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Course, academic year 2023/2024
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Development Economics - JEM123
Title: Development Economics
Guaranteed by: Institute of Economic Studies (23-IES)
Faculty: Faculty of Social Sciences
Actual: from 2023
Semester: winter
E-Credits: 6
Examination process: winter s.:combined
Hours per week, examination: winter s.:2/2, Ex [HT]
Capacity: unknown / unknown (55)
Min. number of students: unlimited
4EU+: no
Virtual mobility / capacity: no
State of the course: taught
Language: English
Teaching methods: full-time
Teaching methods: full-time
Note: course can be enrolled in outside the study plan
priority enrollment if the course is part of the study plan
Guarantor: doc. PhDr. Michal Bauer, Ph.D.
Class: Courses for incoming students
Files Comments Added by
download DE_sylabus_IES_2021.pdf Sylabus 2021 doc. PhDr. Michal Bauer, Ph.D.
Annotation -
Last update: doc. PhDr. Michal Bauer, Ph.D. (05.09.2022)
The course covers several major topics in development economics. It focuses on concepts that are important for understanding causes of under-development and poverty. After introducing traditional growth models, particular attention is devoted to the role of technological complementarities, population growth, human capital, institutions, access to finance and psychological effects of poverty. We will also extensively discuss how the existing empirical evidence speaks to some of the key issues. Most of the evidence will be based on field experiments.
Literature - Czech
Last update: PhDr. Petr Bednařík, Ph.D. (18.11.2021)

See sylabus.

Requirements to the exam -
Last update: doc. PhDr. Michal Bauer, Ph.D. (05.09.2022)

Grading

Your final grade will consist of three parts with approximately following weights:

  • Paper summaries: 20%
  • Final exam: 80%
  • Total: 100%

 

 

Syllabus -
Last update: PhDr. Petr Bednařík, Ph.D. (23.11.2021)

Primer text: Ray Debraj (1998): Development economics. Princeton University Press. (available in the library)

The text is supplemented by a packet of recent articles and book chapters. You can download them via the intranet (Moodles). It is crucial that you use Moodles (https://dl1.cuni.cz/course/view.php?id=855). It is a platform where you can find important dates, download slides, referenced papers and tasks for exercise sessions. Each of you will get access to the account of this subject. The key is “eldc”.

 

Outline of the course

 

Lecture 1: Introduction

 Topics

  • Why to study economic development?
  • Course: approach, structure and requirements
  • Historical and geographical overview
  • Economic lives of the poor

 Literature

  • Ray Debraj (1998): Development Economics, ch.1-2, pp. 2-42.
  • Todaro and Smith (2004): Economic Development, ch. 1-2, pp.3-71. Library folder.
  • J. Bradford De Long, “Main Themes of Twentieth Century Economic Development,” University of California, Berkeley, pp. 1 – 10.
  • Banerjee, A. and E. Duflo (2006): Economic lives of the poor. Journal of Economic Perspectives
  • Banerjee A. and E. Duflo (2008): What is middle class about the middle classes around the world? Journal of Economic Perspectives

 

 

Lectures 2-3: Traditional growth models and poverty traps

Topics

  • Harrod-Domar model
  • Solow model
  • Convergence
  • Poverty traps: savings trap, capital threshold
  • Policy implications of poverty trap models

Literature

  • Ray Debraj (1998): Development Economics, ch.3, pp. 47-90.
  • Sachs, Jeffrey, et al. (2004): Ending Africa' s Poverty Trap, Brookings Papers on Economic Activity, Issue 1, 2004 pp. 117-130.
  • De Mel, McKenzey, Woodruff (2008): Returns to capital in microenterprises: evidence from a field experiment. Quarterly Journal of Economics

 

Lecture 4: Technology adoption and complementarities

Topics

  • Complementarities and coordination failure
  • Increasing returns

Literature

  • Ray, D. 1998: Development Economics. ch. 5, pp. 131-159.
  • Rosenstein-Rodan (1943): Problems of industrialization of Eastern and Southeastern Europe. The Economic Journal, Vol. 53, No. 210/211. (Jun. - Sep., 1943), pp. 202-211.
  • Todaro and Smith (2004): Economic Development, ch. 5, pp.170-5. Library folder.
  • Dulfo, Kremer and Robinson (2006): Why don't farmers use fertilizers: Evidence from field experiments in Kenya. American economic review

 

 Seminar 1 (exercises) – growth models and complementarities

 

 Lecture 5-6: Population, poverty and under-nutrition

 Topics

  • Population: basic concepts
  • Demographic transition and hidden momentum
  • Poverty measures and evidence
  • Poverty, nutrition and discrimination

 Literature

  • Ray, D. 1998: Development Economics. ch. 8-9, pp. 249-338. Library folder.
  • Todaro and Smith (2004): Economic development, ch.7. Library folder.
  • Jensen and Miller (2008): Giffen behavior and subsistance consumption. American economic review.
  • Strauss, John (1986): Does better nutrition raise farm productivity? Journal of political economy.
  • Miguel, E. and M. Kremer. 2004. „ Worms : Identifying Impacts on Education and Health in the Presence of Treatment Externalities“. Econometrica 72: 159-217.
  • Field, Robles and Torero: The cognitive link between geography and development: Iodine deficiency and schooling attainment in Tanzania, working paper
  • Sen, A. (1992): Missing women. BMJ 1992;304: 586-7(free registration required).
  • Sen, A. (2002): Missing women- revisited. BMJ 2003;327:1297-1298 (6 December) (free registration required).
  • Miguel (2004): Poverty and witch killing. Review of economic studies.
  • Qian (2008): Missing women and the price of tea in China. Quarterly journal of economics.

 

 Seminar 2 (exercises) – poverty lines, population growth

 

Lecture 7: Education

 Topics

  • Benefits of greater education
  • Barriers of increasing education
  • Why are field experiments a powerful tool to figure out what policy interventions work?
  • Evaluations of different types of interventions: supply side and demand side

 Literature

  • Ray, D. 1998: Development Economics. ch. 4, pp. 100-107
  • Psacharopoulos, George (1991): The Economic Impact of Education: Lessons for Policymakers. In Meier and Rauch (eds.) (2005), pp. 189-193.
  • E. Duflo, M. Kremer and R. Glennerster (2006): Using Randomization in Development Economics Research: A Toolkit. In Schultz and Strauss (2008): Handbook of Development Economics, volume 4.  
  • E. Duflo: Schooling and Labor Market Consequences of School Construction in Indonesia: Evidence from an Unusual Policy Experiment
  • Glewwe, P., Ilias, N., & Kremer, M. (2010). Teacher incentives. American Economic Journal: Applied Economics, 2(3), 205–227. 
  • Jensen, R. (2010). The (perceived) returns to education and the demand for schooling. The Quarterly Journal of Economics, 125(2), 515-548.
  • Barrera-Osorio, F., Bertrand, M., Linden, L. L., & Perez-Calle, F. (2011). Improving the Design of Conditional Transfer Programs : Evidence from a Randomized Education Experiment in Colombia. American Economic Journal: Applied Economics, 3(2), 167–195.

 Seminar 3 (discussion seminar): Education

 Papers to read (also pick one and write a summary before the seminar)

  • Banerjee and Duflo (2011). Poor economics . chapter 1 - Think again, again
  • Glewwe, Kremer and Moulin (2007): Many children left behind? Textbooks and test scores in Kenya.
  • Duflo, E. and R. Hanna (2005): Monitoring works: Getting teachers to come to school. NBER working paper 11880

 

 Lecture 9: Microcredit and asymmetric information

 Topics

  • The poor: un-bankable?
  • Adverse selection and credit rationing
  • Moral hazard and credit rationing
  • Microcredit innovation and its key characteristics
  • Measuring adverse selection and moral hazard

 Literature

  • Armendariz DeAghion and Morduch (2005): Economics of microfinance. MIT, ch. 1-2, pp. 1-52. Library folder.
  • Karlan and Zinman (2007): Observing Unobservables: Identifying Information Asymmetries with a Consumer Credit Field Experiment. Econometrica.

 

Seminar 5 (discussion seminar): Microfinance

 Papers to read (also pick one and write a summary before the seminar)

  • Banerjee, Duflo, Glennerster and Kinnan (2009): The miracle of microfinance? Evidence from a randomized evaluation. AEJ: Applied
  • Karlan and Zinman (2011): Microcredit in Theory and Practice: Using Randomized Credit Scoring for Impact Evaluation. Science.
  • Karlan, D. and X. Gine (2006): Group Versus Individual Liability: A Field Experiment in the Philippines. 

 

 Lecture 10: Institutions and corruption

Topics

  • Overview: corruption and development
  • Parasite and productive enterprises
  • Informal property rights and “mystery of capital”

Literature

  • Pande, Rohini (2008): Understanding Political Corruption in Low Income Countries. In Schultz and Strauss (2008): Handbook of Development Economics, volume 4.
  • Bowles, Durlauf and Hoff (2006): Poverty traps. Princeton University Press. p. 79-94.
  • DeSoto, Fernando (2000): The Mystery of Capital: Why Capitalism Triumphs in the West and Fails Everywhere Else. Basic Books. Ch1, 3.

 

 Seminar 6 (exercises) – Microfinance

 

 Lecture 11: Psychology of poverty

 Topics

  • Does poverty increases impatience?
  • Does poverty impair cognitive function and increases stress?
  • How does stress and lower cognitive function affect decision-making?

 Literature

  • Mani, S. Mullainathan, E. Shafir, J. Zhao, Poverty impedes cognitive function. Science 341(6149), 976-980 (2013).
  • Haushofer, J., & Shapiro, J. (2013). Household Response to Income Changes: Evidence from an Unconditional Cash Transfer Program in Kenya. Working paper
  • Haushofer, J., & Fehr, E. (2014). On the psychology of poverty. Science (New York, N.Y.), 344(6186), 862–7. doi:10.1126/science.1232491
  • Lerner, J. S., Li, Y., & Weber, E. U. (2013). The financial costs of sadness. Psychological Science, 24(1), 72–9. doi:10.1177/0956797612450302
  • Bartos, V., Bauer, M., Chytilova, J. and Levely, I. (2017): Does poverty inhibit attention or self-control? Experimental evidence on behavioral sources of impatience among the ultra-poor. Working paper

 

Seminar 7 (exercise): Institutions

 

If time allows: Lecture 12: Heath: Lessons about pricing from RCTs

 Topics

  • Demand for health products: shall health products be subsidized?

 Literature

  • Kremer, M., & Holla, A. (2009). Improving Education in the Developing World : What Have We Learned from Randomized Evaluations ? Annual Review of Economics, 1, 513–42.
  • Cohen, J., and P. Dupas. 2010. “Free Distribution or Cost-Sharing? Evidence from a Randomized Malaria Prevention Experiment*.” Quarterly Journal of Economics 125:1–45.
  • Dupas, Pascaline. 2014. “Short-Run Subsidies and Long-Run Adoption of New Health Products: Evidence from a Field Experiment.” Econometrica 82 (1): 197–228.
  • Fischer, Greg, Dean Karlan, Margaret Mcconnell, and Pia Raffler. 2016. “To Charge or Not to Charge : Evidence from a Health Products Experiment in Uganda.” Working paper.
  • Ashraf, N., Berry, J., & Shapiro, J. M. (2010). Can Higher Prices Stimulate Product Use? Evidence from a Field Experiment in Zambia. American Economic Review, 100, 2383-2413.

 

Registration requirements -
Last update: Ing. Dagmar Schnellerová (20.09.2023)

The JEM123 Development Economics course will not be offered in WS 2023/2024

Students of the Master's program in the specialization of Public Sector Economics and Health Care, who have this course as a mandatory specialization, can instead choose any other specialization course from the other specializations according to the new Karolinka 2023/2024 (a total of 18 different courses). Alternatively, of course, they can enroll in this course next academic year, when it is advertised again.

If they have already completed such a course as a compulsory elective, it can also be recognized as a specialisation, but then its credits will not be counted towards the required 24 credits for compulsory elective courses and it is necessary to complete another compulsory elective course.

No steps are required on the part of the students to count another specialization course instead of JEM123 Development Economics, the recognition will take place directly by the guarantor of the study as part of the control of study obligations before the State Final Examination at the end of the master's program.

In case of questions, contact the master's program guarantor Doc.

Adam Geršleršl.

 
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