The Development Gap: Causes and Strategies
The Development Gap
The development gap is the difference in levels of economic and social development between the richest and poorest countries in the world. Despite overall improvements in global prosperity over recent decades, significant inequality persists between and within countries.
Scale of the gap:
- The richest 10% of the world's population accounts for approximately 52% of global income
- The richest country by GNI per capita (Luxembourg, ~87,000)isapproximately∗∗150times∗∗richerthanthepoorest(Burundi, 580)
- Sub-Saharan Africa contains the majority of the world's lowest-income countries
- The gap has narrowed in some ways (China and India have lifted hundreds of millions out of poverty) but widened in others (inequality within countries has often increased)
The development gap is not simply a global map of north and south — it also manifests within countries. Brazil has some of the world's wealthiest cities (São Paulo, Rio) and some of its poorest rural areas (the northeast sertão). The gap is spatial, social, and historical.
Causes of Uneven Development: Physical Factors
Geography and climate:
- Countries in tropical and subtropical zones face higher disease burdens (malaria, dengue, cholera) that reduce workforce productivity, impose healthcare costs, and deter foreign investment
- Landlocked countries have higher trade costs — without port access, importing and exporting is significantly more expensive; many of the world's poorest countries are landlocked (Chad, Mali, Burkina Faso, Nepal)
- Drought-prone regions (Sahel, Horn of Africa) are vulnerable to crop failure and food insecurity; these shocks disrupt economic activity and require governments to divert investment from development to emergency relief
- Countries on tectonic plate boundaries face repeated earthquake and volcanic hazard costs (Haiti's 2010 earthquake destroyed 120% of GDP in damage costs)
Resources:
- Countries lacking fertile land, water, or mineral resources face structural disadvantages
- However, the "resource curse" is equally well-documented: Nigeria, DRC, and Angola have vast natural resources but persistent poverty — revenue from resources can fuel corruption, inequality, and conflict rather than development
Causes of Uneven Development: Economic and Historical Factors
Colonialism and its legacy:
- European colonial powers (Britain, France, Portugal, Belgium, Netherlands, Spain) extracted raw materials from colonies and suppressed local industrial development for hundreds of years
- Colonial borders were drawn to suit European administrative convenience, not African, Asian, or Latin American ethnic, cultural, or geographic realities — creating states with no shared identity and high conflict risk
- When colonies gained independence (1940s–1970s), they often lacked trained administrators, industrial infrastructure, or educational institutions because colonists had systematically excluded locals from these roles
- Trade structures established under colonialism — exporting raw materials to developed world manufacturers, importing finished goods back — persist in modified form today, keeping commodity-dependent economies in a structurally disadvantaged position
Trade inequalities:
- Primary commodity dependency: LICs often rely on exporting one or two agricultural or mineral commodities (coffee, cocoa, copper, oil) whose global prices fluctuate widely; a price fall in a single commodity can decimate a country's export earnings
- Trade rules set by wealthy nations and international organisations (WTO) have historically favoured HIC interests — agricultural subsidies in the EU and USA make it difficult for LIC farmers to compete in global markets
- TNCs based in HICs extract profit from LICs through transfer pricing and tax arrangements, limiting the development benefit retained in host countries
Debt:
- Many LICs borrowed heavily in the 1970s to fund development projects; rising interest rates in the 1980s made repayments unpayable; countries spent more on debt repayment than on health or education
- Structural adjustment programmes imposed by the IMF and World Bank in exchange for debt rescheduling required cuts to government services, often harming the poorest populations
Strategies to Reduce the Development Gap I: Investment and Trade
Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) and industrial development:
- HICs and China invest in factory construction, infrastructure, and extraction industries in NEEs and LICs
- Example: Chinese FDI in sub-Saharan Africa has funded roads, railways, ports, and stadiums
- Benefit: job creation, technology transfer, tax revenue for governments
- Criticism: profits repatriated to HIC home countries; working conditions often poor; dependence on a single foreign investor creates vulnerability
Tourism:
- Tourism brings foreign currency, creates employment, and can fund infrastructure development in LICs and NEEs
- Example: Kenya's safari and wildlife tourism — tourism contributes approximately 8% of Kenya's GDP; employs 1 in 10 Kenyan workers
- Ecotourism in developing countries promotes conservation alongside economic development
- Criticism: profits concentrated in foreign-owned hotel chains (leakage); tourism is vulnerable to global economic downturns, pandemics, and political instability; can cause environmental damage and cultural disruption
Aid:
- Bilateral aid: one government gives directly to another (e.g. UK FCDO development assistance)
- Multilateral aid: channelled through international organisations (World Bank, UN agencies)
- NGO/charity aid: OXFAM, Save the Children, MSF deliver emergency and development aid
- Short-term emergency aid: provides food, water, medical supplies after disasters
- Long-term development aid: funds schools, hospitals, agricultural programmes
- Criticism of aid: can create dependency; may be tied to political conditions; corruption in recipient governments can divert funds; addresses symptoms not causes
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Strategies to Reduce the Development Gap II: Fair Trade, Debt Relief and Microfinance
Intermediate (appropriate) technology:
- Technology that is affordable, locally maintainable, and suited to local conditions
- Example: Practical Action (formerly Intermediate Technology Development Group) promotes tools such as hand pumps, small-scale solar units, improved cookstoves, and basic water filtration that can be maintained by local people without imported spare parts or specialist engineers
- Benefit: sustainable, empowers local communities, reduces dependence on expensive imported technology
- Contrast with large-scale mega-projects (Aswan Dam, large hydroelectric schemes) that may not benefit local populations and create long-term dependence on outside expertise
Fair trade:
- Fairtrade certification guarantees producers in LICs a minimum price for their crops (above market price), plus a Fairtrade Premium paid to community funds
- Example: Fairtrade coffee farmers in Ethiopia, Colombia, and Uganda receive a minimum price of 1.40/lbplusa0.20/lb community premium, regardless of whether the world coffee price falls below this
- The premium is invested in local priorities: schools, wells, health clinics, farm equipment
- Over 1.8 million farmers in 75 countries participate in Fairtrade
- Criticism: the Fairtrade price premium is often small; most Fairtrade revenue stays in the retail chain in rich countries; certification costs exclude the poorest smallholders
Debt relief:
- Jubilee 2000 campaign (1990s–2000s) successfully lobbied for the cancellation of debts owed by the world's poorest countries to HICs and international institutions
- The HIPC (Heavily Indebted Poor Countries) Initiative (IMF/World Bank) cancelled or restructured debts of 36 countries between 1996–2015; freed resources were required to be spent on poverty reduction
- Example: Zambia had $4.7 billion of debt cancelled in 2005; this freed funds previously spent on debt service for healthcare and education spending
- Criticism: debt relief does not address the underlying structural causes of poverty; some cancelled debts have been replaced by new borrowing
Microfinance loans:
- Small loans (typically 50–500) given to people in LICs who lack access to conventional bank credit
- Example: Grameen Bank (Bangladesh), founded by Muhammad Yunus (Nobel Peace Prize 2006): provides microloans primarily to women to start small businesses (sewing, food production, mobile phone rental)
- Over 9 million borrowers; 97% women; repayment rates above 95%
- Benefit: empowers women; generates income and savings; does not create country-level debt
- Criticism: interest rates on microloans are sometimes high; evidence that microloans reduce poverty at macro scale is mixed
Summary of bottom-up strategies:
| Strategy | Key example | Mechanism | Key limitation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Intermediate technology | Practical Action hand pumps/solar units | Affordable, locally maintainable — communities operate independently | Small scale; does not address structural trade or debt causes |
| Fair trade | Fairtrade coffee (Ethiopia, Colombia) — min. 1.40/lb+0.20 premium | Guarantees price floor above market to LIC producers | Premium small; most retail value stays in HIC supply chain |
| Debt relief | Zambia — $4.7 billion cancelled 2005 (HIPC Initiative) | Frees repayment funds for health and education | Does not prevent new debt accumulation |
| Microfinance | Grameen Bank (Bangladesh) — 9 million borrowers, 97% women | Provides credit to those excluded from conventional banking | Interest rates sometimes high; macro poverty impact mixed |
Common Exam Mistakes
1. Describing only one category of cause
Uneven development has physical, economic, and historical causes. A question on "causes of uneven development" expects all three categories. Listing only "tropical diseases" or only "colonialism" gives an incomplete answer. Include at least one from each category.
2. Treating aid as unambiguously positive
Aid has genuine benefits in emergency situations and long-term development. But a complete answer also notes criticisms: potential for dependency, diversion by corruption, tied conditions, and the argument that trade reform would be more transformative than aid. Balance benefits and limitations.
3. Confusing fair trade with free trade
Fair trade is a certification and trading system that guarantees minimum prices to LIC producers — a deliberate intervention in the market to benefit producers. Free trade is the removal of barriers to trade (tariffs, quotas) — a policy that its proponents argue benefits all countries through comparative advantage, though critics argue it disadvantages LIC producers competing against subsidised HIC agriculture.
4. Stating that all foreign investment helps development equally
FDI and TNC investment can benefit LICs through job creation and technology transfer, but much profit is repatriated to HIC home countries. The net development benefit depends on tax arrangements, labour standards, and how much value is retained in the host country. Present both sides.
5. Not naming examples for development strategies
"Aid helps poor countries" earns minimal marks. "The Jubilee 2000 debt relief campaign resulted in Zambia having $4.7 billion of debt cancelled in 2005, freeing resources for healthcare and education" earns much more. Every strategy must be supported by a specific, located example.
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