Development and Development Paradigms
ISSUE PAPERS
Resources for policy making
EASYPol Module 102
Development and Development Paradigms
A (Reasoned) Review of Prevailing Visions
Resources for policy making
Development and Development Paradigms
A (Reasoned) Review of Prevailing Visions
by Lorenzo G. Bell?, Policy Officer, Economist, Policy Assistance Support
Service, Policy and Programme Development Support Division
of the
FOOD AND AGRICULTURE ORGANIZATION OF THE UNITED NATIONS
About EASYPol The EASYPol home page is available at: easypol EASYPol is a multilingual repository of freely downloadable resources for policy making in agriculture, rural development and food security. The resources are the results of research and field work by policy experts at FAO. The site is maintained by FAO's Policy Assistance Support Service, Policy and Programme Development Support Division, FAO.
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Development and Development Paradigms A (Reasoned) Review of Prevailing Visions
Table of contents
1 Summary ............................................................................. 1 2 Introduction .......................................................................... 1 3 Background .......................................................................... 1 4 Defining development, development paradigms and development
ingredients ........................................................................... 2 4.1 Development defined .....................................................2 4.2 What should be developed? Dimensions of development ....2 4.3 How to develop: development paradigms .........................5 4.4 Identifying development paradigms and related policies .....6 4.5 Disentangling development ingredients ............................8 5 Economic growth versus poverty and inequality reduction ..........9 6 Agricultural growth versus economic growth ........................... 14 7 Technology changes versus economic growth.......................... 20 8 Agricultural growth and technological changes versus poverty reduction ............................................................................ 22 9 External factors versus growth, poverty, technology and agricultural development ...................................................... 25 10 Institutions and other domestic factors versus external factors.. 31 11 Development paradigms identified ......................................... 35 12 Conclusions ........................................................................ 38 13 Further Readings ................................................................. 39
Development and Development Paradigms
1
A (Reasoned) Review of Prevailing Visions
1 SUMMARY
This paper attempts to sketch prevailing development paradigms, i.e. the definition of modalities to achieve development, based on either a codified set of activities and/or based on a vision regarding the functioning and evolution of a socio-economic system.
This exercise contributes to the interpretation of recent past and ongoing development processes and policies and to support the exploration of alternative development paradigms to address emerging and future development issues. After defining the concepts of development and development paradigms, this paper identifies some key "ingredients" of recent past and prevailing development "recipes". Mutual links among these "ingredients" are explored through selected contributions in the literature which focuses on development issues. On this basis, some cause-effect relationships are highlighted, which are at the root of most development processes. The analysis of these cause-effect relationships allows for the identification of selected development paradigms prevailing in different countries, during different periods and within different development contexts. In the light of the emerging issues affecting the sustainability of development achievements in industrialised countries, the concluding remarks reassess the prevailing vision according to which selected countries are considered "developed", as opposed to others considered "developing".
2 INTRODUCTION
Objectives: The aim of this paper is to provide some conceptual elements for further qualitative and quantitative analytical work, to feed the debate on development and related policy decision making processes.
Target audience: Anyone involved in development policy making processes: policy analysts and advisors, government ministries, international organizations, researchers, practitioners, academics...
Required background: Readers can follow links included in the text to other EASYPol modules or references1. See also the list of EASYPol links included at the end of this module.
3 BACKGROUND
In an ever changing context, where emerging issues raise questions for the development community on the way development processes have been and are being designed and supported, it is important to critically assess prevailing visions about development and adapt them, or even adopt alternative, more suitable approaches. As a contribution to
1 EASYPol hyperlinks are shown in blue, as follows: a) training paths are shown in underlined bold font b) other EASYPol modules or complementary EASYPol materials are in bold underlined italics; c) links to the glossary are in bold; and d) external links are in italics.
2
EAYSPol Module 102
Issue Papers
this assessment, this paper attempts to sketch prevailing development paradigms, i.e. defined visions and related activities regarding the functioning and evolution of socio-economic systems.
In section 4, after defining the concepts of development and development paradigms, some key "ingredients" of recent past and prevailing development "recipes" are identified. In sections 5 to 9, the mutual links among them are explored through selected contributions from available literature which focus on development issues. On this basis, some cause-effect relationships are highlighted, which are at the basis of most development processes. The analysis of these cause-effect relationships allows for the identification of selected development paradigms prevailing in different countries, during different periods and within different development contexts. Findings are summarised in Section 11, which also provides some insights on further work to be carried out on their basis. Section 12 provides concluding remarks and section 13 contains a list of references to the various strands of the literature on which the work is based.
4 DEFINING DEVELOPMENT,
DEVELOPMENT INGREDIENTS
DEVELOPMENT
PARADIGMS
AND
4.1 Development defined
In general terms, "development" means an "event constituting a new stage in a changing situation"2 or the process of change per se. If not qualified, "development" is implicitly intended as something positive or desirable. When referring to a society or to a socioeconomic system, "development" usually means improvement, either in the general situation of the system, or in some of its constituent elements. Development may occur due to some deliberate action carried out by single agents or by some authority preordered to achieve improvement, to favourable circumstances in both. Development policies and private investment, in all their forms, are examples of such actions.
Given this broad definition, "development" is a multi-dimensional concept in its nature, because any improvement of complex systems, as indeed actual socio-economic systems are, can occur in different parts or ways, at different speeds and driven by different forces. Additionally, the development of one part of the system may be detrimental to the development of other parts, giving rise to conflicting objectives (trade-offs) and conflicts. Consequently, measuring development, i.e. determining whether and to what extent a system is developing, is an intrinsically multidimensional exercise.
4.2 What should be developed? Dimensions of development
Even if the development of a socio-economic system can be viewed as a holistic exercise, i.e. as an all-encompassing endeavour; for practical purposes, in particular for policy making and development management, the focus of the agents aiming at development is almost always on selected parts of the system or on specific features. To
2 Oxford English Dictionary.
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