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GCSE/Geography/Edexcel

T2.1Measuring development: economic indicators (GNI per capita, GDP), social indicators (HDI, life expectancy, literacy); strengths and limitations of single vs composite measures

Notes

The Development Gap

What is development?

Development is the process by which a country improves the quality of life of its people. It is multidimensional — economic growth alone does not capture education, health, gender equality or environmental quality. Countries are commonly classified as:

  • HICs (High Income Countries): GNI per capita > $12,696 (World Bank, 2023); e.g. UK, USA, Japan.
  • EDCs (Emerging and Developing Countries): rapidly industrialising; e.g. India, China, Brazil.
  • LIDCs (Low Income Developing Countries): GNI per capita < $1,085; e.g. Niger, Malawi, Afghanistan.

The traditional "North–South divide" oversimplifies — there is a spectrum of development, and some LIDCs are growing faster than HICs.

Measuring development

Economic indicators

  • GNI per capita (Gross National Income per capita): total income earned by a country's residents divided by population. In US dollars at purchasing power parity (PPP) for comparability. High GNI → more resources for services, infrastructure. Limitation: disguises inequality within countries (the Gini coefficient measures this).
  • GDP per capita: similar, but measures income produced within borders (excludes overseas earnings of nationals).

Social indicators

  • Life expectancy: average years a person can expect to live at birth. Reflects healthcare quality, nutrition, sanitation. Ranges from ~50 years (Chad) to ~84 years (Japan).
  • Infant mortality rate (IMR): deaths per 1,000 live births before age 1. High IMR → poor healthcare, nutrition, clean water.
  • Literacy rate: % of adults who can read and write. Low literacy → poverty trap; high literacy → economic productivity.
  • Access to clean water / sanitation.

Composite indicators

  • HDI (Human Development Index): combines Life Expectancy Index + Education Index (mean and expected years of schooling) + GNI per capita Index. Scale 0–1. Norway ~0.96; Niger ~0.40.
  • Advantages over single measures: captures three dimensions of wellbeing; harder to manipulate than a single GDP figure.
  • Limitations: doesn't capture inequality within countries (use IHDI), gender gaps (use GDI), or environmental sustainability.

Patterns of uneven development

Global development is highly uneven:

  • Sub-Saharan Africa has the world's lowest HDI scores; LIDCs concentrated here.
  • South and East Asia includes both LIDCs (Afghanistan, Cambodia) and rapidly growing EDCs (India, Vietnam, Indonesia).
  • Latin America has higher HDI than Africa but significant inequality within countries (Brazil's Gini ~0.53).
  • North America, Western Europe, Australasia, Japan: HICs with HDI > 0.85.

Causes of uneven development

Physical factors

  • Landlocked countries (e.g. Niger, Chad, Malawi) lack ports → higher trade costs → reduced export earnings.
  • Climate: tropical regions face higher disease burden (malaria, dengue), crop unreliability, and extreme weather (flooding, drought).
  • Natural resources: some resource-rich nations (Nigeria, DRC) are paradoxically underdeveloped — "resource curse" (corruption, Dutch disease, conflict).
  • Natural hazards: frequent disasters set back development (Haiti's GDP fell 5% after the 2010 earthquake).

Historical factors

  • Colonialism: European powers extracted raw materials and labour from colonies, leaving weak institutions, arbitrary borders, and mono-crop economies.
  • Slave trade: removed millions of working-age adults from West Africa over 350 years → demographic and economic damage.
  • Debt: many LIDCs carry post-colonial debt to HICs and IMF/World Bank; repayment consumes development budgets.

Economic and political factors

  • Trade terms: LIDCs often export low-value primary products (coffee, cotton, minerals) and import high-value manufactured goods → unfavourable terms of trade.
  • Corruption and conflict: internal conflict destroys infrastructure; corruption diverts aid and tax revenue. DRC's armed conflict keeps per capita income at ~$570/year despite vast mineral wealth.
  • TNCs: foreign direct investment can spur growth (India's IT sector, Vietnam's manufacturing) but profits repatriated, tax avoided via transfer pricing.
  • Aid dependency: can undermine local markets and governance if poorly managed.

Theories of development (T2.3 link)

  • Rostow's Modernisation Model (1960): five linear stages (Traditional Society → Pre-conditions for Take-off → Take-off → Drive to Maturity → Age of High Mass Consumption). Optimistic: all countries can reach HIC status with investment and the right institutions.
  • Frank's Dependency Theory (1967): the "core" (HICs) actively underdeveloped the "periphery" (LIDCs) through colonialism and trade; LIDCs cannot develop within the capitalist world system without breaking dependency.

Edexcel B exam tip

When evaluating causes of uneven development, use a "most important factor" structure: introduce the factor → support with data/example → concede other factors → justify your conclusion. E.g. "Historical colonialism is the most significant cause of the development gap in sub-Saharan Africa because… however, physical factors such as landlocked geography also…"

AI-generated · claude-opus-4-7 · v3-edexcel-geography

Practice questions

Try each before peeking at the worked solution.

  1. Question 14 marks

    Compare development indicators (4 marks)

    Compare the advantages of using HDI over GNI per capita to measure development. [4 marks]

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  2. Question 26 marks

    Causes of uneven development (6 marks)

    Evaluate the causes of the global development gap. [6 marks]

    Level mark scheme:

    LevelMarksDescriptor
    L11–2Simple list of causes; no evaluation of relative importance; limited or no named examples.
    L23–4Explanation of multiple causes with some named examples; partial evaluation — some causes described as more/less important but without full justification.
    L35–6Detailed, balanced evaluation; specific named country examples with data; clear judgement on the most significant cause(s); acknowledges the interaction of factors.

    Indicative content:

    • Physical: landlocked countries (Niger, Malawi) face high trade costs; tropical disease burden limits productivity; resource curse (Nigeria — oil wealth but HDI = 0.54).
    • Historical: colonialism extracted resources and left weak institutions; debt repayment cycles (sub-Saharan Africa pays $41 bn/year in debt service).
    • Economic/political: unfavourable terms of trade (cotton farmers vs garment manufacturers); TNC profit repatriation; corruption (DRC — $570/year GDP per capita despite vast minerals).
    • Conclusion: historical colonialism combined with ongoing unfavourable trade terms is the most significant cause of persistent development gaps — physical factors exacerbate but do not create underdevelopment. Award L3 only if a reasoned conclusion is present.
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  3. Question 34 marks

    Limitations of development indicators (4 marks)

    Explain the limitations of using GNI per capita as a measure of development. [4 marks]

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  4. Question 42 marks

    Development patterns (2 marks)

    Describe the global pattern of development shown by HDI scores. [2 marks]

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Flashcards

T2.1 — The development gap: measuring development and causes of uneven development

8-card SR deck for Edexcel Geography topic T2.1

8 cards · spaced repetition (SM-2)