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Printable Handouts
Navigable Slide Index
- Introduction
- Motivation and overview
- Differences in living standards (1)
- Differences in living standards (2)
- Differences in living standards (3)
- Income comparison
- Prosperity is the exception
- World map of extreme poverty
- Poverty data
- World map of poverty
- Big questions regarding development
- Why study development economics?
- A highly complex socioeconomic system
- Overview of development economics
- Development as an objective
- Development as a process
- Analytical framework of development economics
- Development and economic growth
- Economic growth is not enough (1)
- Economic growth is not enough (2)
- Increase in well-being is important
- Good stewardship is important
- Development policy (1)
- Development policy (2)
- Development policy (3)
- Development policy (4)
- Development policy (5)
- Evaluation of policy via the analytical framework
- Development policy in this series
- Further study (1)
- Further study (2)
This material is restricted to subscribers.
Topics Covered
- Why study development
- Why study development economics
- Development as an objective
- Development as a process
- Development policy
Links
Series:
Categories:
Talk Citation
Schaffner, J. (2016, September 29). Development economics: introduction and overview [Video file]. In The Business & Management Collection, Henry Stewart Talks. Retrieved December 21, 2024, from https://doi.org/10.69645/XBLT4472.Export Citation (RIS)
Publication History
Other Talks in the Series: Development Economics
Transcript
Please wait while the transcript is being prepared...
0:00
Welcome to this first Henry Stewart Talk
on Development Economics.
I'm Julie Schaffner.
I'm a Development Economist
in the Fletcher School of Law
and Diplomacy at Tufts University.
In these talks we'll be using
the term development
to refer to a process of economic
and social change that makes life better,
raises well-being for many people. And especially
for people around the world who are poor,
meaning that they are living with less
than a minimally acceptable level of comfort,
security and opportunity.
This series is designed for viewers
who want not only to learn about development
but also to become more engaged
with development.
Perhaps, by becoming more
knowledgeable voters
or donors to charitable organizations
or perhaps, more directly through
new career directions
involving work with governments,
non-governmental organizations,
or any of the many private enterprises
that are part of the international
development community today.
0:50
In this introductory talk,
I'll first briefly address
two motivation questions.
Why study the general subject of development?
And why study development economics
more specifically?
I'll then offer an overview
of the structure
that development economists
bring to their study of development,
describing how they approach
three important tasks
which I'll call, defining
the development objective,
understanding the development process,
and designing and analyzing
development policies.
We'll be using the term policy
very broadly by the way,
to encompass any sort of policy,
project or program
introduced with the aim
of encouraging development.
Polices can be introduced by governments,
non-governmental organizations
or private sector enterprises alone
or in creative partnerships.
Development policies in this sense
could include anything
from programs distributing cash,
food or insecticide treated bed nets,
to programs of road and school construction,
to offers of loans or insurance contracts
to poor households
that are unreached
by formal financial systems,
to the development of legal
and law enforcement systems
that protect property rights,
to macro-policies toward international trade.
So the term policy is really
just a short hand expression
for almost any kind of
action development actors
might take to encourage development.