Nearly half sub-Saharan children malnourished
Japan Sees Great Opportunity in Africa
Finally, the Nepali businessmen have realized (after decades of inefficient investment in the garment and apparel sector) that Nepal should focus on what it inherently is best at exploiting comparative advantage. The President of Nepal Chamber of Commerce (NCC) argues that for economic development the government should focus on four main areas:
(i) Development of hydropower (ii) Promotion of tourism and special incentives for its development (iii) Strengthening of economic diplomacy and (iv) Human resource development.
Is it a self-discovery of the best sectors needed for economic development? If it is, then thank God, it has been acknowledged now, though late. Enough of focus on the uncompetitive garment, apparel, and carpet sector, which have led the economy nowhere! Now, it is time to change direction and focus on what Nepal is best at harnessing its comparative advantage.
Nepal has notorious transportation system, which has always created supply bottlenecks (contributing to longer delivery time and increase in cost of production). Focusing on tourism and hydro sector would be relevant because these sectors do not require well paved roads. Tourism relies very less on road transportation, as tourists usually either take airway or hike up the hills. Hydro sector also does not require roads as much as the export/trade sector does. So, in the short run Nepal is better off focusing on these sectors. Meanwhile, in the long run it should construct well paved roads/transport networks along with the development in the trading sector.
More like self-discovery, agian:
We have always urged the government to provide incentives to farmers, focus on agro and herb processing industries and link farms with the market - both domestic and overseas - in order to develop rural Nepal and help people enjoy the fruits of development. We have also focused on capacity building of commodity associations so that they can better serve the markets.
Very sticky labor laws are a big, big problem in Nepal:
...our long-running demands like "no work no pay" and a "hire and fire" provision in the labor law continue to fall on deaf ears. Labor law reform has been shelved for now.
This article is interesting. It looks at how much of exports from China is made from imported intermediate goods and how much from domestically generated intermediate goods. The authors estimate that about 50% of China's export contains domestic content-- much lower than most other countries.
Why is it useful to dissect export data in this way? Well, it is important to analyze export statistics this way because it gives clearer picture while designing policies, especially to determine the effect of exchange rate fluctuations on domestic exports and on GDP growth. Cēterīs paribus, a given exchange rate appreciation would have a smaller effect on trade volume, the lower the share of domestic content in the exports.
We also estimated that the share of foreign value added in normal exports is way lower (between 5-11%) than in processing exports (between 74-82%). There are also interesting variations across sectors and firm ownership. Those sectors that are likely labelled as relatively sophisticated such as computers, telecommunication equipments, and electronic devices have particularly high foreign content (about 80%). Moreover, foreign-invested firms also tend to have higher foreign content in their exports than do Chinese domestic firms
Here is the conclusion:
Our best estimate suggests that the share of domestic content in China’s exports is about 50%, which is much lower than most other countries. This implies that a given exchange rate appreciation is likely to have a smaller effect on China’s trade surplus than for other countries. The domestic content share is particularly low in sectors that are likely to be labelled as sophisticated, such as electronic devices and telecommunication equipments. This means the competitive pressure China’s exports place on skilled workers in high-income countries is smaller than suggested by a simple-minded look at the raw trade data.
Here is an interesting paper, An Empirical Test Of The Poverty Traps Hypothesis, written by Francisco Rodriguez and published by the UNDP's International Poverty Center (IPC):
This paper presents an empirical test of a subclass of poverty traps hypotheses. The test is based on the observation that the nonconvexities in the production function necessary to generate multiple equilibria need only be present in the region between the equilibria. Increasing returns should therefore be strongest when the economy is transitioning between steady states than when it is at or near one of those steady states. I implement this idea by estimating the degree of increasing returns during growth accelerations and growth transitions for a panel of developing and developed economies using UNIDO's Database of Industrial Statistics. I find no evidence of systematic differences in economies of scale between transition and non-transition episodes, shedding doubt on the idea that increasing returns in manufacturing generate poverty traps.
Here some are key facts compiled by the IFAD:
Norman Borlaug, father of the Green Revolution and the only man who was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for contribution in agriculture and food production, is considered as "the man who fed the world" during the 60s, 70s, and 80s, when millions of people in the world (especially in India, Pakistan and China) were under threat from famine. Borlaug is a legend for his contribution in spearheading the agriculture revolution at a time when people were skeptical about the use of fertilizers and hybrid, high yielding seeds.
I spent the whole day yesterday reading a biography of Norman Borlaug. The Man Who Fed The World: Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Norman Borlaug And His Battle to End World Hunger is written by Leon Hesser. It is an excellent book and has high relevance to today's rise in global food prices.
Borlaug is the undisputed father of the Green Revolution--a term coined in 1968 by William S. gaud, the then Administrator of the USAID. He was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1970 for spearheading the Green Revolution. He was was a researcher and always sought answer to how to increase yield and productivity.He defied Malthus' prediction-- unchecked population growth always exceeds the growth of means of subsistence-- by emphasizing in new technology, research, and use of high yielding hybrid seeds to increase production and productivity.
Bourlaug’s Mexican dwarf wheat varieties and their Indian and Pakistani derivative had been the principal catalyst in triggering the Green Revolution. The unusual breadth of geographic adaptation combined with high genetic yield potential, short straw, a strong responsiveness and high efficiency in the use of heavy doses of fertilizers, an a broad spectrum of disease resistance had made the Mexican dwarf varieties the biological bombshell that launched the Green Revolution.
Borlaug was not only a pragmatic agronomist and researcher but he also knew that without a fair price for harvest, credit, fertilizers, and infrastructure agriculture revolution was simply not possible. Back in the 70s he argued that infrastructure is key to higher food production and productivity-- clear example is India where fairly good infrastructure, along with credit injection and purchase (from Mexico) and use of high yielding seeds, in Punjab led to boom in food production, which helped India attain self-sufficiency in food production by 1974.
He also knew that bringing about a drastic change in a developing country is be very difficult. His used to advise his students: "Don't try to change everything at once, they will slit your throat." He was referring to the intransigence of the Indian and Pakistani bureaucracy to change long running faulty and distorted agricultural policies.
Convincing government officials to change a long running practice is very difficult. Borlaug believed in "Kick-Off Approach", which basically is manipulation of technical, psychological and economic factors to achieve superior, rapid results. He used his research and tests to convince governments to change food policy (technical). He then tested a sample of his seeds to show the people and government that the yield was higher in the same plots and circumstance (psychological). Finally, he forced a change in economic policies so that farmers get a fair price for their produce (economic).
He favored government intervention/action because depending on free markets alone in the food sector would lead to nowhere and increase chances of more hunger and starvation. Markets are not perfect and the government has to ensure that there are right conditions in place to entice markets to operate in the villages, where most of the food is grown. Sometimes, subsidies and credit facility (basically injection) are required to roll the wheels of market, which is too obsessed with adverse selection and moral hazard. He had realized that the poor lack credit to purchase fertilizers, seeds, and farming equipment-- things the government need to provide in the absence of markets. He said, "What India needs is fertilizer, fertilizer, fertilizer, credit, credit, credit, and fair prices, fair prices, fair prices!" Pakistan and India both did it and they became self-sufficient in 1974 and 1978 respectively.
Borlaug indicated that government action was needed to assure (a) the availability of the right kind of fertilizer at reasonable prices at the village level six weeks before the onset of the planting season; (b) credit for the farmers to purchase fertilizer and seed before planting, to be paid back at harvest; and (c) an announcement before the initiation of the planting season that, at harvest, farmers would receive a fair price for their grain.
Fair price for harvest sends a different signal in the market and gives farmers incentive to produce more. When prices are distorted, then farmers would be unwilling to send surplus produce to the market. This is exactly what happened in Pakistan in 1968.
The problem was that, on the advice of economists, the government had dropped its guaranteed price for wheat by 25%. Speculators were hoarding the crop.
Borlaug had rightly diagnosed the problem in Africa by pointing out that lack of infrastructure is basically holding back Africa. He argues:
Lack of infrastructure is killing Africa… Africa needs a much broader network of roads, with many just plain, gravel rural roads, but the continent also needs some surfaced main roads with efficient connections to seaports. Asphalt paving can come later for much for much of the rural road system. Improved basic transport systems would greatly accelerate agricultural production, break down tribal animosities, and help establish rural schools and clinics in areas where teachers and health practitioners are heretofore unwilling to venture… Water resource development has to be high on the development priority list in Africa.
Borlaug is now partnering with Jimmy Carter and the Nippon Foundation of Japan in a program called Sasakawa Global 2000 to bring a Green Revolution in Africa. And success has already been seen in Uganda and possible Ghana within 2009. The test program is being replicated in numerous sub-Saharan African countries. Borlaug believes that with the right seeds, fertilizers, and agricultural policies, we can
An extremely good, light-to-read book. Highly recommended for those who are interested in the current food crisis.
Here is more about Borlaug from the Nobel Prize website. Here is Borlaug's website and information about his foundation.
Rajasthan gets India's first millennium village
Amarpura in Churu district of Rajasthan has been declared as India’s first millennium village...“The millennium villages are a way of meeting the millennium development goals,” economist Jeffrey Sachs, director The Earth Institute, said. Sachs will work with the Gita Mittal foundation in Amarpura. The foundation, the trustees of which include steel baron ML Mittal and his sons Lakshmi Narain, Pramod and Vinod, has made a commitment to contribute whatever is required in the area, part of Rajgarh tehsil, which is also their ancestral home.
Why was economics so late in starting?
Amartya Sen bats for industrialisation
After Doha, What's Next? Q&A with CGD's Randall Soderquist
Capitalism and Keynes: From the Treatise on Probability to The General Theory (by Edmund Phelps)...also related Keynes and the current financial crisis
Friedman's Nobel Lecture reconsidered
Recognizing farmer's knowledge in development initiatives: The legacy: Beyond nukes (by Arvind Subramanian)
Indigenous bee-keeping in Alaba Special woreda, Southern Ethiopia
(This paper argues that recognizing and documenting indigenous bee-keeping practice in the woreda is a pre-requisite to sustain honey production and strengthen existing development efforts aimed at improving the living standard of low income farmers...the authors argue that early introduction of modern apiculture in the study area has not taken in to account the role and significance of indigenous knowledge in development process.)