Prebisch-Singer hypothesis
. Th
ose developing
economies that are dependent upon agricultural products
may receive relatively low prices for their exports while
having to pay relatively high prices for their imports.
Prebisch-Singer hypothesis:
a theory that suggests
that the terms of trade tend to move against developing
economies so that developing economies have to export
more to gain a given quantity of imports.
KEY TERM
Developed economies tend to export mainly manufactured
goods and services. Th
ey also tend to export a wide range
of products. Some developing economies, in contrast,
rely heavily on exporting a narrow range of products. For
example, in 2012 exports of coff ee accounted for 60% of
Ethiopia’s export revenue.
Classification according to urbanisation
Developing economies tend to have a relatively high
proportion of their populations living in rural areas but
also rapid rates of rural-urban migration. Th
is migration
can put pressure on the infrastructure, housing and
schools in urban areas.
Most developed economies already have the
majority of their populations living in urban areas. As
a result, there is relatively little growth in the urban
population of developed economies. For example, in
2013, 83% of the population of the USA was living
in urban areas and the rate of rural-urban migration
between 2003 and 2013 was 1.3% per year. In contrast,
24.2% of the population of Burkina Faso lived in urban
areas in the same year and the rate of rural-urban
migration was 7.3%.
SELF-ASSESSMENT TASK
9.12
Population changes
In the recent past, Spain was Europe’s largest recipient of
immigrants. Its population grew from 40 million in 1999
to more than 47 million in 2010 largely as the result of
immigration coming from, for example, Bolivia, Morocco
and Romania. In 2010, however, the position changed.
Migrants began to return home and more Spanish people
emigrated. This reversal from net immigration to net
emigration combined with one of the world’s lowest birth
rates is causing the population to decline for the first
time since records began.
The decline in the size of Spain’s population and the
increase in the average age of the population are
causing a number of problems. One is that they are
reducing Spain’s economic growth rate. With very
little productivity growth, Spain’s economic growth
rate had been largely driven by increases in the size
of the country’s labour force. Another problem is that
the ratio of workers to pensioners is declining. There
is also the problem of Spain’s national debt, which in
2014 amounted to 105% of GDP. In addition, with so
many empty houses and flats, a smaller population
depresses the housing market further.
Spain’s population decline is in contrast with the
relatively rapid rise in population in some African
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