﻿1
00:00:01,319 --> 00:00:04,920
in Kruger is an American economist born
in 1934

2
00:00:04,920 --> 00:00:08,420
she spent a lot of her career at
University of Minnesota

3
00:00:08,420 --> 00:00:12,150
Duke the World Bank and the
International Monetary Fund

4
00:00:12,150 --> 00:00:16,330
following on the work according to Alec

5
00:00:16,330 --> 00:00:19,710
in Kruger applied the idea of
rent-seeking behavior

6
00:00:19,710 --> 00:00:24,440
to developing economies there in seeking
is one of the strange economic words

7
00:00:24,440 --> 00:00:24,770
that

8
00:00:24,770 --> 00:00:27,520
actually mean something a little
different from what the words themselves

9
00:00:27,520 --> 00:00:28,610
indicate

10
00:00:28,610 --> 00:00:33,210
economists refer to read seeking when
people invest resources

11
00:00:33,210 --> 00:00:37,210
to take money from others or to take
welfare mothers

12
00:00:37,210 --> 00:00:41,960
rather than producing sir rent-seeking
behavior is in general inefficient

13
00:00:41,960 --> 00:00:45,250
one example of rent-seeking behavior is
lobbying

14
00:00:45,250 --> 00:00:49,280
if an individual or group goes to the
government and tries to get a subsidy

15
00:00:49,280 --> 00:00:53,180
tries to get a privilege that is
rent-seeking another example of

16
00:00:53,180 --> 00:00:54,600
rent-seeking behavior

17
00:00:54,600 --> 00:00:58,750
is a thief when the thief tries to steal
the television from your house

18
00:00:58,750 --> 00:01:03,280
that's using his labor to take resources
from someone else

19
00:01:03,280 --> 00:01:09,439
rather than to produce well for much
more in rent seeking see our unit

20
00:01:09,439 --> 00:01:11,409
devoted to the concept of corruption

21
00:01:11,409 --> 00:01:15,729
and Kruger was the first economist to
try to come up with an empirical

22
00:01:15,729 --> 00:01:17,219
estimate how important

23
00:01:17,219 --> 00:01:21,479
rent-seeking was for developing
economies it's now commonly believed

24
00:01:21,479 --> 00:01:24,209
that corruption and rent-seeking
behavior

25
00:01:24,209 --> 00:01:27,950
they're one of the very most important
problems faced by poor countries

26
00:01:27,950 --> 00:01:32,719
and Kruger noted a startling fact she
went back and looked at

27
00:01:32,719 --> 00:01:35,920
import licences import licences

28
00:01:35,920 --> 00:01:40,289
the time they existed or something you
had to do a permission you had to get

29
00:01:40,289 --> 00:01:41,179
from the government

30
00:01:41,179 --> 00:01:44,249
if you wanted to buy goods and services
from a broad

31
00:01:44,249 --> 00:01:47,469
you couldn't just spend your money on
goods and services

32
00:01:47,469 --> 00:01:51,990
you needed to buy the import license
many developing economies in the

33
00:01:51,990 --> 00:01:53,109
nineteen sixties

34
00:01:53,109 --> 00:01:56,450
had import licences including India and
Turkey

35
00:01:56,450 --> 00:02:01,770
and in Kruger estimated that import
licenses in India were so significant

36
00:02:01,770 --> 00:02:05,939
that they comprised 7.3 percent and
India's GDP

37
00:02:05,939 --> 00:02:11,240
in Turkey in 1968 import licences were
so significant

38
00:02:11,240 --> 00:02:15,060
that they comprised 15 percent after
kiss GDP

39
00:02:15,060 --> 00:02:20,090
Kruger also made the point that if these
import licenses are so valuable

40
00:02:20,090 --> 00:02:23,270
in accord with the concept of
rent-seeking behavior

41
00:02:23,270 --> 00:02:27,600
people will devote a lot of resources to
trying to get the import license

42
00:02:27,600 --> 00:02:32,569
you can import license in these contexts
by lobbying the government by being

43
00:02:32,569 --> 00:02:35,709
politically connected by getting favors
from your friends

44
00:02:35,709 --> 00:02:39,520
so just think about it for a moment
import licences

45
00:02:39,520 --> 00:02:42,600
are worth up to fifteen percent if
Turkey's GDP

46
00:02:42,600 --> 00:02:46,970
how much in the way have money resources
time effort

47
00:02:46,970 --> 00:02:50,420
well people invest trying to get those
import licences

48
00:02:50,420 --> 00:02:54,910
Welker said we don't exactly know the
number but you can imagine that in some

49
00:02:54,910 --> 00:02:56,019
circumstances

50
00:02:56,019 --> 00:03:00,880
people would be willing to invest up to
15 percent of Turkey's GDP

51
00:03:00,880 --> 00:03:04,459
for instance imagine there's a one
hundred dollar prize you can get

52
00:03:04,459 --> 00:03:08,140
how much money would you devote trying
to get that hundred dollar prize

53
00:03:08,140 --> 00:03:11,769
well you might devote up to ninety nine
dollars or even a bit more

54
00:03:11,769 --> 00:03:15,600
if you had to so what krueger pointed
out is that people

55
00:03:15,600 --> 00:03:18,750
running after subsidies privileges
favors

56
00:03:18,750 --> 00:03:22,130
Wasif transferring wealth to themselves
through the government

57
00:03:22,130 --> 00:03:26,510
that this was a major drain on the
resources are developing economies

58
00:03:26,510 --> 00:03:30,160
and think about it the more people that
are using their on January

59
00:03:30,160 --> 00:03:33,560
to get resources our money or favors for
themselves

60
00:03:33,560 --> 00:03:37,250
the less talent there is going to be
devoted to innovating

61
00:03:37,250 --> 00:03:41,790
Kruger also did important work

62
00:03:41,790 --> 00:03:44,829
on tariffs and the idea import
substitution

63
00:03:44,829 --> 00:03:48,430
import substitution is when a developing
economy

64
00:03:48,430 --> 00:03:53,109
imposes tariffs on foreign goods hoping
that its domestic producers

65
00:03:53,109 --> 00:03:57,930
will arise as substitutes and that those
industries will grow creating jobs

66
00:03:57,930 --> 00:04:01,709
this is sometimes called the infant
industry argument for Paris

67
00:04:01,709 --> 00:04:05,260
see our unit on trade policy for more on
this idea

68
00:04:05,260 --> 00:04:09,859
anyway krueger look at some actual data
taken from several Asian countries and

69
00:04:09,859 --> 00:04:10,870
also from Turkey

70
00:04:10,870 --> 00:04:14,750
and she found that in developing
economies protected industries did not

71
00:04:14,750 --> 00:04:15,450
in general

72
00:04:15,450 --> 00:04:18,470
as impressive or above average
productivity gains

73
00:04:18,470 --> 00:04:21,700
she also found that open trade in
developing

74
00:04:21,700 --> 00:04:25,270
amis was good for productivity gains and
best for economic growth


