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Why does measuring development matter?
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All Flashcards in Topic 3.3
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3.3.111 cards
Why does measuring development matter?
Because how you measure it decides what 'development' means and which countries look developed — so choosing a measure is a political choice.
What does GDP per person measure, and miss?
It measures the size of the economy (income). It misses inequality, people's health and education, and the environment.
What is the HDI?
The Human Development Index — it combines health, education and income into one score, capturing human development beyond money.
What is the MPI?
The Multidimensional Poverty Index — it measures poverty across health, education and living standards, not just income.
What is the Gini index?
A 0–1 score of income inequality: 0 = everyone equal, 1 = one person has everything.
Why can GDP and the HDI disagree?
A country can be rich in GDP but rank lower on the HDI, because wealth does not always reach people as health, education and long life.
Why is one measure never enough?
Every measure leaves something out and can be gamed, so the fullest picture uses several measures together.
Give a limitation of GDP.
It counts only money, ignoring how it is shared, people's well-being and the environment — so it can rise while most stay poor.
Give a limitation of the HDI.
It captures health, education and income but ignores inequality and freedoms, and reduces development to one number.
Why can measures be misused?
Governments can choose the measure that flatters them, and data can be patchy or manipulated.
What is a balanced approach to measuring development?
Use several measures together (GDP, HDI, MPI, Gini) and read each critically, knowing what it leaves out.
3.3.1011 cards
What is water security?
When everyone can reliably get enough safe, clean water for health, food and livelihoods.
Why does water matter for development?
Clean water and sanitation cut disease, reliable water grows food and powers industry, and it frees people from hours fetching water.
What is water stress?
When demand for water is greater than the reliable supply available — a growing threat from population, farming and climate change.
What causes water insecurity?
Climate change, over-use for farming and industry, population growth, pollution, poor infrastructure, unequal access, and disputes over shared rivers.
Why can shared rivers cause tension?
When an upstream country dams or diverts a river, downstream countries can lose water they depend on, raising the risk of conflict.
Why does shared water often lead to cooperation?
Because managing a shared river together through treaties and joint bodies is usually cheaper and more reliable than fighting over it.
Are 'water wars' common?
No — the historical record shows shared water more often leads to cooperation than to outright war, though scarcity is raising the risk.
What is the water-as-a-human-right view?
That access to safe water is essential to life and dignity, so basic water must be guaranteed to all and not denied to those who cannot pay.
What is the water-as-a-commodity view?
That pricing water discourages waste and funds delivery infrastructure; but charging can put water out of reach of the poor.
How does fetching water affect development?
Where water is far away, people (often women and girls) spend hours collecting it — time lost from school or work, holding back development.
What decides whether shared water divides or unites?
Politics, fairness and institutions: strong, fair treaties and joint bodies turn shared water into cooperation, while their absence raises conflict risk.
3.3.1111 cards
What is energy security?
Reliable access to enough affordable energy to power a country's homes, industry, health and education.
Why does energy matter for development?
It powers industry and jobs, lets clinics and schools function, connects people to information, and ending energy poverty lifts living standards.
What is energy poverty?
When people lack reliable, affordable, modern energy — relying on wood, charcoal or nothing — harming health and holding back development.
What is energy geopolitics?
The way control of oil, gas and energy supplies gives some countries power over others, and cutting supply can be used as a weapon.
What is 'leapfrogging' in energy?
Skipping expensive, dirty central grids by going straight to off-grid clean energy like solar, bringing power to remote areas for the first time.
What is the case for fossil fuels in development?
They are cheap, reliable and proven for heavy industry, the rich developed using them, and poorer countries have emitted little so far.
What is the case for renewables in development?
Solar and wind are now often cheaper, reach remote areas off-grid, avoid import dependence and price shocks, and fight climate change.
Why is energy also a question of power?
Because countries rich in oil and gas can pressure those that depend on them, and cutting supply can be used as leverage in global politics.
What is a 'just transition' in energy?
Shifting to clean energy in a way that does not leave the poor paying the upfront cost, often with richer countries helping finance it.
How does energy poverty harm health?
Relying on burning wood or charcoal indoors causes disease, and clinics without power cannot refrigerate vaccines or run equipment.
What is a balanced view of the energy path?
The clean-energy shift is increasingly the better path — cheaper and cleaner — but only if it is a just, financed transition so the poor are not left paying the upfront cost.
3.3.211 cards
What are the main economic factors in development?
Trade, aid, debt and foreign direct investment (FDI), plus access to resources — the money and investment development runs on.
Why is trade central to development?
It is the biggest source of income for most developing countries — fair trade lifts incomes, unfair trade can trap a country in low-value exports.
What is aid, and its double edge?
Money or help given by richer countries or bodies; it can fund vaccines and schools, or create dependency and prop up bad governments.
How can debt harm development?
Many poorer countries spend more on repaying loans and interest than on health or education, so debt can drain development rather than fund it.
What is FDI?
Foreign direct investment — when a foreign company or investor builds or buys in another country, bringing capital, jobs and technology (but can extract profit).
Why do 'the terms' matter more than the money?
The same flow can help or trap: fair trade and manageable debt build a country; unfair trade, crushing debt and dependency-creating aid trap it.
What is the aid-vs-dependency debate?
Whether long-term aid saves lives and funds development, or creates dependency, props up bad governments and undercuts local business.
Are economic factors enough for development?
No — necessary but not sufficient: corrupt or weak governments can waste any amount of money, so politics and institutions matter too.
How can the same money develop one country but not another?
Because it can be used well or stolen and wasted — governance decides whether resources become development or enrich a few.
What does 'access to resources' mean for development?
Whether a country has (and can use) resources like minerals, energy, capital and credit to fund its development.
Why is unfair trade a problem?
It can lock a country into exporting cheap raw materials while importing expensive goods, keeping it dependent and poor.
3.3.311 cards
What are political and institutional factors in development?
Stability, accountability, transparency, low corruption, the rule of law and effective institutions — the governance that decides whether resources develop a country.
What are 'institutions'?
The lasting rules, laws and bodies that run a country — courts, tax offices, the civil service — plus the rule of law.
Why are institutions decisive for development?
They decide whether money is invested honestly and becomes services, or is stolen — so the same resources can develop one country and enrich a few in another.
What is corruption?
The abuse of public power for private gain — it drains resources meant for development.
How does corruption harm development?
Money for roads, schools and hospitals is siphoned off, contracts go to the well-connected, and aid props up leaders instead of reaching people.
Why does stability matter for development?
Peace and predictable government let long-term investment happen; conflict and chaos destroy infrastructure and deter investment.
What is accountability in governance?
Leaders being answerable to the people, with open decisions, so power is checked and corruption curbed.
Why is 'good governance' seen as central to development?
Accountable, low-corruption governments with the rule of law invest resources honestly and attract investment, so they consistently develop better.
Are good institutions enough for development on their own?
No — they need money, infrastructure and market access, and are constrained by geography, history and global rules; they are the decisive multiplier, not the sole cause.
Why can the same resources give different results?
Because governance decides whether money is used honestly or wasted — the difference between development and enrichment of a few.
What is the rule of law's role in development?
It means laws apply fairly to all, protecting property, contracts and rights, which encourages honest investment and curbs abuse.
3.3.411 cards
What are social factors in development?
Gender relations, migration, and values and culture — how a society treats women, whether people can move for work, and its attitudes to education and change.
Why is gender a development multiplier?
Empowering women raises household income and health, lowers child mortality and slows population growth; excluding them wastes half a society's talent.
How does migration affect development?
People moving for work send home remittances and skills, boosting their home country — but poorer states can also lose skilled workers ('brain drain').
What are environmental factors in development?
Geography, resource endowment and, above all, climate change — the natural conditions that shape and threaten development.
Why is climate change central to development?
It hits the poorest hardest, destroys crops, homes and infrastructure, and can reverse years of development gains in a single disaster.
Why is development that ignores the environment unsustainable?
Because a changing climate and depleted resources can wipe out progress faster than money can build it.
What is 'brain drain'?
When skilled workers emigrate from a poorer country, so it loses the talent it trained — a downside of migration.
How do values and culture shape development?
Attitudes to education, work, trust and change affect how readily a society invests in and pursues development.
Do social and environmental factors only help development?
No — they cut both ways: empowering women drives development but gender inequality holds it back; a healthy environment sustains it but climate change reverses it.
Why do the poorest suffer most from climate change?
They depend more on farming and have fewer resources to cope, yet did least to cause it — so its effects on food, water and homes hit them hardest.
Are environmental factors the greatest threat to development?
Climate change is a uniquely reversing, growing threat, but it works alongside corruption, conflict and unfair global rules rather than alone.
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How can trade drive development?
By bringing income, jobs, investment, technology and larger markets — export-led growth has lifted millions out of poverty.
What are the terms of trade?
The price of a country's exports compared with the price of its imports; cheap raw exports plus costly imports = poor terms.
What is comparative advantage?
The idea that countries gain by specialising in what they make most cheaply and trading for the rest.
Why can trade trap poorer countries?
Dependence on a few raw commodities brings volatile prices and poor terms of trade, and rich-country subsidies and tariffs shut them out.
What is free trade?
Trade with few or no tariffs or barriers, so goods flow freely between countries.
What is fair trade?
Trade that tries to guarantee poorer producers a fairer minimum price and better conditions.
Why does what a country exports matter?
Exporting higher-value manufactured goods captures more value and creates more jobs than exporting cheap raw materials.
What is export-led growth?
A development strategy of growing by selling manufactured goods to world markets, which has driven fast development in several countries.
Why did some now-rich countries protect young industries?
To let their new industries grow strong before facing full foreign competition, rather than opening completely to free trade at once.
What is a subsidy in trade?
Government money that lowers a producer's costs; rich-country subsidies can undercut poorer countries' producers and shut them out of markets.
What is a balanced view of trade and development?
Trade is a powerful driver of development, but only when the terms are fair and a country can add value — openness alone is not enough.
3.3.611 cards
What is aid?
Money, goods or help given by richer countries or organisations to poorer ones, as emergency relief or longer-term development support.
What is humanitarian aid?
Short-term emergency help after a disaster, war or famine — food, shelter and medicine to save lives.
What is development aid?
Longer-term help to build a country's schools, clinics, infrastructure, skills and economy so it can grow.
What is bilateral vs multilateral aid?
Bilateral aid goes directly from one country to another; multilateral aid is pooled through an organisation like the UN or World Bank.
What is tied aid?
Aid the receiver must spend on the donor's own companies or goods — a string that benefits the giver.
What is conditional aid?
Aid given only if the receiver makes certain policy changes; conditions can push reform but can also serve the donor.
Why can aid create dependency?
Large, unconditional aid can replace self-reliance, prop up corrupt governments, distort local markets and come with strings that serve the donor.
How can aid help development?
It saves lives in emergencies and funds the health, education, clean water and infrastructure poor countries cannot afford alone.
When does aid work best?
When it is well-targeted, well-governed and builds capacity, rather than large, unconditional or channelled through corrupt hands.
What is the case for aid conditions?
Conditions can push governments toward reform and transparency and help ensure aid is not stolen or wasted.
What is the case against aid conditions?
Conditions can serve the donor's interests, force harmful one-size-fits-all policies on poor countries, and undermine their sovereignty and democracy.
3.3.711 cards
What is debt in development?
Money a country owes to lenders and must repay with interest; it can fund development or, if too heavy, block it.
What is debt servicing?
The money a country must pay each year in interest and repayments; heavy servicing crowds out spending on services.
What is a debt trap?
When a country must borrow more just to repay old debts, sinking deeper instead of investing in development.
What is structural adjustment?
Reforms — spending cuts, privatisation, opening markets — that lenders demanded in return for loans, which could harm the poor.
How can debt help development?
A well-used loan can fund productive investment (roads, power, industry) that raises future income and pays for itself.
How can debt block development?
When repayments crowd out health and education, when it is unpayable, or when it is spent badly or stolen.
What is debt relief?
Cancelling or reducing a country's unpayable debt to free money for development and give it a fresh start.
What is the case for debt relief?
It frees money for schools, clinics and clean water, gives a fresh start, and is fair when debts were run up by past corrupt rulers.
What is the case against debt relief?
It can reward reckless borrowing and lending, the freed money may be misused without good governance, and attached conditions can harm the poor.
Why is debt not simply bad?
Because a well-used loan funds investment that raises income; debt harms mainly when it is too large, misused or unpayable.
What is austerity in a debt context?
Cutting public spending to afford debt repayments, which can harm the poor and further slow development.
3.3.811 cards
How does climate change threaten development?
Floods, droughts, storms and heatwaves destroy crops, homes and infrastructure, worsen hunger and disease, and force people to migrate — undoing development gains.
What is climate justice?
The idea that those who caused climate change should help those hit hardest by it, since the poorest emitted least yet suffer most.
What is the development–environment clash?
Poor countries need to grow, often using cheap fossil fuels, yet growth adds to the emissions that drive climate change.
Why is climate change unfair to poorer countries?
They produced a tiny share of emissions yet face the worst impacts and can least afford to protect themselves, while the rich are more protected.
What is adaptation to climate change?
Measures that help a country cope with climate impacts — sea defences, drought-resistant crops, early warning — as opposed to cutting emissions.
What is 'loss and damage'?
The harm from climate impacts that cannot be prevented; poorer countries argue rich, high-emitting countries should pay for it.
Why do some argue poor countries should 'grow first'?
They need affordable energy to lift people out of poverty, they emitted least historically, and daily poverty is their more urgent threat.
Why do some argue everyone must 'go green now'?
Climate change hits development hardest, delay locks in worse and costlier damage, and clean energy is now often cheaper.
Who should pay to tackle climate change, on the climate-justice view?
The rich, high-emitting countries that caused most emissions and gained most wealth should cut most and help fund poorer countries' clean development.
Why is climate change a global politics issue, not just science?
Because it raises deeply political questions of fairness, responsibility and who pays — between rich and poor countries — that must be negotiated.
What is a balanced view of climate and development?
Not 'grow OR green' but shared, just green development: the rich cut and pay most while poorer countries develop cleanly with support.
3.3.911 cards
What is food security?
When all people can always get enough safe, nutritious food to live healthy lives — with four parts: availability, access, use and stability.
What are the four parts of food security?
Availability (enough produced/imported), access (can people afford and reach it), use (safe and nutritious), and stability (reliable supply).
What does 'access' mean in food security?
Whether people can actually obtain food — can they afford it and reach it; this is where most hunger comes from.
Why does food security matter for development?
Well-fed children learn better and become healthier, more productive adults; food security underpins health, education and stability.
What causes food insecurity?
Poverty, conflict, climate shocks, volatile global prices, weak infrastructure, and waste and unfair markets.
Why is hunger often about access, not supply?
The world grows enough food, so most hunger happens because poor people cannot afford or reach it, or conflict and markets block it.
Why are modern famines usually failures of access?
Because they happen when people cannot obtain food — conflict blocks supply, prices spike, or local harvests fail while imports are unaffordable — not a simple global shortage.
What is the self-sufficiency vs trade debate in food?
Growing your own food protects against price spikes and supply cuts; trade lets countries import cheaply but is vulnerable to crises — most food security needs a balance.
How does food insecurity harm development?
Hunger stunts children, weakens workers and fuels instability, trapping poor countries in a cycle that holds back development.
How can technology help food security?
New seeds, irrigation and farming methods can raise yields, but they help most when combined with access — affordability and distribution.
What is a balanced view of the causes of hunger?
Access (poverty, conflict, prices, distribution) is usually the deeper cause, but production and climate also matter, so both must be tackled.
Topic 3.3 study notes
Full notes & explanations for Nature, practice and study of development and sustainability
Global Politics exam skills
Paper structures, command terms & tips
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