Zusammenfassung der Ressource
A Global Perspective on
Development Issues
- Definitions
- NICs- Newly Industrialised
Countries eg India and Thailand
- LIC- Low Income Country
- MNC- Multinational Company
- Tariffs- Taxes placed on imported goods
- Trade Blocs- Trading
partnership between
countries
- Quotas- Restrictions on the
number of goods that can
be imported each year
- Fair trade- Producers are
paid a fair amount of money
for products grown
- Globalisation- The interconnectivity
across the world due to an exchnage
in goods, tech, and sharing of cultures
- Development Indicators
- Literacy Rates- Tells us the
percentage of the population
that can read or write. It
shows the country's access to
education and a higher literacy
rate means that people are
better-educated and can have
higher-paying jobs
- Life expectancy- Tells us the average
age that people in a country live up
to. A higher value tells us that the
people have better access to
healthcare and better treatments
are provided so people can have a
better quality of life and live longer
as they suffer from fewer diseases
- GDP per capita - This is an
economic measure of the
average income of a family. A
higher GDP shows that epople
ahve higher standards of living
and better hobs. However, it does
not take the cost of livjg into
account nor the quality of life
- HDI- It is on a scale of 0 to 1. It takes
several factors into account such as
education, literacy rates, and GDP
- Education and
Development
- Improved education means
that poverty will be reduced
as more children can read
and write and access further
education, thus getting more
jobs
- It also creates an equal status
between men and women because if
girls recive an education, they will
get better jobs and will have children
later and will face less discrimation
- Barriers to education in LICs
- Education can be very expensive
so people can't afford it
- Schools in LICs may not be as accessible
as they are further away and they are
not very common
- It might be more profitable in the
short term to send children to work as
they can support the family.
- Shwapna's story
- She did not want to
partake in an
arranged marriage
and wanted to
continue going to
school
- 'Room to Read' was a girls'
education priogramme to
allow girls to pursue further
education by expalining the
imprortance of education so
Shwapna could go to uni and
have a job and be financially
independent
- Globalisation
- Factors that drive
globalisation
- Communication- Improvements
in tech have allowed for the
facilitaed spread of info
- Culture- Western styles of
media are relased throughout
the world at the same time
- Trade- Improved
tech and free
aviation fuel mean
that products can
be easily flowing in
and out of countries.
- MNCs- Link peopke through the
production and sale of goods.
- Impacts on the UK
- Has a higher
population due to a
higher net migartion
from the world
- Half of migrants have
highly skilled jobs in the
UK such as in finance, law
and banking. Migrants
produce 35% of UK's
exports
- Migrants can share their skills
- many migrnats take up dirty,
unwanted jobs that the
British citzens don't want
- 37% of London's population was born oversees
- Some say that migrants
take up jobs for local
people as well as strain
services such as
healthcare and education
- However, migrants pay lrage amints of taxes and
contribute to the economy
- Impacts around the world
- Positive
- More trade for LIC
- Sharing of cultures
- Secondary industries have moved
to NICs, creating new jobs
- HICs shift to the tertiary and
quaternary sectors
- Negatives
- Cultures become
more westernised
and lose their
charcteristics
- Increased transport leads
to CO2 emissions
- De-industrailisation in HICs
increase the gap between
the rich and the poor
- People gorw more
crops for profits,
leading to
deforestation and
reduced habits and
biodiversity
- Nike Case Study
- Background
- Operates and
sells in over 140
countries
- in 2014, Nike
employed 48,000
peole worldwide
- Its head office is in Oregon, USA
- Impacts of Nike
- Negative
- It brings in foreign
nations to do the
management roles
- Does not care
about the
host country's
envoronement
- It can pull
out of
the host
country
at any
time
- It provides
mostly low-paid
jobs with long
hours
- Positive
- Increases the host country's wealth
- provides jobs and
training for the locals
- Provides healthcare
and education for
workers and families
- Why Nike moved to Vietnam
- Workers are paid low wages
- No trade unions or strikes as the
Vietnamese are hard-working
- Vietnam background
- Loacted in south-east of Asia and is
bordered by China to the north
- Nike has ten large factories in Vietnam
- NIC Case Study- Bangladesh
- Economic and social
impacts of NIC growth
- Many sweatshops exploit
workers, who are paid low
wages, especially women
- Usual minimum wage in
Bangladesh is £25 a month,
which is lower than what it
should be
- Environmental Impacts of NIC growth
- NICs have very
relaxed
environmental
and planning
laws so MNCs
can reduce cots
by not having to
follow strict
building or
environmental
regulations
- Waste water is often discharged
into open drains and ditches
- In 2013, due to poor construction, the Rana
Plaza collapsed and killed 1,100 people,
mainly women in a clothing factory
- Trade
- China
- Exports
- Computers, textiles,,phones, internet
- Worth $2.6 trillion
- Imports
- Oil, metal ores
- Worth $ 2 trillion
- Ghana
- Imports
- Machinery, vehicles,
engineering materials
- Worth $ 28 billion
- Exports
- Coffee beans,
metal ores oil
- Worth $ 16 billion
- Trade blocs and development
- Trade blocs are
manily between HICs
and NICs eg. EU
- This means that HICs and NICs
can gian a lot of profit and can
export goods of high value, further
contributing to their econmoies
and enabling development
- Africa is mainly left out of trade blocs
- This means that less goods
are exported by LICs so LICs
in Afraca do not gain as much
proft as HICs so their
development is restricted,
which can inhibit services
such as edcuation and
healthcare
- Fair Trade
- Kuapa Kokoo Case Study
- It is a cooperation od
cocoa farmers in Ghana
- Farmers receive
$2000 per tonne of
cocoa, which is 10%
more than the
global market price
- Members of this
organisation can borrow
money from micro-credit
banks to invest in
improving their farms
- One person in the
village is elected to
weigh the cocoa beans.
When it is a woemn,
the ststus of woemn
are raised
- Advantages
- Farmers volunteer to
help each other for free
during the harvest
rather than employing
cheap leabour so many
children don't have to
work and can go to
school
- Farmers receive specail
training so can produce a
higher yiled of cocoa so
farmers profit more and can
invest in local village services
- The biodiversity of
the plantation is
conserved as farmers
can conserve cocoa
plants, as cocoa plants
need high biodiversity
- Aid and Development
- Emergency Aid-
Aleppo City, Syria
- Due to the Syrian Civil War,
nearly 7 million Syrians have fled
thier homes and 13.5 million
Syrinas are in need of aid
- The Penny Appeal Charity is
helping 2 million children get
back into education after the
conflict
- It is also providing food,
medical suppport and
shelter for families
dispalced by the war
- Long-term
Development
Aid, Malawi
- Lots of families in Malawi
find it diificult to escape
the cylce of poverty once
theyr are trapped in it
- To tackle this issue, a cow loan
scheme is taking place
- As a cow is loaned to a fmaily
in Malawi, the family can
drink the milk from the cow
an can sell extra milk
- This relsukts in a
steady income for
the family so they
can aford basci
necessities scuh as
clothing
- They can also afford to
educate their children and
buy stationery so children can
get qualicatation and get well
paid jobs
- The cow can then breed and
have another cow to help with
the family income.
- Pros and Cons of Aid
- Pros
- Emergency aid in
disatste rhas
saved lives and
reduced people's
misery
- Development projects sich
as improving water led to
improved living standards
- Provision of
medical training
and equipment
improves heallth
and standard of
living
- Aid improves the
repuation of donor
countries and
show thier
genroity and thier
efficient handling
of their econmy to
provide aid to LICs
- Cons
- Increases the
dependency
of LICs on
donor
countries
- Profits from large projects can go to donors and
donor countries rather than the recipeint country
- Donors can use aid to
exert political pressure on
the recipient
- Aid does not
alsways reach
people who need it
the most can can
be kept by corrupt
offcicials