5183 - THE ECONOMICS OF DEVELOPMENT AND TRANSITION
CLEA - CLAPI - CLEFIN - CLELI - CLEACC - DES - CLEMIT - DIEM - CLSG
Department of Economics
Course taught in English
ELIANA LA FERRARA
Course Objectives
The first part of the course examines the functioning of markets and institutions in developing countries. The methodological approach focuses on the role of information, incentives, and limits to contracting, and examines how developing countries cope with these types of market imperfections. The organization of the informal sector in emerging economies is studied in depth, covering such topics as: intra-household allocation of resources; child labour; contractual forms in agriculture, microfinance and group lending; firms in developing countries (with particular emphasis on ethnic and informal networks).
The second part of the course deals with the lessons learnt from the transition into a market economy of the formerly planned economies of Central and
Course Content Summary
- Economics of the family and child labour
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Land markets
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Credit markets and microfinance
- Firms and networks
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Understanding Transition
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The Optimal Speed of Transition
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Transition, Institutional Transformation and Governance
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Eastern enlargement and migration
Detailed Description of Assessment Methods
Written exam.
Students have two options. They may take the exam in two written parts: a 1st partial exam and a 2nd partial exam. Alternatively they may take a general exam covering the entire course material.
Textbooks
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D. RAY, Development Economics, Princeton Univ. Press, 1998
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G. ROLAND, Transition and Economics, MIT Press, 2000
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T. BOERI, Structural Change, Welfare Systems and Labour Reallocation, Oxford Univ. Press, 2000
Additional readings and material on several topics will be available at the beginning of the course.
For further and continuously updated information consult the IEP web site or contact SID - Servizio Informazione Didattica - Institute of Economics - via Gobbi, 5 - Room 313.