaching Assistant: Nicholas Wilson
(email: Nicholas_Wilson@brown.edu)
Class time: T, Th 10:30-11:50 AM (I Hour)
Class Location: 101 Wilson
Hall
Midterm: October
28, 2004 During class
Exam: December 18,
2004, 9AM
Sections: During normal lecture—apx.
once every two weeks.
Web site: http://adfdell.pstc.brown.edu/ec151,
login:ec151, password: provided in class
Overview
This course examines why some countries persistently fail to
achieve high levels of growth, and the implications of this for individual
well-being. Some of the questions which we will investigate include: Why do the
poor in low income countries under-invest in human capital? What are the
constraints on the efficient functioning of markets in these countries? Can
public policy be used to improve the functioning of these markets, and thereby
accelerate growth? What constrains policy decisions in low income countries? An
important aim of this course is to teach you how to use both the theoretical
and empirical tools of economics to investigate these questions.
Given the multi-faceted nature of development as a process
it should be no surprise that there is some overlap between this course and
other courses offered by the department:
EC0143 Economics of Population
EC0152 The Economic Analysis of Institutions,
EC0153 Health Hunger and the Household in Developing Countries,
EC0156 Economic Growth,
EC0154 International Trade.
Economics 151 is not a prerequisite for these courses but
will provide relevant background and may help students identify which of these
courses is most likely to be of interest.
Prerequisites
The formal prerequisite for this course is intermediate
microeconomics. It is also recommended that students have a background in
statistics and/or econometrics.
Students with concerns about their preparation for the
course should speak with the instructor.
Requirements
There are a series of problems assigned in each week. Please
turn the problem sets in for the previous week by the start of class on
Tuesday. There will also be a series of empirical exercises (3-4) passed
out in class. Problem sets and empirical exercises will count toward 40% of the
final grade for the course. The mid-term will count for 25%. The final exam
will count for the remaining 35%. Class participation is expected, and will be
taken into account in marginal cases.
Text and readings:
The text for this class is Debraj Ray’s Development Economics.
You are responsible for the material in these chapters with particular emphasis
on the material discussed in class. Several other articles are also included in
the syllabus. These articles will be available on the class web site. You
will not be responsible for technical material not discussed in class, but you
should be able to characterize the frame of the argument used in any of the
assigned readings.
I may make modifications/additions to the list of problem
sets and readings on this syllabus. Any such modifications will be announced in
a timely fashion in class. An updated copy of the syllabus will be kept on the
web site, with any changes marked with a *.
Syllabus
- Introduction
to economic development 9/7
- What is development?,
PPP, convergence
- Read Ray, Chapters 1
and 2
- *Do Ray 2.2, 2.6, 2.9
- Chapter 2 handout
- Economic Growth (9/14)
- Harrod-Domar, neoclassical versus endogenous growth;
- Read
Ray Chapters 3 and 4
- Do
Ray 3.2, 3.3, 3.7, 3.8, 4.2, 4.9
- Chapter 3
handout
- Chapter 4 handout
- Empirical Problem Set
1
- EE 1 Data Set
- Industrialization
and Structural Transformation 9/21
- History,
expectations, coordination failure
- Read
Ray Chapter 5
- Do
Ray. 5.3,5.4,5.9
- Inequality
and Development 9/28
- Measuring
inequality, Kuznes, distribution and growth
- Read
Ray Chapter 6 and 7
- Do
Ray. 6.1, 6.3, 7.1, 7.2, 7.5, 7.9, 7.11
- Chapter 7 handout
- Income
and nutrition 10/5
- Effects
of income on nutrition, effects of nutrition on income
- Read
Ray Chapter 8
- Ex.
8.1, 8.3, 8.6, 8.7
- Education
10/12
- Supply
and demand for schooling, child labor
- “The
Schools Environment”, Public Report on Basic Education in India,
Chapter 3, Oxford
University
Press, 1999.
- Foster,
Andrew D. and Mark R. Rosenzweig, “Technical Change and
Human-Capital Returns and Investments: Evidence from the Green Revolution”
American Economic Review, Vol. 86, No. 4. (Sep., 1996), pp.
931-953.
- Education handout.
- Empirical Problem Set
2.
- Population
10/19
- Fertility,
gender, dowries
- Read
Ray Chapter 9
- Read
Dreze, Jean and Amartya
Sen, 1995, “Gender inequality and women’s
agency”, In India: Economic Development and Social Opportunity,
Chapter 7, pp140-78. Oxford
University
Press: Delhi.
- Do Ray
9.2, 9.6, 9.14
- Practice midterm
- Rural
Urban Migration 10/26
- The
Lewis model, agricultural transformation, labor markets, migration
decisions, non-farm economic growth
- Read
Ray 10
- Do
Ray 10.3, 10.4, 10.10
- Foster A. and M. Rosenzweig, 2003, “Agricultural productivity growth,
rural economic diversity, and economic reforms: India 1970-200” October
2003
- Agriculture:
Land and Labor Markets 11/2
- Incomplete
markets, the rural household, farm size and efficiency, land tenancy
- Read
Ray 11, 12, 13
- Do
Ray 12.3,12.8, 13.2
- Agriculture:
Credit and Insurance Markets 11/9
- Read
Ray 14, 15
- Do
Ray 14.1, 14.5 ,15.6
- Local
political economy 11/16
- Effects
of gender mandates, democratization
- Foster, Andrew and
Mark Rosenzweig, “Democratization,
decentralization and the distribution of local public goods in a poor
rural economy”, manuscript, Brown University. 2003.
- Chattopadhyay, R. and E. Duflo,
“Women as policymakers: Evidence form a nationawide
randomized experiment”, MIT 2001.
- Empirical Problem Set
3 (Due 12/9/04)
- Esther Duflo, “Grandmothers and Grandaughters:
Old Age Pension and Intra-household Allocation in South Africa”, Mansucript,
MIT.
- South African
data set
- International
Trade 11/16
- Comparative
advantage, specialization, tariffs, trade policy
- Read
Ray 16, 17, 18
- Do
Ray 16.4, 17.8, 17.10,
- Corporations,
Technology and Globalization 11/23
- Foreign
direct investment, export-led growth, technology transfer
- Perkins
et al Economics of Development Chapter 14 (on web)