Economic Development in Developing Nations
The content of the 14th chapter in Todard and Smith's Economic Development details the effects of foreign aid on the economies and overall development of developing economies. The author's consider the results of such aid at both a macro and micro level by outlining general principles and identifying how they subsequently play out for individual countries (particularly those in Africa). The chapter begins with the authors (2012) denoting the various forms of foreign aid and the ways in which they flow in and out of developing countries. The most prominent of these is that associated with the presence of multinational companies (MNCs), although other forms of foreign aid involve public funds from other governments, a variety of stock options (portfolio investment), and even a contribution of the portion of earnings of individuals in a developing nation that have travelled abroad to earn money (p. 684-685).
The authors spend a fair amount of time denoting the way that multinational investment works. Typically, these countries are large ones with a global presence that are looking to maximize their investments (and global presence) in developing countries by establishing a subsidiary and there in exchange for certain benefits. The nature of those benefits is best detailed in the section of the chapter in which the authors examine the pros and cons of the presence of MNCs in developing nations. The pros are that they provide a source of revenue to the country...
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