Concept of Development
Concept of Development
Sustenance
This involves the ability to meet one’s life sustaining basic needs.
These include: food, shelter, health, and protection. Sustenance
also involves the realization of human potential through the
provision of conditions necessary for the expansion of people’s
capabilities. The elimination of absolute poverty, creation of jobs,
and ensuring less inequality are all necessary but not sufficient
conditions for development. A recognition is given to wealth as
important for human life but not as necessary for the fulfilment of
some important human choices. Against this background,
development goes beyond life sustaining economic elements to
include intangible needs of man.
Self-esteem
To be a person relates to a sense of worth and self respect. All
societies and individuals seek to be recognized and not to be used
as a tool by others for their own ends/gains. It is unfortunate that,
the current importance attached to material possession has
resulted in the disrespect for the materially-deprived in society. Are
• It does not also give a clear picture of the other aspects of life
which cannot be quantified mathematically. Humans do not
derive all satisfaction from goods, but also from essential
services such as quality of health, education, social care and
interaction. You may have a high income and be unhappy in
life. Development connotes happiness.
• It is also argued that, the use of GNP and Per Capita Income for
measuring development result in the creation of dual economies
where you have modern and traditional sectors.
If all three of these have declined from high levels, then to him
there is no doubt development has occurred. If there is a growth in
any of the above, especially if all the three increase, the result he
said, cannot be development. According to Currey (1973),
development is that process of change through which a
society evolves the values, political leadership and other
Development as Freedom
My dear, do you enjoy being free and do you think you have the
freedom to do what you want? In the view of Amartya Sen,
development is all about the expansion of freedoms that individuals
enjoy. He sees development as the process of expanding the real
freedoms that people enjoy. To him, the growth of GNP, incomes,
industry and many other economic indicators are important as
means to expanding freedoms or development. Even Seers (1972)
pointed out that, to see GNP and per capita income as
inappropriate measures of a nation’s development is to weaken the
significance of the growing GNP per capita gap between rich and
poor nations. The fact of their argument is that, these indicators are
means to freedom or development. They call for us to focus on the
end which is freedom and not the means which involve GNP and
per capita income. Sen also concedes that, freedoms depend also
on other determinants such as social and economic arrangements,
and political and civil rights.
The introduction of the HDI has had the intended effect of bringing
into fore the non-economic dimension of development. As a
composite of averages, a national HDI over simplifies the national
picture where there are disparities in social and economic
conditions within a country. The critique against the index relates to
how to determine the threshold and choosing the most relevant
indicators and of assigning weights. How to cater for such factors
as unpaid household work, environmental impact, political
participation, freedom and security is problematic. There is also the
problem of data availability and reliability for the selected indicators
especially in developing countries
• Rural-urban inequality
Global Planning
Global planning is undertaken normally by the Ministry of Finance
in most countries. This type of planning seeks to search a balance
between consumption and investment, exports and imports and
establish a balance between supply and demand. It is at the level
of global planning that national priority for resource allocation for
development is established. It is interesting to note that, global
planning is concerned with establishing overall balance among
variables such as consumption, exports and imports and the supply
and demand of employment opportunities. Global planning also
establishes national priorities for resource allocation to broad
functional sectors of the economy such as agriculture, transport,
health and education. Global planning involves developing a
broader outlook of the national economy, from which specific
details can then be developed.
Sectoral Planning
Sectoral planning means the spatial planning under consideration
of only one planning criteria (e.g. traffic, environmental, housing,
agriculture etc.) It is concerned with setting specific targets and
combining them into more comprehensive programmes. To a
greater extent, the major sectors of the economy corresponds to
the administrative structure of national governments with its
ministries and independent agencies each of which is devoted to
specialised functions.