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Adaptive

Learn Development Economics

Read the notes, then try the practice. It adapts as you go.When you're ready.

Session Length

~17 min

Adaptive Checks

15 questions

Transfer Probes

8

Lesson Notes

Development economics is a branch of economics that focuses on improving the economic, social, and institutional conditions of developing countries. It examines the structural transformations that low-income nations must undertake to achieve sustainable growth, reduce poverty, and raise living standards for their populations. The discipline addresses fundamental questions about why some countries prosper while others remain trapped in cycles of deprivation, and what policies, institutions, and investments can catalyze broad-based development.

The field draws on contributions from classical economists like Adam Smith and W. Arthur Lewis, who analyzed the transition from agrarian to industrial economies, through to modern researchers such as Amartya Sen, who reframed development as the expansion of human capabilities and freedoms. The work of Abhijit Banerjee and Esther Duflo brought experimental methods into the field, using randomized controlled trials to rigorously evaluate anti-poverty interventions. These intellectual currents have produced a rich body of theory spanning growth models, structural change analysis, institutional economics, and behavioral approaches to poverty.

Today, development economics informs the policies of governments, international organizations like the World Bank and the United Nations, and nongovernmental organizations worldwide. Its scope encompasses trade policy, foreign aid effectiveness, microfinance, health and education investments, agricultural modernization, urbanization, climate adaptation, and governance reform. With the adoption of the Sustainable Development Goals, the discipline is increasingly concerned with inclusive growth, environmental sustainability, and the challenge of ensuring that economic progress reaches the most marginalized communities.

You'll be able to:

  • Explain key development indicators including GDP per capita, Human Development Index, and multidimensional poverty measures
  • Apply growth models including Solow, endogenous growth, and institutional frameworks to analyze developing economies
  • Analyze the effectiveness of foreign aid, microfinance, and trade liberalization policies on poverty reduction outcomes
  • Evaluate structural transformation strategies and their capacity to generate inclusive and sustainable economic development

One step at a time.

Interactive Exploration

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Key Concepts

Poverty Trap

A self-reinforcing mechanism where countries or individuals remain stuck in persistent poverty because the conditions of poverty themselves prevent escape. Low income leads to low savings, which leads to low investment, which perpetuates low income.

Example: A subsistence farming family cannot afford fertilizer or improved seeds, so crop yields stay low, income remains insufficient, and they can never accumulate enough capital to invest in productivity improvements.

Human Development Index (HDI)

A composite measure developed by the United Nations that evaluates a country's development based on three dimensions: life expectancy at birth, education (mean and expected years of schooling), and gross national income per capita.

Example: Norway consistently ranks near the top of the HDI due to high life expectancy, extensive education, and high per capita income, while countries like Niger rank near the bottom across all three dimensions.

Structural Transformation

The long-run reallocation of economic activity from agriculture to manufacturing and services, accompanied by urbanization, demographic transition, and rising productivity across all sectors.

Example: South Korea transformed from a predominantly agricultural economy in the 1960s to a high-tech industrial powerhouse by the 2000s, shifting labor from rice paddies to semiconductor factories and software companies.

Import Substitution Industrialization (ISI)

A trade and economic policy in which a developing country attempts to replace foreign imports with domestic production by erecting trade barriers and subsidizing local industries to foster self-sufficiency.

Example: Brazil pursued ISI from the 1930s through the 1980s, establishing domestic automobile, steel, and petrochemical industries behind high tariff walls, achieving industrial growth but also accumulating inefficiencies.

Microfinance

The provision of small loans, savings accounts, insurance, and other basic financial services to low-income individuals and entrepreneurs who lack access to conventional banking. It aims to promote entrepreneurship and self-sufficiency among the poor.

Example: The Grameen Bank in Bangladesh, founded by Muhammad Yunus, extended small loans to impoverished women to start businesses like poultry farming and weaving, achieving high repayment rates and measurable poverty reduction.

Foreign Aid and Official Development Assistance (ODA)

Financial, technical, or material assistance provided by governments and multilateral institutions to developing countries with the aim of promoting economic development and welfare. Its effectiveness remains one of the most debated topics in the field.

Example: The Marshall Plan provided approximately $13 billion (over $150 billion in today's dollars) in aid to rebuild Western Europe after World War II, widely regarded as a successful aid program that spurred rapid recovery.

Conditional Cash Transfers (CCTs)

Government programs that provide cash payments to poor families on the condition that they meet certain behavioral requirements, such as keeping children in school, attending health checkups, or receiving vaccinations.

Example: Mexico's Progresa (later Oportunidades and now Prospera) program gave cash to mothers conditional on children's school attendance and family health visits, significantly improving education and nutrition outcomes.

Institutions and Governance

The formal and informal rules, norms, and enforcement mechanisms that shape economic behavior in a society. Strong institutions including property rights, rule of law, and accountable governance are considered essential for sustained development.

Example: Botswana's strong legal institutions and prudent management of diamond revenues enabled it to grow from one of the poorest countries at independence in 1966 to an upper-middle-income nation, contrasting with resource-cursed neighbors.

More terms are available in the glossary.

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Concept Map

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Worked Example

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Adaptive Practice

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What you get while practicing:

  • Math Lens cues for what to look for and what to ignore.
  • Progressive hints (direction, rule, then apply).
  • Targeted feedback when a common misconception appears.

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