See subject. Why is Africa such a shithole? I mean, there are some decent places, but compared to pretty much any other area of the world, it's in horrible condition. It's been that way for at least a few centuries. Why do the countries of Africa lag so far behind most other countries with respect to standard of living? Kind of a broad subject, but I'd like to see people's opinion on it. I understand that there are specific problems facing the many individual nations of Africa, but I'm attempting to look at the bigger picture.
7/30/2008 9:04:23 PM
too hot imo
7/30/2008 9:05:09 PM
well european colonization didnt help
7/30/2008 9:18:21 PM
^^^why do you ask the question?you already know the answer. everyone knows the answer. It's because of submillennial shifts of the tropic and equatorial climate cells.
7/30/2008 9:26:31 PM
it's cause of all those niggers!but, seriously, it's a combination of colonization and the centuries of a hunter/gatherer lifestyle. pretty simple
7/30/2008 10:07:39 PM
geography played a huge role
7/30/2008 10:14:21 PM
Unlike many places in the world that were colonized by Europeans, Africa was left with virtually no social, civil, or economic institutions in place. It'd be like handing the car keys to a teenager who had never taken a drivers' ed course and who had, in fact, always been forced to ride in the back seat (or maybe the trunk).In India/Pakistan, local involvement in civil life had been pretty strong for quite a while. In the Americas, you had existing local governments separating themselves from the mother country. Each of these cases involves relatively experienced people working with an existing infrastructure. Furthermore, the inhabitants of these areas often had long history of cities and large governments. In sub-Saharan Africa, by contrast, you have large areas where blacks had -zero- experience in government, because that is what they had been allowed. They hadn't had the opportunity to learn from the colonial governments, and by and large they didn't have their own familiarity with municipalities or "national" governments. Outside of Egypt and a few other kingdoms, there was no African history of such things prior to the arrival of the whites.But, the Europeans cut them loose and effectively said, "Good luck." That already left them at a huge disadvantage, because only a minute educated elite had any idea how to run a country. Compounding the problem was the positively brilliant fashion in which Africa was carved up, with national borders cutting across cohesive populations and former colonial masters granting authority arbitrarily to whichever group they thought closest resembled white people. This bred resentment, separatism, and border conflict. These factors, coupled with a Cold War environment that ensured a steady stream of weapons to anyone who asked, meant that virtually every country in Africa ended up with a relatively large, untrained, angry, corrupt military, with its power-hungry leadership in factions that only occasionally sided with the actual government. These factions like to shoot at each other, causing political instability and violence that effectively halts all national improvement. Many African nations are full to the brim with natural resources, but nobody wants to invest in putting meaningful facilities in a country where it is likely to be shelled by government or resistance forces who are cutting off all the workers' hands besides.Then of course there are those regions that simply don't have resources of any kind. Giant, arid deserts are only important when they're full of oil. Ethiopia doesn't qualify. The entire Horn of Africa's only relevance is its location by the Red Sea shipping lanes, and it can't capitalize on that because of political instability and piracy.
7/30/2008 10:14:44 PM
Short Answer: We don't know.We do know that tropics in general seem to be problematic for growth.We also know that institutions are important for growth and most african nations are only 40 or 50 years old.Also, there are few nation states in Africa and nation states tend to do better.That being said the big question is - Why are parts of Africa worse than they were in the late 1980s? Why is Africa moving backwards?Aids obviously doesn't help, neither does malaria. However, statistical studies show that disease doesn't seem to be powerful enough.There is some thought that it is the curse of foreign aid. Foreign aid has at times kept corrupt governments in business. However, this is probably the biggest puzzle facing modern economics. In particular consider that much East Asia was as poor as Africa in the 1960s but is rapidly industrializing. Remeber, starving children in China, are why you need to finish your supper. Yet, as East Asia grows Africa slips backwards.Understanding Africa is probably the biggest challenge we face in the early 21st century.
7/30/2008 10:17:32 PM
7/30/2008 10:31:35 PM
I just don't know how going from zero government to shitty government made it worse.
7/30/2008 10:51:52 PM
This pretty well answers your question.
7/30/2008 10:59:41 PM
Sir Ian Smith was the last hope. The world shat on him.*shrug*That, and the rule of law is nonexistent.
7/30/2008 11:12:59 PM
my armchair anthropologist answer would be that it was not allowed to become civilized on its own - modern society was thrust upon it my Europeans. For whatever reason, when the human societies started spreading out from Africa, the societies that populated Europe and Asia seemed to have advanced their civilizations much faster than those who stayed behind in Africa, and faster also than the ones who made it all the way to the Americas. So when modern Europeans "re-discovered" Africa a few hundred years ago, they 1) pillaged and plundered, as we know, but 2) tried to build societies and civilizations in Africa based on what they had in Europe, but the Africans weren't ready for it yet. Then, of course, as others have pointed out, after pulling africa out of the stone ages in just a couple of centuries, Europe and then America up and left them all alone. Had civilizations in africa been given time to grow and develop technology of their own, or with trading from the outside but without the colonization, it would probably be a completely different place.
7/30/2008 11:17:10 PM
white people
7/30/2008 11:19:51 PM
Actually Africa is a beautiful place. It's where humans originally came from. If humans Sub-Saharan Africa is having trouble adapting to their environment then perhaps they should follow the example of every other animal capable of doing so and *gasp* migrate elsewhere *gasp*. But no, humans, despite their supposed superior intellect, seem incapable of realizing when the environment can no longer support their infectious numbers. Humans are far more likely to continue trashing the planet so they can drive their fat asses around in SUVs and spread their misguided hyper consumerism mentality to the rest of the world including Africa.
7/31/2008 12:21:39 AM
hockeywomanTry to stay on topic. I'm sure there's a thread for you're whiny environmentalist rants. This isn't it.
7/31/2008 12:23:58 AM
Nothing "whiny" about it. And as the OP stated
7/31/2008 12:29:34 AM
You're seriously going to blame SUV's for the problems in Africa?
7/31/2008 12:38:43 AM
I am blaming human complacency for the problems in Africa.
7/31/2008 12:40:40 AM
Watch the Movie "Lord of War," and you will get a good idea of what is currently wrong with Africa.
7/31/2008 12:42:10 AM
Also true.
7/31/2008 12:45:26 AM
7/31/2008 3:43:25 AM
7/31/2008 7:17:29 AM
It is not as difficult as some here let on. Africa is a terrible place because of the era most of it gained independence. At independence, many African countries had working free-market economies, corrupt but functional governments, and a functional civil society. Regretfully, when a country achieves independence it is rebuilt from scratch using the latest and greatest political and economic theory at the time. Regretfully, the practice at the time was state centric socialism. Regretfully, state centric socialism invariably results in economic disaster, especially under corrupt regimes, and only the strongest of political systems can survive the resultant depression. Few did, and so we have countries with failed economies giving birth to failed governments: cycle complete. As such, had these countries been granted independence in 1910, or even in 1991, I believe they would have not fallen so far. Look at eastern Europe: their independence situation was far more harsh than Africa's, with no working economy to speak of, yet they have transitioned seamlessly to corrupt but functional societies. Had they gained independence in the 60s and 70s as Africa did then they too would have fallen for the trap and become failed societies.
7/31/2008 9:51:24 AM
^they have had a lot more constructive help by "people like them"*white people look after other white people.
7/31/2008 10:19:14 AM
How much foreign aid was given to eastern european countries excluding Russia since 1991? While I'm sure it was a lot, how does it compare to the inflation adjusted amount of aid given to Africa since 1945?And foreign aid is often a handicap, not an inducement to good economic and political systems. [Edited on July 31, 2008 at 10:47 AM. Reason : .,.]
7/31/2008 10:46:26 AM
jchill2's first post made me lol
7/31/2008 10:47:48 AM
^^ that is why i said constructive help instead of saying that they received foreign aid. i was being very precise. foreign aid is often assumed to be monetary contributions but help can mean and be associated with many things that are not monetary. i consider europe having received much help while africa just got aid.
7/31/2008 11:36:55 AM
Then what help are you referring to? No western country sent troops to stabilize easter europe, and the western establishment is always eager to offer "advice" to any new countries. I seriously doubt substantially more advice was given to eastern europe, when a whole bunch of countries gained independence at once, compared to Africa, which was usually one at a time. So, be more precise, as your current level of precision confused me.
7/31/2008 2:21:42 PM
BUSH DID IT!!!1
7/31/2008 4:32:15 PM
china did it?
7/31/2008 4:47:57 PM
aids and ebola and lions and tigers did it?
7/31/2008 4:50:14 PM
double posting did it?[Edited on July 31, 2008 at 4:50 PM. Reason : doh]
7/31/2008 5:22:15 PM
7/31/2008 6:13:34 PM
1) No infrastructure2) Absurd levels of corruption within government3) Poor central banking4) A population with no education and limited skillset5) Tough environmental conditions6) Relief effort funding that only brings about more suffering
8/1/2008 12:57:31 AM
8/1/2008 4:18:22 AM
8/1/2008 10:22:18 AM
except for the exceptions,from what i've noticed,places that the British colonised are way better off years after colonisation ends, than with other colonial powers - especially the French and Belgians
8/1/2008 10:34:52 AM
True, Zimbabwe wouldn't be having all the current issues were it not for the fact that, somehow, there are educated people living somewhere in the country. Or, more correctly, were.But in 20 more years, it'll have degraded to what most of the other countries are at, and it won't matter who originally was the colonial power.
8/1/2008 10:54:32 AM
^^True.But I didn't observe it myself.I read about it.[Edited on August 1, 2008 at 10:56 AM. Reason : sss]
8/1/2008 10:55:06 AM
8/1/2008 2:45:22 PM
No, the genetic thing has been disputed, because if you take the Africans out of Africa they do very well.
8/1/2008 3:01:21 PM
8/1/2008 9:05:40 PM
^^ OBAMA!!!!!!
8/2/2008 12:12:11 AM
^^^ ODB!!!
8/2/2008 12:13:21 AM
I wonder how similar the genetic pool of Africa today is from a few thousand years ago. If anything has been naturally selected for recently, I don't think it's helped them as a society.
8/2/2008 12:29:50 PM
8/2/2008 12:34:29 PM
seriously
8/2/2008 12:59:22 PM
Western "free-trade" programs and the like don't seem to be helping.
8/2/2008 1:06:02 PM