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15 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back

Urban bias

The notion that most governments in developing countries favor the urban sector in their development policies, thereby creating a widening gap between the urban and the rural economies. P. 315

Rural-urban migration

The movement of people from rural villages, towns, and farms to urban centers (cities) in search of jobs. P. 316

Agglomeration economies

Cost advantages to producers and consumers from location in cities and towns, which take the forms of urbanization economies and localization economies. P. 318

Urbanization economies

Agglomeration effects associated with the general growth of a concentrated geographic region. P. 318

Localization economies

Agglomeration effects captured by particular sectors of the economy, such as finance or autos, as they grow within an area. P. 318

Social capital

The productive value of a set of social institutions and norms, including group trust, expected cooperative behaviors with predictable punishments for deviations, and a shared history of successful collective action, that raises expectations for participation in future cooperative behavior. P. 321

Congestion

An action taken by one agent that decreases the incentives for other agents to take similar actions. Compare to the opposite effect of a complementarity. P. 322

Informal sector

The part of the urban economy of developing countries characterized by small competitive individual or family firms, petty retail trade and services, labor-intensive methods, free entry, and market-determined factor and product prices. P. 328

Todaro migration model

A theory that explains rural-urban migration as an economically rational process despite high urban unemployment.  Migrants calculate (present value of) urban expected income (or its equivalent) and move if this exceeds average rural income.  P...

A theory that explains rural-urban migration as an economically rational process despite high urban unemployment. Migrants calculate (present value of) urban expected income (or its equivalent) and move if this exceeds average rural income. P. 337

Harris-Todaro model

An equilibrium version of the Todaro migration model that predicts that expected incomes will be equated across rural and urban sectors when taking into account informal-sector activities and outright unemployment.  P. 337

An equilibrium version of the Todaro migration model that predicts that expected incomes will be equated across rural and urban sectors when taking into account informal-sector activities and outright unemployment. P. 337

Present value

The discounted value at the present time of a sum of money to be received in the future. P. 339

Labor turnover

Worker separations from employers, a concept used in theory that the urban-rural wage gap is partly explained by the fact that urban modern-sector employers pay higher wages to reduce labor turnover rates and retain trained and skilled workers. P. 341

Efficiency wage

The notion that modern-sector urban employers pay a higher wage than the equilibrium wage rate in order to attract and retain a higher-quality workforce or to obtain higher productivity on the job. P. 341

Induced migration

Process in which the creation of urban jobs raises expected incomes and induces more people to migrate from rural areas. P. 342

Wage subsidy

A government financial incentive to private employers to hire more workers, as through tax deductions for new job creation. P. 343