A developing country (or a low and middle income country (LMIC), less developed country, less economically developed country (LEDC), or underdeveloped country) is a country with a less developed industrial base and a low Human Development Index (HDI) relative to other countries. However, this definition is not universally agreed upon. There is also no clear agreement on which countries fit this category. A nation's GDP per capita compared with other nations can also be a reference point.
The term "developing" describes a currently observed situation
and not a changing dynamic or expected direction of progress. Since the
late 1990s, developing countries tended to demonstrate higher growth
rates than developed countries. Developing countries include, in decreasing order of economic growth or size of the capital market: newly industrialized countries, emerging markets, frontier markets, Least Developed Countries. Therefore, the least developed countries are the poorest of the developing countries.
Developing countries tend to have some characteristics in common.
For example, with regards to health risks, they commonly have: low
levels of access to safe drinking water, sanitation and hygiene; energy poverty; high levels of pollution (e.g. air pollution, indoor air pollution, water pollution); high proportion of people with tropical and infectious diseases (neglected tropical diseases); high number of road traffic accidents. Often, there is also widespread poverty, low education levels, inadequate access to family planning services, corruption at all government levels and a lack of so-called good governance. Effects of global warming (climate change) are expected to impact developing countries more than wealthier countries, as most of them have a high "climate vulnerability".
The Sustainable Development Goals, by the United Nations, were set up to help overcome many of these problems. Development aid or development cooperation is financial aid given by governments and other agencies to support the economic, environmental, social and political development of developing countries.
Definitions
The UN acknowledges that it has "no established convention for the designation of "developed" and "developing" countries or areas". According to its so-called M49 standards, published in 1999:
The designations "developed" and "developing" are intended for statistical convenience and do not necessarily express a judgement about the stage reached by a particular country or area in the development process.
The UN implies that developing countries are those not on a tightly defined list of developed countries:
There is no established convention for the designation of "developed" and "developing" countries or areas in the United Nations system. In common practice, Japan in Asia, Canada and the United States in northern America, Australia and New Zealand in Oceania, and Europe are considered "developed" regions or areas. In international trade statistics, the Southern African Customs Union is also treated as a developed region and Israel as a developed country; countries emerging from the former Yugoslavia are treated as developing countries; and countries of eastern Europe and of the Commonwealth of Independent States [the former Soviet Union] in Europe are not included under either developed or developing regions.
However, under other criteria, some countries are at an intermediate stage of development, or, as the International Monetary Fund (IMF) put it, following the fall of the Soviet Union, "countries in transition": all those of Central and Eastern Europe (including Central European countries that still belonged to the "Eastern Europe Group" in the UN institutions); the former Soviet Union (USSR) countries in Central Asia (Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Turkmenistan); and Mongolia. By 2009, the IMF's World Economic Outlook
classified countries as advanced, emerging, or developing, depending on
"(1) per capita income level, (2) export diversification—so oil
exporters that have high per capita GDP would not make the advanced
classification because around 70% of its exports are oil, and (3) degree
of integration into the global financial system"
Along with the current level of development, countries can also
be classified by how much their level of development has changed over a
specific period of time.
In the 2016 edition of its World Development Indicators, the World Bank
made a decision to no longer distinguish between "developed" and
"developing" countries in the presentation of its data, considering the
two-category distinction outdated. Instead, the World Bank classifies countries into four groups, based on Gross National Income per capita, re-set each year on July 1. In 2016, the four categories in US dollars were:
- Low income countries: $995 or less.
- Lower middle income countries: $996 to $3,895.
- Upper middle income countries: $3,895 to $12,055.
- High income countries: $12,056 and above
Measure and concept of development
Kofi Annan, former Secretary General of the United Nations, defined a developed country as "one that allows all its citizens to enjoy a free and healthy life in a safe environment".
Development can be measured by economic or human factors.
Developing countries are, in general, countries that have not achieved a
significant degree of industrialization relative to their populations, and have, in most cases, a medium to low standard of living. There is an association between low income and high population growth. The development of a country is measured with statistical indexes such as income per capita (per person), gross domestic product per capita, life expectancy, the rate of literacy, freedom index and others. The UN has developed the Human Development Index
(HDI), a compound indicator of some of the above statistics, to gauge
the level of human development for countries where data is available.
The UN had set Millennium Development Goals from a blueprint developed by all of the world's countries and leading development institutions, in order to evaluate growth. These goals ended in 2015, to be superseded by the Sustainable Development Goals.
The concept of the developing nation is found, under one term or
another, in numerous theoretical systems having diverse orientations —
for example, theories of decolonization, liberation theology, Marxism, anti-imperialism, modernization, social change and political economy.
Another important indicator is the sectoral changes that have
occurred since the stage of development of the country. On an average,
countries with a 50% contribution from the secondary sector (manufacturing) have grown substantially. Similarly countries with a tertiary sector stronghold also see a greater rate of economic development.
Terms used to classify levels of development
There
are several terms used to classify countries into rough levels of
development. Classification of any given country differs across sources,
and sometimes these classifications or the specific terminology used is
considered disparaging. Use of the term "market" instead of "country"
usually indicates specific focus on the characteristics of the
countries' capital markets as opposed to the overall economy.
- Developed countries and developed markets
- Developing countries include in decreasing order of economic growth or size of the capital market:
Developing countries can also be categorized by geography:
Other classifications include:
- Heavily indebted poor countries, a definition by a program of the IMF and World Bank
- Transition economy, moving from a centrally planned to market-driven economy
- Multi-dimensional clustering system: with the understanding that different countries have different development priorities and levels of access to resources and institutional capacities and to offer a more nuanced understanding of developing countries and their characteristics, scholars have categorised them into five distinct groups based on factors such as levels of poverty and inequality, productivity and innovation, political constraints and dependence on external flows.
Criticisms and other terms
There
is criticism for using the term "developing country". The term could
imply inferiority of this kind of country compared with a developed country. It could assume a desire to develop along the traditional Western model of economic development which a few countries, such as Cuba and Bhutan, choose not to follow. Alternative measurements such as gross national happiness have been suggested as important indicators.
The classification of countries as "developing" implies that other countries are developed. This bipartite division is contentious.
To moderate the euphemistic aspect of the word "developing", international organizations have started to use the term less economically developed country
for the poorest nations—which can, in no sense, be regarded as
developing. This highlights that the standard of living across the
entire developing world varies greatly. Other terms sometimes used are
less developed countries, underdeveloped nations, and non-industrialized
nations. Conversely, developed countries, most economically developed countries, industrialized nations are the opposite end of the spectrum.
At the development level, anthropologist and researcher Jason
Hickel has challenged the widely propagated narrative that the rich
countries of the OECD help the poor countries develop their ecocomies
and eradicate poverty. Hickel's findings reveal that the rich countries
"aren’t developing poor countries; poor countries are developing rich
ones."
Third World
Over the past few decades since the fall of the Soviet Union and the end of the Cold War, the term Third World
has been used interchangeably with developing countries, but the
concept has become outdated in recent years as it no longer represents
the current political or economic state of the world. The three-world model arose during the Cold War to define countries aligned with NATO (the First World), the Communist Bloc (the Second World,
although this term was less used), or neither (the Third World).
Strictly speaking, "Third World" was a political, rather than an
economic, grouping.
Global South
The term "Global South" began to be used more widely since about 2004. It can also include poorer "southern" regions of wealthy "northern" countries. The Global South refers to these countries' "interconnected histories of colonialism, neo-imperialism,
and differential economic and social change through which large
inequalities in living standards, life expectancy, and access to
resources are maintained".
One of the early criticism that questioned the use of the terms
'developing' and 'underdeveloped' countries, but one that did not
confine itself to the economic sphere, was made by prominent historian
and academic Walter Rodney:
In some quarters, it has often been thought wise to substitute the term ‘developing’ for ‘underdeveloped’. One of the reasons for so doing is to avoid any unpleasantness which may be attached to the second term, which might be interpreted as meaning underdeveloped mentally, physically, morally or in any other respect. Actually, if ‘underdevelopment’ were related to anything other than comparing economies, then the most underdeveloped country in the world would be the U.S.A, which practices external oppression on a massive scale, while internally there is a blend of exploitation, brutality, and psychiatric disorder. However, on the economic level, it is best to remain with the word ‘underdeveloped’ rather than ‘developing’, because the latter creates the impression that all the countries of Africa, Asia and Latin America are escaping from a state of economic backwardness relative to the industrial nations of the world, and that they are emancipating themselves from the relationship of exploitation. That is certainly not true, and many underdeveloped countries in Africa and elsewhere are becoming more underdeveloped in comparison with the world’s great powers, because their exploitation by the metropoles is being intensified in new ways.
Common challenges
Most developing countries have these criteria in common:
- High levels of poverty – measured based on GNI per capita averaged over three years. For example, if the GNI per capita is less than US $1,025 (as of 2018) the country is regarded as a least developed country.
- Human resource weakness (based on indicators of nutrition, health, education and adult literacy; for example low literacy levels).
- Economic vulnerability (based on instability of agricultural production, instability of exports of goods and services, economic importance of non-traditional activities, merchandise export concentration, handicap of economic smallness, and the percentage of population displaced by natural disasters).
Urban slums
According to UN-Habitat, around 33% of the urban population in the developing world in 2012, or about 863 million people, lived in slums. In 2012, the proportion of urban population living in slums was highest in Sub-Saharan Africa (62%), followed by South Asia (35%), Southeast Asia (31%) and East Asia (28%).
The UN-Habitat reports that 43% of urban population in developing countries and 78% of those in the least developed countries are slum dwellers.
Slums form and grow in different parts of the world for many different reasons. Causes include rapid rural-to-urban migration, economic stagnation and depression, high unemployment, poverty, informal economy, forced or manipulated ghettoization, poor planning, politics, natural disasters and social conflicts. For example, as populations expand in poorer countries, rural people are moving to cities in an extensive urban migration that is resulting in the creation of slums.
In some cities, especially in countries in Southern Asia and sub-Saharan,
slums are not just marginalized neighborhoods holding a small
population; slums are widespread, and are home to a large part of urban
population. These are sometimes called "slum cities".
Violence against women
Several forms of violence against women are more prevalent in developing countries than in other parts of the world. For example, dowry violence and bride burning is associated with Ancient India but not the modern one, Bangladesh and Nepal. Acid throwing is also associated with these countries, as well as in Southeast Asia, including Cambodia. Honor killing is associated with the Middle East and South Asia. Marriage by abduction is found in Ethiopia, Central Asia and the Caucasus. Abuse related to payment of bride price (such as violence, trafficking and forced marriage) is linked to parts of Sub-Saharan Africa and Oceania.
Female genital mutilation is another form of violence against women which is still occurring in many developing countries. It is found mostly in Africa,
and to a lesser extent in the Middle East and some other parts of Asia.
Developing countries with the highest rate of women who have been cut
are Somalia (with 98 per cent of women affected), Guinea (96 per cent),
Djibouti (93 per cent), Egypt (91 per cent), Eritrea (89 per cent), Mali
(89 per cent), Sierra Leone (88 per cent), Sudan (88 per cent), Gambia
(76 per cent), Burkina Faso (76 per cent), and Ethiopia (74 per cent). Due to globalization
and immigration, FGM is spreading beyond the borders of Africa and
Middle East, to countries such as Australia, Belgium, Canada, France,
New Zealand, the U.S., and UK.
The Istanbul Convention prohibits female genital mutilation (Article 38). As of 2016, FGM has been legally banned in many African countries.
Public health
People in developing countries usually have a lower life expectancy
than people in developed countries. The burden of infectious diseases,
maternal mortality, child mortality and infant mortality are typically
substantially higher.
Undernutrition is more common in developing countries. Certain groups have higher rates of undernutrition, including women—in particular while pregnant or breastfeeding—children under five years of age, and the elderly. Malnutrition in children and stunted growth
of children is the cause for more than 200 million children under five
years of age in developing countries not reaching their developmental
potential. About 165 million children were estimated to have stunted growth from malnutrition in 2013. In some developing countries, overnutrition in the form of obesity is beginning to present within the same communities as undernutrition.
The following list shows the further significant
environmentally-related causes or conditions, as well as certain
diseases with a strong environmental component:
- Illness/disease (malaria, tuberculosis, AIDS, etc.): Illness imposes high and regressive cost burdens on families in developing countries.
- Tropical and infectious diseases (neglected tropical diseases)
- Unsafe drinking water, poor sanitation and hygiene
- Indoor air pollution in developing nations
- Pollution (e.g. air pollution, water pollution)
- Motor vehicle collisions
- Unintentional poisoning
- Non communicable diseases and weak healthcare systems
Water, sanitation, hygiene (WASH)
Access to water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) services is at very low levels in many developing countries. In 2015 the World Health Organization
(WHO) estimated that "1 in 3 people, or 2.4 billion, are still without
sanitation facilities" while 663 million people still lack access to
safe and clean drinking water. The estimate in 2017 by JMP states that 4.5 billion people currently do not have safely managed sanitation. The majority of these people live in developing countries.
About 892 million people, or 12 per cent of the global population, practiced open defecation instead of using toilets in 2016.
Seventy-six per cent (678 million) of the 892 million people practicing
open defecation in the world live in just seven countries. India is the country with the highest number of people practicing open defecation.
Further countries with a high number of people openly defecating are
Nigeria (47 million), followed by Indonesia (31 million), Ethiopia (27
million), Pakistan (23 million), Niger (14 million) and Sudan (11 million).
Sustainable Development Goal 6 is one of 17 Sustainable Development Goals established by the UN in 2015. It calls for clean water and sanitation for all people. This is particularly relevant for people in developing countries.
Energy
In 2009, about 1.4 billion of people in the world lived without electricity. 2.7 billion relied on wood, charcoal, and dung (dry animal dung fuel)
for home energy requirements. This lack of access to modern energy
technology limits income generation, blunts efforts to escape poverty,
affects people's health due to indoor air pollution, and contributes to
global deforestation and climate change. Small-scale renewable energy
technologies and distributed energy options, such as onsite solar power and improved cookstoves, offer rural households modern energy services.
Renewable energy
can be particularly suitable for developing countries. In rural and
remote areas, transmission and distribution of energy generated from fossil fuels can be difficult and expensive. Producing renewable energy locally can offer a viable alternative.
Renewable energy can directly contribute to poverty alleviation
by providing the energy needed for creating businesses and employment.
Renewable energy technologies can also make indirect contributions to
alleviating poverty by providing energy for cooking, space heating, and
lighting.
Kenya is the world leader in the number of solar power systems installed per capita.
Pollution
Indoor air pollution
Indoor air pollution in developing nations is a major health hazard. A major source of indoor air pollution in developing countries is the burning of biomass. Three billion people in developing countries across the globe rely on biomass in the form of wood, charcoal, dung, and crop residue, as their domestic cooking fuel.
Because much of the cooking is carried out indoors in environments that
lack proper ventilation, millions of people, primarily poor women and
children face serious health risks.
Globally, 4.3 million deaths were attributed to exposure to IAP
in developing countries in 2012, almost all in low and middle income
countries. The South East Asian and Western Pacific regions bear most of
the burden with 1.69 and 1.62 million deaths, respectively. Almost
600,000 deaths occur in Africa. An earlier estimate from 2000 but the death toll between 1.5 million and 2 million deaths.
Finding an affordable solution to address the many effects of
indoor air pollution is complex. Strategies include improving
combustion, reducing smoke exposure, improving safety and reducing
labor, reducing fuel costs, and addressing sustainability.
Water pollution
Water pollution is a major problem in many developing countries. It requires ongoing evaluation and revision of water resource policy
at all levels (international down to individual aquifers and wells). It
has been suggested that water pollution is the leading worldwide cause
of death and diseases, and that it accounts for the deaths of more than 14,000 people daily.
India and China are two countries with high levels of water pollution: An estimated 580 people in India die of water pollution related illness (including waterborne diseases) every day. About 90 per cent of the water in the cities of China is polluted. As of 2007, half a billion Chinese had no access to safe drinking water.
Further details of water pollution in several countries, including many developing countries:
Global warming
The effects of global warming such as extreme weather events, droughts, floods, biodiversity loss, disease and sea level rise are dangerous for humans and the environment. Developing countries are the least able to adapt to climate change
(and are therefore called "highly climate vulnerable") due to their
relatively low levels of wealth, technology, education, infrastructure
and access to resources. This applies to many countries in Sub-Saharan Africa or Small Island Developing States. Some of those island states are likely to face total inundation. Fragile states or failed states like Afghanistan, Haiti, Myanmar, Sierra Leone, and Somalia are among the worst affected.
Climate vulnerability has been quantified in the Climate Vulnerability Monitor reports of 2010 and 2012. Climate vulnerability in developing countries occurs in four impact areas: health, extreme weather, habitat loss, and economic stress.
A report by the Climate Vulnerability Monitor in 2012 estimated that
climate change causes 400,000 deaths on average each year, mainly due to
hunger and communicable diseases in developing countries. These effects are most severe for the world’s poorest countries.
A changing climate also results in economic burdens. The economies in Least Developed Countries have lost an average of 7% of their gross domestic product for the year 2010, mainly due to reduced labor productivity. Rising sea levels cost 1% of GDP to the least developed countries in 2010 – 4% in the Pacific – with 65 billion dollars annually lost from the world economy. Another example is the impact on fisheries: approximately 40 countries are acutely vulnerable to the impact of greenhouse gas emissions on fisheries. Developing countries with large fisheries sectors are particularly affected.
In many cases, developing countries produce only small quantities
of greenhouse gas emissions per capita but are very vulnerable to the
negative effects of global warming. Such countries include Comoros, The Gambia, Guinea-Bissau, São Tomé and Príncipe, Solomon Islands and Vanuatu - they have been called "forced riders" as opposed to the "free riders". Internationally there is recognition of this issue, which is known under the term "climate justice". It has been a key topic at the United Nations Climate Change Conferences (COP).
During the Cancún COP16 in 2010, donor countries promised an annual $100 billion by 2020 through the Green Climate Fund
for developing countries to adapt to climate change. However, concrete
pledges by developed countries have not been forthcoming. Emmanuel Macron (President of France) said at the 2017 United Nations Climate Change Conference in Bonn (COP 23): "Climate change adds further injustice to an already unfair world".
Climate stress is likely to add to existing migration patterns in developing countries and beyond but is not expected to generate entirely new flows of people. A report by World Bank in 2018 estimated that around 143 million people in three regions (Sub-Saharan Africa, South Asia, and Latin America)
could be forced to move within their own countries to escape the
slow-onset impacts of climate change. They will migrate from less viable
areas with lower water availability and crop productivity and from areas affected by rising sea level and storm surges.
Economic development and climate are inextricably linked, particularly around poverty, gender equality, and energy. Tackling climate change will only be possible if the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) are met (goal number 13 is on climate action).
Population growth
Over the last few decades, global population growth has largely been driven by developing countries, which often have higher birth rates (higher fertility rate) than developed countries. According to the United Nations, family planning can help to slow population growth and decrease poverty in these countries.
Others
- Increased and intensified industrial and agricultural production and emission of toxic chemicals directly into the soil, air, and water.
- Unsustainable use of energy resources.
- High dependency on natural resources for livelihood, leading to unsustainable exploitation or depletion of those resources
- Child Marriage
- Political instability
- Political corruption
- Indebtedness
- Under performing civil service
- Food insecurity
- Illiteracy
- Unemployment
The economies of many developing nations are tried to primary
products and a majority of their exports go to advanced nations. When
advanced nations encounter economic downturns, they can quickly
transmitted to their developing country trading partners as seen in
global economic downturn of 2008-2009.
Opportunities
- Human Capital
- Trade Policy: Countries with more restrictive policies have not grown as fast as countries with open and less distorted trade policies.
- Investment: Investment has a positive effect on growth.
- Education