Zusammenfassung der Ressource
AQA Geography GCSE- Development
gap
- 1- Differences in development
- Development is the use of natural
and human resources to achieve
a higher standard of living
- Factors affecting development
- Environmental
- E.g. natural hazards
- Economic
- e.g. trade / debt
- Social
- E.g. access to safe water / proper education
- Political
- E.g. government corruption / internal conflict
- Measuring development
- Development indicators
- Economic
- GDP
- Total value of the goods and services produced by a country in a year
- Per capita
- Value/population
- GNI (gross national income)
- Includes money earned from overseas
- Trade
- Transport
- km of railway
- Problems
- Hides inequalities
- Informal economy (black market) doesn't declare cash
- PPP is different in each country
- Can quickly become outdated & aren't reliable alone
- Social
- Health
- Infant mortality rate
- Life expectancy
- Obesity levels
- Doctors / 1000
- Housing
- % dwelling with water
- % dwelling with electricity
- Education
- % GNP spent on educaton
- Literacy rates
- Full time teachers / 1000
- Problems
- Social indicators often lag behind
economic indicators
- Composite
- HDI (human development index)
- Combines data on GDP per capita, adult literacy rates, life expectancy
and number of years in education
- PQLI (Physical quality of life index)
- Includes life expectancy, infant mortality rates, literacy rates
- Development gap: the widening
difference in levels of development
between the world's richest and
poorest countries
- 2- Dividing up the world
- More than one indicator is used usually used to
get a better idea of development
- How to divide the world up
- North/ South divide
- Wealthy 'North' controlled 80% of world's wealth and
20% controlled by poor 'south'
- The Brandt line
- Used GNP per capita- purely
economic
- Too simple to divide the world due to
rapid development
- First, second and third world countries
- First used when Britain colonised
countries
- Stages of development- MEDC & LEDC
- MEDC- richer countries
- LEDC- poorer countries
- NICs- newly industrialised economies
- 3- Standard of living and quality of life
- Standard of living
- The degree of wealth and material comfort
available to a person or community
- Measured by GDP per capita
- Good standard= enough for basics and money left over
- Quality of life
- The standard of health, comfort and
happiness experiences by an individual
or group
- More difficult to measure- many
aspects can be included
- HDI is used to measure by the UN
- Improving
- Self help
- Charity schemes
- Government programs
- In Nairobi
- Kiambiu
- Northeast Nairobi
- Slum
- improvements
- Christian aid & Kenyan partner Maji na Ufanisi
(water and development)
- Five toilet and shower blocks have been built
- Local people maintain and clean them
- Small fee to use then use that
money to develop further
- Clean drinking water
- Matopeni
- A woman formed a group to organise rubbish
colection & educate about health.
- If MNU finds money, they will work in Matopeni
- 60% live in places without access to basic things like clean drinking
water, education, proper toilets & healthcare
- 2009- 4 million were short of food
- 4- Widening the gap
- Global inequalities are made worse by a set of 4 factors
- Environmental
- Natural hazards
- Poor countries suffer worst- they don't have money
to prepare and protect
- E.g. Honduras & Hurricane Mitch
- HDI- 0.604
- HDI rank- 106th
- Overuse of forect
- Decreased productivity
- Hunting of wildlife
- Destroys basis for profitable tourism industry
- For illegal trade
- For food
- For exotic pets
- Economic
- Trade
- Most of world trade is between richer countries
- Richer countries- buy cheap goods and sell expensive goods
- Trade imbalance
- Poorer countries- buy expensive manufactured goods ( they can't
make) and sell cheap goods
- Sell cash crops
- E.g. Kenya
- HDI- 0.470
- HDI rank- 128th
- Rich countries also oversupply which reduces market
value of goods
- Workforce is usually poorly educated
- Little investment
- Poor infrastructure
- To move raw materials, finished goods & labour
- Unreliable electricity
- Political
- E.g Zimbabwe
- The government redistributed land from white farmers to the black population
- Tried to close development gap
- Had opposite effect
- Land was given to government supporters with little farming experience
- Production of crops to eat and trade collapsed, the
economy crashed & Zimbabweans left dependant on
international food aid
- HDI rank- 169th
- HDI- 0.140
- Corruption
- Foreign countries don't want to invest
- Corrupt governments hold onto money
- Divert tax rev/ loans/ aid into private account/
investment for own business
- Conflict
- Resources diverted to fighting
- Developments destroyed
- Social
- Water
- Availability
- 12% of world uses 85% of water
- 47L PP in Africa
- 578L PP in USA
- Quality
- A child dies from a water- borne disease every 15 seconds
- WaterAid
- Charity to overcome poverty & improve lives by helping people get
safe water and sanitation
- Have provided spring-fed wells to ensure clean water supplies
- E.g. Ethiopia
- Ethiopia: 74000 children die from diarrhoea each year
- HDI- 0.328
- HDI rank- 157th
- Education
- Health
- 6- Trade and development gap
- Japan VS Kenya
- Imports
- J: Machinery, fuel, foodstuff,
textiles, chemicals
- Imports cheap materials
- K: Machinery, oil products, motor
vehicles, iron & steel
- Imports expensive materials
- Exports
- J: Transport equip, motor vehicles,
electrical machinery, chemicals
- Exports expensive manufactured goods
- K: Tea, coffee, fish, cement, flowers
- Exports cheap primary goods
- Difference between imports & exports- trade balance.
- Countries want a surplus so they become richer
- Other patterns
- Countries trade with neighbours-
Japan's trading partners are US and
Chins
- Trade groups often leave poorer countries out
- Most trade is between richer countries-
little trade between poor countries
- TNC's have their headquarters in rich
countries- very important for world trade
- Quotas
- Restrict primary goods
- Limits quantity of goods that can be
imported
- Reducing the gap
- Trade
- Richer countries control trade
- Tariffs
- Taxes or customs duties paid on imports.
- Used to make imported goods more expensive and less
attractive to buyers than home- produced goods
- E.g. Ghana
- Exports raw cocoa beans.
- Most processing & packaging done in Europe
- EU import tariffs higher for
processed cocoa than raw cocoa
beans
- in 2007, EU charged 7.7% import tariff on
cocoa powder, 15% on chocolate with cocoa
butter and none on raw cocoa beans
- Ghana forced to export raw beans and lose out on extra money
from processing
- Seasonal- long periods of poverty
- Quotas
- Precise limit on quantity of goods that can be
imported. Usually on primary goods.
- Work against poorer countries
- Trading groups
- NAFTA
- EU
- Countries that have grouped together to increase the amount
they trade between them & the value of their trade
- Cut tariffs in place between them- make goods cheaper
- Countries not in trading groups lose out
- Free- trade
- When countries don't discourage or restrict the
movement of goods with tariffs and quotas
- Producers in poor countries can join together to
produce goods for fair trade market
- World Trade Organisation
- Aims to make trade easier and get rid of
anything hindering it
- Negotiates trade agreements and settles trade
disputes
- Focusing on helping poorer countries by reducing and removing
farm subsidies (grants paid to farmers to encourage them to grow
more
- WTO's agreement on Agriculture still allows EU and USA to spend huge
amounts of money on subsidies
- Farmers there then produce huge volumes of food which EU and US governments
buy and dump on poor countries as food aid
- Reduces price of food actually produced in those countries which
puts livelihoods of local farmers at risk
- In long term, is better than aid for helping countries to develop
- Creates jobs which provide waged that people
can spend on improving standard of living &
quality of life
- Arguments
- For
- Creates jobs = wages
- Quality of life & standard of living increased
- More money for education so more people employed
- Increased wealth long term
- Decreases dependancy on aid
- Learn to trade well- increases knowledge
- Against
- Countries may not have enough goods to trade
- Takes long time to generate profit to reinvest & is vulnerable
to fluctations in market
- Limitations from lack of resources & skills (work force)
- Trade involves investment- poorer countries can't afford
- Debt
- Many poorer countries are in debt and the sums they owe are huge
- 1970s: international banks lent large amounts of money to poorer countries to
build expensive infrastructure projects e.g. dams
- 1980S: interest rates more than doubled. increased amount owed
- Many countries couldn't repay debts so unpaid interest added to original loan amounts & loan grew
- In return for reorganising debts to make them more manageable, banks expected governments of indebted
countries to cut spending. E.g. Uganda- biggest cuts to healthcare & education (crucial for development)
- Trade
- Problems with trade & debt
- Central America once had 500000km of
rainforest. 80% now gone
- Each year 800 km plus is cut down in Honduras
- For ranches
- For banana plantations
- Earn money for debt
- For small farms
- Used to provide hardwood & traded to repay debt
- 20% of money Honduras earns from
exports spent on debt
- Cancelling
- July 2005: ten live 8 concerts held around the world to campaign for
make poverty history & cancel world debt
- A few days later, at a meeting of the G8 (world's richest 8 countries), an
agreement was made to cancel all debts owed by 18 Highly Indebted
Poor Countries
- Two conditions had to be met before they were cancelled
- Government had to show it could manage finances & that it wasnt corrupt
- Had to agree to spend debt money on education, healthcare and reducing poverty
- 27/38 HIPC countries met conditions in 2008- $85 billion cancelled
- African countries still owe $300 billion- small chance they can repay
- Cancelled $1.5 billion in Uganda
- Conservation swaps (debt for nature
swaps)
- Country which is owed money by another cancels part of the debt in
exchange for the debtor country's agreement to pay for conservation
activities
- Often organised by NGOs like WWF
- E.g. Peru
- 2002 & 2008: Peru and US agreed to a debt swap worth $40 million
- P: agreed to conservation activities to preserve 27.5 million acres of endangered rainforest
- Provides habitat for many rare species e.g. pink dolphin & jaguar
- Aid
- When a country receives help from another country or
organisation to help it develop and improve people's lives
- What
- Money
- Gifts
- Grants
- Loans
- People with special skills
- Medical
- Teachers
- Goods
- Emergency supplies
- tents or food
- Equipment
- Tractors
- Types of
- Short term
- E.g. after a nat. disaster
- Long term
- Sustainable long term aid can prevent emergencies from
happening in the first place
- E.g. immunisation to eradicate
disease e.g. polio
- Tied
- Insistence of where the aid is used
- Something in return
- E.g. Malaysia and UK- a well in
exchange for trade
- Donor: country/ organisation
giving the aid
- Recipient: country recieving aid
- Aid projects can be
organised in two way
- Top-down
- Decisions about dev. projects made by national governments/
large organisations
- Projects are often large- scale across whole country
- Often involve large sums of money
- Locals usually have no direct involvement in decision making
- Workers are external specialists
- Bottom-up
- Experts work with local communities to identify their needs
- Alot of work done by NGOs E.g. FARM africa
- Locals have control over improving their lives
- Workers are mainly local but there are some external trainers
- Arguments
- For
- Improved standard of living
- Could improve relations between countries
- Improves health
- Jobs could be increased- lower unemployment
- Can support countries in accessing their natural resources
- After natural disasters it is needed so people don't die etc
- Against
- May feel like they need to
repay but often cant
- Top- down aid- locals don't actually get a say
- Corruption can stop aid getting to where it is needed
- Can increase LEDC dependancy on donor countries
- Sometimes projects don't help small scale farmers