November 21, 2018
Second-year undergraduate course
Department of International Public Policy
Osaka University
Press Space key to proceed; Shift + Space to move back
Chapter 10 of
3 chapters per week from
Chapter 10 of
3 chapters per week from
Each of you will make a 5-minute presentation on one chapter
Which counts for your final grade
It's clearly too much for you to read three chapters each week.
I want everyone to read at least one chapter each week.
Then practice talking in English about the chapter of your choice
So we will change the way each class is organized as follows:
Chapter A
Chapter B
Chapter C
Speaker
Discussants
gives the 5-minute talk
Pair discussion & my feedback to
discuss the chapter
Floor discussions (i.e. the rest of the class)
First
5 min
Next
5 min
Next
15 min
Last
5 min
Sign up at
First come first served
What you should do by next Wednesday #1
Sign up at
First come first served
What you should do by next Wednesday #2
To help you make these decisions, let me give you...
We will read the chapters of this book in the following order:
Chapters 3, 7, 8
Chapters 4, 1, 10
Chapters 9, 12, 13
Chapters 11, 6, 14
Chapters 5, 2, 15
December 5
December 12
December 19
January 9
January 16
To make it easier to understand the book
Chapter 3
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Rich countries
Poor countries
Inclusive
economic institutions
Extractive
economic institutions
Inclusive
political institutions
Extractive
political institutions
Rich countries
Poor countries
Inclusive
economic institutions
Extractive
economic institutions
Chapter 3
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Definition of inclusive and extractive institutions
Case studies:
North & South Korea, the Congo
Inclusive
political institutions
Extractive
political institutions
Chapter 3
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Rich countries
Poor countries
Inclusive
economic institutions
Extractive
economic institutions
Inclusive
political institutions
Extractive
political institutions
How inclusive institutions bring about economic growth
Case study:
Path to Industrial Revolution in England (13th-18th centuries)
Chapter 3
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Rich countries
Poor countries
Inclusive
economic institutions
Extractive
economic institutions
Inclusive
political institutions
Extractive
political institutions
How extractive institutions result in poverty
Case studies:
Ottoman, Austrian, Russian, Chinese, Ethiopian Empires & Somalia
Chapter 4
Chapter 1
Chapter 10
Rich countries
Inclusive
economic institutions
Inclusive
political institutions
?
Chapter 4
Chapter 1
Chapter 10
Rich countries
Inclusive
economic institutions
Inclusive
political institutions
?
How the Black Death in 14th century
& the rise of Atlantic trade in the 16th century
gave birth to the inclusive institutions in England
Chapter 4
Chapter 1
Chapter 10
Rich countries
Inclusive
economic institutions
Inclusive
political institutions
?
How inclusive institutions emerged
in the United States, but not in Mexico
Chapter 4
Chapter 1
Chapter 10
Rich countries
Inclusive
economic institutions
Inclusive
political institutions
?
How inclusive institutions emerged
in Australia, France, and Japan
Chapter 9
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Poor countries
Extractive
economic institutions
Extractive
political institutions
?
Chapter 9
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Poor countries
Extractive
economic institutions
Extractive
political institutions
?
How extractive institutions were
(1) set up by Europeans in Southeast Asia and South Africa
(2) exacerbated by the slave trade in Africa
Chapter 9
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Poor countries
Extractive
economic institutions
Extractive
political institutions
?
How extractive institutions persist
(1) by the same ruling elite in Guatemala & US South
(2) despite leadership changes in Sierra Leone & Ethiopia
Chapter 9
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Poor countries
Extractive
economic institutions
Extractive
political institutions
?
How extractive institutions caused state failure
in Zimbabwe, Argentina, Colombia, North Korea, Uzbekistan, Egypt
Chapter 11
Chapter 6
Chapter 14
Rich countries
Poor countries
Inclusive
economic institutions
Extractive
economic institutions
Inclusive
political institutions
Extractive
political institutions
?
Chapter 11
Chapter 6
Chapter 14
Rich countries
Poor countries
Inclusive
economic institutions
Extractive
economic institutions
Inclusive
political institutions
Extractive
political institutions
How attempts to make institutions extractive were averted
in 19th-century Britain and 20th-century U.S.
Chapter 11
Chapter 6
Chapter 14
Rich countries
Poor countries
Inclusive
economic institutions
Extractive
economic institutions
Inclusive
political institutions
Extractive
political institutions
How inclusive institutions collapsed
in Medieval Venice and Roman Republic
Chapter 11
Chapter 6
Chapter 14
Rich countries
Poor countries
Inclusive
economic institutions
Extractive
economic institutions
Inclusive
political institutions
Extractive
political institutions
How extractive institutions turned into inclusive ones
in Botswana, U.S. South in the 1960s, Brazil (pp. 455-460 in Chap.15)
Chapter 5
Chapter 2
Chapter 15
Rich countries
Poor countries
Inclusive
economic institutions
Extractive
economic institutions
Inclusive
political institutions
Extractive
political institutions
?
Chapter 5
Chapter 2
Chapter 15
Rich countries
Poor countries
Inclusive
economic institutions
Extractive
economic institutions
Inclusive
political institutions
Extractive
political institutions
How economic growth realized under extractive institutions
(1) in Soviet Union, Kuba Kingdom in Congo, Mayan city-states
(2) during the Neolithic Revolution
?
Chapter 5
Chapter 2
Chapter 15
Rich countries
Poor countries
Inclusive
economic institutions
Extractive
economic institutions
Inclusive
political institutions
Extractive
political institutions
Why geography, culture, and enlightened leadership
cannot explain global income inequality
?
Chapter 5
Chapter 2
Chapter 15
Rich countries
Poor countries
Inclusive
economic institutions
Extractive
economic institutions
Inclusive
political institutions
Extractive
political institutions
Authors' criticism on Poor Economics
Case studies: China since 1979
?
Authors' criticism
on Why Nations Fail
After the 5 min talk on Chapter 10 of Poor Economics,
I'll ask everyone to answer the following question:
Which book is more convincing about the cause of global poverty, Why Nations Fail or Poor Economics?
Each chapter contains several examples of the main message
Pick one or two that you think is the most illustrative
If there are more than one main message...
Be brave to entirely cut one (or two) of them from your presentation
It's better to explain one thing or two clearly
than talking about many things vaguely
Sign up at
First come first served
What you should do by next Wednesday #1
Sign up at
First come first served
What you should do by next Wednesday #2