IGCSE Economic Development
IGCSE Economic Development
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
Content
Review
Homework challenges
Differences in Economic Development
between Countries
Indicators of living standards
Absolute and relative poverty
Plenary
Differences in Economic Development
Other factors
Unstable and corrupt governments,
conflicts with neighboring countries have
often blighted the development of some of
the least-developed countries.
Development Indicators
The main measure of the level of economic
development in a country is the total value of its
output, or Gross Domestic Product (GDP).
The pace of economic development is measured
by the annual rate of change in its total output,
or real GDP.
Dividing the total GDP of a country by its total
population will provide a better indicator of the
level of economic development; this measure is
called GDP per capita.
Price inflation erodes the real value or purchasing
power of people’s incomes over time. We take
into account the price inflation and compute the
Development Indicators
Development Indicators
Human Development Index provides a wider
measure of living standards and economic
welfare than GDP per capita. Its value is between
0 and 1 and combines 3 measures:
Living standards measured by the average gross
national income per capita
Level of education measured by how many years a
person aged 25 will have spent in education
Healthcare and the achievement of healthy lifestyles
measured by life expectancy
Development Indicators
Measuring Poverty
Absolute poverty is the inability to afford basic
necessities to live successfully, such as food,
water, education, healthcare, shelter.
In 2017, the World Bank defined extreme poverty
as the condition in which a person is trying to
survive on less than $1.9 per day.
Relative poverty is a condition of having fewer
resources than others in the same society. It’s
measured by the extent to which a
person’s/household’s financial resources fall
below the average income level in the economy.
Measuring Poverty
The global multidimensional poverty index
combines a range of indicators to monitor
economic hardship in over 100 developing
countries. It looks at living standards, education
and health but uses a large number of indicators
of household deprivation.
Measuring Poverty
What Causes Poverty
Identify causes of poverty
What Causes Poverty
Lack of resources
Lack of education
Low wages
Old age, disability and ill health
Vulnerability to climate change and natural
disasters
Wars and internal conflicts
Corruption
Measures to Alleviate Poverty
Food aid
Technological aid
Financial aid and low-cost loans
Debt relief
International Measures to Reduce Poverty