Development Economics as Taught in Developing Countries

This paper uses a combination of survey questions to instructors and data collected from course syllabi and examinations to examine how the subject of development economics is taught at the undergraduate and masters levels in developing countries, and benchmark this against undergraduate classes in the United States. The study finds that there is considerable heterogeneity in what is considered development economics: there is a narrow core of only a small set of topics such as growth theory, poverty and inequality, human capital, and institutions taught in at least half the classes, with substantial variation in other topics covered. In developing countries, development economics is taught largely as a theoretical subject coupled with case studies, with few courses emphasizing data or empirical methods and findings. This approach contrasts with the approach taken in leading U.S. economics departments and with the evolution of development economics research. The analysis finds that country income per capita, the role of the state in the economy, the education level in the country, and the involvement of the instructor in research are associated with how close a course is to the frontier. The results suggest there are important gaps in how development economics is taught.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Mckenzie, David, Paffhausen, Anna Luisa
Format: Working Paper biblioteca
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2015-12
Subjects:CAPITA INCOME, COLLEGE, ECONOMIC GROWTH, PRODUCTION, UNDERGRADUATE DEGREE PROGRAM, EMPIRICAL WORK, INDEX NUMBERS, ECONOMIC LITERATURE, INCOME, MACROECONOMIC MANAGEMENT, POVERTY RATES, POVERTY TRAPS, ENROLLMENT RATIO, INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS, GDP PER CAPITA, GRADUATE LEVEL, LABOR FORCE, DEVELOPING COUNTRIES, ELASTICITY, MARGINAL PRODUCT, POLITICAL ECONOMY, POLICY OPTIONS, GROWTH MODEL, BASIC KNOWLEDGE, PAPERS, INCENTIVES, INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT, MASTERS LEVEL, VARIABLES, ASYMMETRIC INFORMATION, DEVELOPMENT POLICIES, GROWTH WITHOUT DEVELOPMENT, PER-CAPITA INCOME, INPUTS, UNDERGRADUATE LEVEL, RETURNS TO SCALE, FACULTY, DEVELOPING COUNTRY, DEVELOPED COUNTRIES, OPEN ACCESS, PROFESSORS, POVERTY REDUCTION, LITERACY, TEXTBOOKS, DEVELOPMENT, INDUSTRIAL POLICY, PER CAPITA INCOMES, PUBLIC POLICY, COURSE CONTENT, ANALYTICAL METHODS, COURSE SYLLABI, TOTAL FACTOR PRODUCTIVITY, EDUCATION STATISTICS, MEASURING POVERTY, PER CAPITA INCOME, DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS, GRADUATE, DEVELOPMENT STRATEGIES, FAILURES, IMPERFECT COMPETITION, INCREASING RETURNS, MARKETS, CONVERGENCE HYPOTHESIS, CAPITA INCOMES, LEARNING, RESEARCH, TRADE POLICY, TEACHING, UNDERGRADUATE EDUCATION, ECONOMIC RESEARCH, UNEMPLOYMENT, DEVELOPMENT RESEARCH, INCOMPLETE MARKETS, PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH, DATA AVAILABILITY, HUMAN CAPITAL, EXAM QUESTIONS, RESEARCH CENTERS, WORKERS, DEVELOPMENT REPORT, COUNTRY LEVEL, ECONOMICS ASSOCIATIONS, CAPITAL, SCIENCE, INTERNATIONAL TRADE, STUDENT, SCHOOLS, MARKET FAILURES, VALUE, HUMAN DEVELOPMENT REPORT, POLICY MAKERS, CREDIT, MACROECONOMICS, POOR COUNTRIES, FACULTIES, NATIONAL INCOME, URBAN AREAS, ABSOLUTE POVERTY, RESEARCHERS, EDUCATION LEVEL, AGRICULTURE, LITERATURE, BENCHMARK, LEARNING OBJECTIVES, PRODUCTION FUNCTION, ECONOMICS, RESEARCH OUTPUT, FACULTY MEMBERS, DATA SETS, ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT, TRADE, RICH COUNTRIES, GDP, SYLLABI, THEORY, GROWTH RATE, TOTAL FACTOR PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH, INSTITUTES, RURAL AREAS, POVERTY, UNDERGRADUATE STUDENTS, MASTERS DEGREES, WAGE DIFFERENTIALS, RESEARCH FINDINGS, EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE, UNIVERSITY, STUDENTS, AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITY, POLICY RESEARCH, GROWTH THEORY, RAPID GROWTH, EXCHANGE RATE, DEGREES, MICRO DATA, ECONOMICS RESEARCH, LABOR MARKETS, SCHOOL, UNDERGRADUATES, TERTIARY EDUCATION, DEVELOPMENT INDICATORS, STUDENT LEARNING, MIDDLE INCOME COUNTRIES, SIGNIFICANT CORRELATION, UNIVERSITIES, DEVELOPMENT POLICY, HUMAN DEVELOPMENT, UNDERGRADUATE COURSES, GROWTH,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2015/12/25705313/development-economics-taught-developing-countries
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/23621
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!