Wednesday, September 4, 2019
Import Substitution :: essays research papers
 Import Substitution    Describe import substitution (Inward looking) developmental strategy, clearly  outlining the differences between the first and second stage. Assess its  effectiveness in promoting economic development. Compare inward looking and  outward looking strategies and discuss the assertion that the latter is superior.      The First Stage of Import Substitution:         All present day industrial and developing countries protect their  manufacturing industries for the domestic markets. While the industrial  countries of today rely primarily upon the usage of relatively low tariffs,  developing countries apply high tariffs or quantitative restrictions which  either limit or completely exclude competition from their imports. Protection  like that - high protection - discriminates against exports through the  explicit/implicit taxation of the export activities.       Explicit taxation can take the form of export taxes whereas implicit  taxation occurs as a result of the effects of protection on the exchange rate.  As your protection level increases, your exchange rate level will decrease in  order to ensure the necessary equilibrium of the balance of payments and the  lower the amount of domestic currency exporters receive per unit of foreign  exchange earned.       There is no need for high protection at the first stage of import  substitution in the replacement of the imports of non-durable consumer goods  (clothing, shoes, household goods, textile fabrics, leather, wood and other  types of inputs) since these commodities exist in the developing countries that  are at the initial frontier of industrialization.       The commodities I mentioned are intensive in unskilled labor, the scale  of output is relatively low, and costs do not rise substantially at lower output  levels. The production of the commodities do not involve the use of  sophisticated technology or highly educated workers and suppliers for parts,  components, materials and accessories are not necessary for highly efficient  operations.       An argument for infant industry protection and promotion is made for the  "easy" stage, that being the first stage of import substitution because even  though the domestic production of the commodities generates external economies  in the form of labor training, entrepreneurial development and the spread of  technology, there is a viable argument for infant industry protection because  without the shielding from larger, more sophisticated companies, these infant  industries will be crushed and overwhelmed by exceeding costs, non-  competitiveness due to the lack of highly skilled laborers and the simple fact  that these infant industries are technologically incompetent.    The Second Stage of Import Substitution:         I see the first stage of import substitution as a temporary requirement  because the domestic production rises since it not only provides for increases  in consumption but it also replaces imports. The rate of this growth however  will decline as soon as the process of import substitution is completed.  					    
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