🏗️ Interventionist Strategies
Interventionist strategies argue that markets alone cannot drive development. Government must actively invest, regulate, and redistribute to overcome barriers.
- Investment in human capital — public spending on education and healthcare raises productivity, improves health outcomes, and builds a skilled workforce.
- Infrastructure development — government-funded roads, railways, ports, energy systems, and digital networks reduce costs and enable economic activity.
- Industrial policy — government selects and supports strategic industries through subsidies, tax breaks, and research funding. Aim: build competitive advantages.
- Land reform — redistributing agricultural land to reduce inequality and increase productivity of small farmers.
- Income redistribution — progressive taxation and transfer payments (welfare, pensions) to reduce poverty and inequality.
China: China's spectacular growth (800 million lifted out of poverty, 1980–2020) combined heavy government intervention (infrastructure, industrial policy, special economic zones) with gradual market liberalisation. Neither purely market-based nor purely interventionist.
🤝 Foreign Aid
Foreign aid. Can be bilateral (country-to-country) or multilateral (through organisations like the World Bank, UNDP).
- Humanitarian/emergency aid — immediate relief after disasters (food, shelter, medicine). Short-term.
- Development aid — long-term projects to build infrastructure, education, healthcare systems.
- Tied aid — aid with conditions requiring the recipient to buy goods/services from the donor country.
- Concessional loans — loans at below-market interest rates from institutions like the World Bank.
- ✅ Fills the savings/investment gap in poor countries.
- ✅ Funds infrastructure and public services governments cannot afford alone.
- ✅ Humanitarian aid saves lives in emergencies.
- ✅ Technical assistance transfers skills and knowledge.
- ❌ Aid dependency — countries rely on aid instead of building own tax base and institutions.
- ❌ Corruption — aid may be diverted by corrupt officials.
- ❌ Tied aid — often benefits the donor's firms more than the recipient.
- ❌ Dutch disease effect — large aid inflows can appreciate the exchange rate, hurting export competitiveness.
- ❌ Donor-driven priorities — projects may not match local needs.
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🏦 Multilateral Development & Debt Relief
- World Bank — provides loans and grants for development projects. Focus: infrastructure, education, health, governance.
- International Monetary Fund (IMF) — provides emergency loans to countries in financial crisis. Often comes with conditions (structural adjustment).
- Regional development banks — African Development Bank, Asian Development Bank — focus on regional needs.
Debt relief. The Heavily Indebted Poor Countries (HIPC) initiative has provided debt relief to 37 countries since 1996.
- ✅ Frees government revenue for health and education spending.
- ✅ Reduces the debt burden that traps countries in poverty.
- ✅ Can be conditional on good governance reforms.
- ❌ Moral hazard — may encourage reckless future borrowing.
- ❌ Doesn't address the root causes of why debt accumulated.
- ❌ Some countries re-accumulated debt after relief.