MIT Study Reveals Why Africa Is Still Poor

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  • Опубликовано: 3 май 2024
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    Africa is the poorest continent in the world. There are, as always, a lot of factors to consider as to why that is the case, but recently Daron Acemoglu and James A. Robinson from MIT have released a study detailing the surprising bigger factors in why Africa still struggles to build wealth despite massive amounts of incoming aid and charity work trying to improve the lives of people there. So what are the reasons why much of Africa can't seem to get out of poverty?
    Interview with Daron Acemoglu: open.spotify.com/episode/29ba...
    Why Nations Fail by Daron Acemoglu and James A. Robinson : a.co/d/2gqPnyT
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Комментарии • 8 тыс.

  • @EconomicsExplained
    @EconomicsExplained  2 месяца назад +83

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    • @jonpol4848
      @jonpol4848 2 месяца назад +8

      how did you comment before the video was uploaded?

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      @axmoylotl 2 месяца назад +172

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  • @danielarchila738
    @danielarchila738 2 месяца назад +2034

    Why is Africa Poor?
    Thumbnail: Not What You Think
    Video: Exactly what you thought

    • @kurtcampher4716
      @kurtcampher4716 Месяц назад +47

      LOL

    • @guest6398
      @guest6398 Месяц назад

      MIT is advocating genocide.

    • @blackmancer
      @blackmancer Месяц назад +107

      @@rayguistina3314 People who annoy you.....

    • @WarpRulez
      @WarpRulez Месяц назад

      @@rayguistina3314
      All that has a more fundamental underlying reason: Culture. The prevailing customs and way of thinking that people are brought up to and what they learn from their own society.
      The amount of greed and corruption within the peoples of a nation varies enormously from nation to nation, and this is not something that's something innate. It's something that people learn, grow up into, by learning from and emulating other people in their surrounding society. In other words, the prevailing culture of the country. If everybody they grow up with is selfish, greedy and corrupt, then you instinctively learn from them, start emulating them, and become greedy and corrupt yourself. (In a twisted way, it makes a kind of sense: "Why should I be honest and fair, as this only leads to everybody taking advantage of me and screwing me over at every turn?" In a twisted way it kind of acts as a form of self-defense mechanism. You won't be taken advantage of if you, too, are as greedy and corrupt as everybody else.)
      The only way to change this is to change the prevailing culture. But that's not something that can just be done overnight. You can't just go there and force people to change their upbringing at gunpoint.

    • @Trueblood_Enod
      @Trueblood_Enod Месяц назад +9

      @@rayguistina3314 I disagree absolutely.

  • @Addi_the_Hun
    @Addi_the_Hun 2 месяца назад +4522

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      @seendidthegreat4814 2 месяца назад +674

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      @asdfghjkl3003 2 месяца назад +582

      He's gotta pay the bills somehow

    • @loadingerror9975
      @loadingerror9975 2 месяца назад

      @@asdfghjkl3003 because there are no other sponsees than a company that sells peoples info they give in therapy and doesn’t even have real therapist?

    • @Moe5Tavern
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      How is it a scam?

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      Scam is a strong word. Unreliable is a better word

  • @lasharael
    @lasharael Месяц назад +130

    "Adoption of the wheel was limited in Africa, because Africa was ruled by regional kings with unchecked authority, unlike Europe." is a hilariously out of pocket "theory."

    • @happyjack8613
      @happyjack8613 6 дней назад +5

      They still carry stuff on their heads like they don't even know what a brain is for. Why wouldn't they fail?

    • @euanstokes2828
      @euanstokes2828 6 дней назад +28

      ​@@happyjack8613 because wheels don't work very well in the rough, humid terrain of central Africa.
      We can see from toys that Africans absolutely understood the concept of the wheel, it's just that in Africa carrying by hand, using pack animals and especially using boats was far more efficient.

    • @osassabi2202
      @osassabi2202 5 дней назад +27

      The whole video just reeks of ignorance and lazy research

    • @shawnmendrek3544
      @shawnmendrek3544 4 дня назад +4

      @@euanstokes2828 After watching documentaries from Africa, I have to agree with you.

    • @jghifiversveiws8729
      @jghifiversveiws8729 4 дня назад +4

      @@happyjack8613 It's orders of magnitude easier to just carry something on your head or on your animal or on a boat than to drag a wheelbarrow through uneven heavily-forested muddy or rocky terrain. Why are you being so dense?

  • @maddoglep2127
    @maddoglep2127 Месяц назад +210

    About 20 years ago a (white) work colleague cycled from the UK to the very south of South Africa. He wrote a book about his experiences. ''Why Africa will never win the World Cup.'' Although he met some good people on the way he encountered endless corruption. Almost every border crossing involved some form of bribe. He got arrested in Zimbabwe because he foolishly cycled past Mugabe's Palace. A kindly Police Sergeant allowed him to leave in the dead of night with the advice; ''get over the border asap.'' He set off with optimism but returned sadly chastened.

    • @stoonookw
      @stoonookw 24 дня назад

      I wonder if their taxes are lower than the US, which would make bribes their taxes

    • @antoy384
      @antoy384 24 дня назад +19

      The palace road was probably the best road of that town, to his credit.

    • @greenwave819
      @greenwave819 21 день назад +13

      Africa will however win plenty of world cups... might not be soon, yet it will happen

    • @TROGULAR10000
      @TROGULAR10000 18 дней назад +9

      Nothing against cycling long distances and across borders as I've done it myself but I can't think of a better way of flaunting Western ways than going for a multi-national cycling exploit in Africa, where almost no one does that except perhaps a handful of Westerners with a definite apetite for risk and no concept of what it means to be white in Africa. Also, no concept of what it means to do highly noticeable things that locals would never do, which applies to anywhere in the world. I know of two cases of white guys cycling Africa with the obvious exact same results. It's just a stupid insensitive thing to do as a white guy.

    • @zephsmith3499
      @zephsmith3499 18 дней назад +18

      @@TROGULAR10000
      This sounds like a distraction. He describes the endless corruption they found in governments across a continent (which he could have just as observed by other modes of transportation, not just bicycling), and then you respond by calling cycling through Africa a "stupid insensitive thing to do". So the smart, sensitive thing to do would be to avoid Africa, and thereby not encounter the corruption which locals have no choice but to endure? Somehow it's the "insensitive" cyclists' fault that Africa is what it is today?

  • @donovan5656
    @donovan5656 2 месяца назад +2326

    I moved to Kenya for a job, curious about living on the continent. I thought I understood corruption, but corruption in Africa is on a whole other level.

    • @taivalmaa2251
      @taivalmaa2251 2 месяца назад +82

      can you give some examples or something?

    • @Holysimba21
      @Holysimba21 2 месяца назад

      ​When Moi stole EuroBond over 3B$.
      NYS Scandal Ann waiguru I mean there's a lot I can't even finish@@taivalmaa2251

    • @FireJach
      @FireJach 2 месяца назад

      2000 years of corruption?

    • @hydromic2518
      @hydromic2518 2 месяца назад

      @@taivalmaa2251just look up state capture in South Africa

    • @hydromic2518
      @hydromic2518 2 месяца назад +63

      I would agree but corruption can be just as bad in rich countries.

  • @SigurdVolsung
    @SigurdVolsung 2 месяца назад +1449

    The irony of an Australian saying bad farmland and geographic isolation made Africa poor...

    • @earth9531
      @earth9531 2 месяца назад +228

      we all know the real reason. ZA seemed to do just fine in the less politically correct era.

    • @MohamedAli-nf1rp
      @MohamedAli-nf1rp 2 месяца назад +13

      @@earth9531 what is ZA

    • @marlontharusha5171
      @marlontharusha5171 2 месяца назад +43

      ​​@@MohamedAli-nf1rpSouth Africa....but I'm not sure of how they're fine

    • @ayde92829
      @ayde92829 2 месяца назад +164

      @@earth9531South Africa has the worst gini coeff of any country in the world. Before apartheid, there was a huge wealth gap which obfuscated the overwhelming poverty that was widespread. This has not changed: it’s just slightly less determined by race.

    • @omuzzish6324
      @omuzzish6324 2 месяца назад +62

      You can't compare Africa with Australia because it's less populated and has abundant resources that share with just 25 million people.

  • @RANDALLBRIGGS
    @RANDALLBRIGGS Месяц назад +103

    The graphic at 13:43 is misleading. Only about 10% of enslaved Africans went to the "13 colonies" in North America. The vast majority went to South America and the West Indies.

    • @virgilius7036
      @virgilius7036 18 дней назад +26

      ...and islamic world !

    • @alexneigh7089
      @alexneigh7089 16 дней назад +2

      Actually, the figure transported to NA was 400K for the whole duration of the trans-Atlantic transportation period, out of the total of ca 14 mln.

    • @NeFO-bd7bi
      @NeFO-bd7bi 15 дней назад +9

      People forget slavery was everywhere and that the Arab world actually brought slaves from Africa for a longer period of time than the Americas did. Slave markets were there until the 1960s.

    • @MNIU_
      @MNIU_ 8 дней назад

      @@alexneigh7089??? That doesn’t mean it’s not 10%

    • @danstewart2770
      @danstewart2770 3 дня назад +1

      Mauritania was the last nation to outlaw slavery-that was in 1983. But, the anti-slavery laws are loosely enforced, and slavery is still widespread-as it is in other similarly situated African countries.

  • @dontbeasheeple5883
    @dontbeasheeple5883 Месяц назад +225

    I work in Algeria, where the amount of red tape to get the simplest of tasks completed means that the simplest of tasks usually don't get completed.

    • @hrthrhs
      @hrthrhs 24 дня назад +5

      That's interesting. Too much Red Tape I find is almost always overlooked when assessing the struggles of many industries and in Algeria case as you say, the struggles of nations.

    • @gerassimos.fourlanos
      @gerassimos.fourlanos 20 дней назад +7

      @@hrthrhs bureaucracy, which is directly linked with poor quality of normative frameworks (i.e., poor quality of legislation) is always overlooked by economists, probably because the price that we all pay for red tape is incalculable, it has to do mostly with lost opportunities, while economists want to see measurable and quantifiable losses/profits. High time, perhaps, to engage a little more in qualitative analysis.

    • @rincwind666
      @rincwind666 18 дней назад

      If i had to guess, this means you're not paying the baksheesh to get things done

    • @Foolish188
      @Foolish188 17 дней назад

      Where would the money to pay bureaucrats come from if it wasn't for red tape.

    • @dontbeasheeple5883
      @dontbeasheeple5883 2 дня назад

      @@rincwind666 baksheesh isn't a thing in my industry

  • @liversuccess1420
    @liversuccess1420 2 месяца назад +1989

    Barack Obama had some blunt feedback on this years ago while hosting the Young African Leaders Initiative. He pointed out that when his father was in Kenya in the 1960s, the GDPs of Kenya and South Korea were about equal. Now, as he said, "it's not even close." He then went on to say that this was because of decades of poor choices and missed opportunities by Kenya's leadership, and it's a similar story for much of Africa. He closed by expressing hope that this generation of Kenyan, and African leaders would not be looking back in 50 years on another era of missed chances.

    • @WhatIsBacon
      @WhatIsBacon 2 месяца назад +220

      I would bet everything I owned that they absolutely will be looking back on missed chances.

    • @naoyanaraharjo4693
      @naoyanaraharjo4693 2 месяца назад

      Lets oversee SK's northern neighbor. Necessisating a spirit of "live or die" too its leadership
      Countries in permanent perilous position often has corruption "magically" stamped up. As national consciousness made "slacking off" frowned upon
      SK too has MULTIPLE YEARS of its national budget having a large portion of it subsidized by the US, again due to NK
      Does many African countries has this privilege aside from Somalia?
      East Asia are full of lying nations. They acted as if their recent jump to modernity is of their own effort. Although the US always, always has a huge part on it. Mostly to blunt the expansion of USSR influence

    • @jazztheglass6139
      @jazztheglass6139 2 месяца назад +243

      In 1992 South Africa had the same GDP as China. Whilst having a smaller population and more available natural resources

    • @Cynicruss2
      @Cynicruss2 2 месяца назад +43

      @@WhatIsBaconwhat’s the suicide rate of young South Koreans again ?

    • @godemperorofmankind3.091
      @godemperorofmankind3.091 2 месяца назад +245

      @@Cynicruss2 whys that relevant?

  • @Fadbangles
    @Fadbangles 2 месяца назад +1445

    Residing in Zambia, Africa, for the past 30 years, I've never experienced conflict or war. It's rare to even see a police officer with a gun where I'm from. My realization is that it's corruption that continues to impede our progress and perpetuate poverty. Until our leaders prioritize the development of our nations over personal gain, obstacles to progress will persist. While external forces significantly contribute to corruption, which further reduces access to resources and capital that we need for development we must eventually take responsibility for addressing and combating these issues.

    • @1wun1
      @1wun1 2 месяца назад +6

      Did life for the average not improve in those 30 years?

    • @IK_MK
      @IK_MK 2 месяца назад

      ​@@1wun1 yesnt

    • @E3ECO
      @E3ECO 2 месяца назад

      Yep. It's always corruption at the heart of economic failure. Just ask Russia.

    • @derekgarvin6449
      @derekgarvin6449 2 месяца назад +36

      I wish i could offer you and your country more than good luck. I'm not sure anyone knows how to break the cycle. I mean, what are normal people supposed to do against widespread corruption?

    • @obsideonyx7604
      @obsideonyx7604 2 месяца назад +58

      Remove middlemen, remove corruption.
      Corruption is a symptom of too many middlemen, they get tempted by the chance to take advantage of their gatekeeper position.

  • @PowderKeg3838
    @PowderKeg3838 Месяц назад +118

    I like how "Ill equipped to handle their problems, natural resources, etc" is just skipped over. Other people, on every other continent has overcame their issues, and this video doesn't describe why but just what happened when other cultures rocketed past them in history. I was expecting better.

    • @reasonablespeculation3893
      @reasonablespeculation3893 Месяц назад +13

      It's all such a mystery. Humanity still has no clue. Not from history. Not from observation.
      No matter how much the problem is studied.
      We will never be able to identify the root of the problem.

    • @anal3544
      @anal3544 Месяц назад +11

      My brother in Christ, disease, lack of water, bad soil, political corruption is a rough set of problems to overcome. It's like trying to form a functional country in Mad Max.

    • @louisxix3271
      @louisxix3271 Месяц назад

      How do they have any more disease or bad soil than, say Vietnam or Uzbekistan, or Colombia? Africa has some of the best soils in the ​world, problem is underutilization of fertilizes. Disease is a lame cop out.@@anal3544

    • @viggotannhauser7251
      @viggotannhauser7251 29 дней назад +15

      Actually, I was expecting the video to never even come close to mentioning the real problem, and I was right.

    • @AshApple
      @AshApple 18 дней назад +1

      @@viggotannhauser7251 what is the real problem

  • @MorganBrown
    @MorganBrown Месяц назад +24

    The video drones in the background while I feast on comments 😂

  • @Daniel-rp7nb
    @Daniel-rp7nb 2 месяца назад +719

    Tagline is “not what you think” - but it’s corruption and leadership - exactly what people think, no?

    • @saaah707
      @saaah707 Месяц назад +37

      No. Ask "why" are corruption and leadership a problem? Is there some underlying reason for it?

    • @jeandutoit1413
      @jeandutoit1413 Месяц назад +89

      @@saaah707 Don't dig any deeper. The answer is not politically correct, and must never be spoken of.

    • @mementovivere2
      @mementovivere2 Месяц назад +69

      ​@@jeandutoit1413It's not politically correct to point out the effects of colonialism?

    • @rllapte
      @rllapte Месяц назад +28

      @@jeandutoit1413 In a nutshell. Intellectual dishonesty is the most destructive form of corruption.

    • @loganmedia1142
      @loganmedia1142 Месяц назад +51

      @@saaah707 Tribalism is one reason. Europe had it too. Still does to a fair extent, but after slaughtering each other for a thousand years they've grudgingly decided to co-operate a bit.

  • @stagecoachmechanic
    @stagecoachmechanic 2 месяца назад +801

    I am from Botswana. It's all true. We're winning. Things really work. Not perfect, but it works. There's a very clear upwards mobility, complimented by our fairly functional education and justice system. I love my country man, and I lived in the States for most of my 20s.

    • @Craicfox161
      @Craicfox161 2 месяца назад +63

      A great example for the rest of the continent. Africa has so much potential 🙏

    • @MomsRavioli
      @MomsRavioli 2 месяца назад +39

      @@Craicfox161 Only a few thousand years more guys!

    • @ArawnOfAnnwn
      @ArawnOfAnnwn 2 месяца назад +82

      @@Craicfox161 One very big asterisk has to be placed next to Botswana as an example of what other African countries should strive for. Botswana is a huge outlier when it comes to demographics in Africa, more than 75% of Botswana's citizens are Batswana, it is literally the land of the Tswanas. Plus they were never really colonized in the traditional sense of the word, the British didn't conquer them and the agreement to make it a protectorate came after the rulers conflicts against the Boers encroaching on their land, and fortunately the British were also fighting the Boers at that time so the Tswanas basically became an important ally to the British in keeping order as well as the Boers under control, so not only did the core leadership structure never fall apart and lose legitimacy, one could argue it gained more legitimacy even after the British left, which made it impossible for any legitimate challengers to power. This is the same reason why the only truly stable countries in the Middle east are all Monarchies, because that's the best way to maintain stability. With that stability, even if it was poor the first few decades after independence, the country developed with the few resources it had. So, in summary, Botswana had three very important things going for it, that IMO, no other Sub-Saharan African country has - Stability, a strong and legitimate leadership structure and well-maintained, strong institutions arising therein.

    • @isaachaley2112
      @isaachaley2112 Месяц назад +26

      Rwanda has decent stability and low crime today, and I would say has one
      of the best chances in Africa​@ArawnOfAnnwn

    • @ArawnOfAnnwn
      @ArawnOfAnnwn Месяц назад +46

      I should add that Botswana's history also lends itself towards democracy much more easily. There was never an absolute ruler, only one with the buy-in of the various tribal chiefs. In some ways it could even be compared to the Holy Roman Empire, albeit that comparison is reaching. Point being that it historically didn't lend itself to full-on tyranny.

  • @WlmaAlexender-zl6nx
    @WlmaAlexender-zl6nx Месяц назад +40

    "Not what I think, well, I would guess corruption, I wonder what it actually is...
    Oh
    Exactly what I thought it was."

  • @tberry79
    @tberry79 Месяц назад +133

    Summation: it’s always somebody else’s fault, never the fault of the people that are actually there running it.

    • @gtbigdog3507
      @gtbigdog3507 Месяц назад +13

      That’s what I got out of it.

    • @enricodellamonica5145
      @enricodellamonica5145 Месяц назад

      to be more precise: it's always white people's fault.

    • @jayg1438
      @jayg1438 Месяц назад +7

      sounds familiar

    • @therealistseb6597
      @therealistseb6597 25 дней назад +3

      Say it louder!

    • @mehmetvurkac7651
      @mehmetvurkac7651 15 дней назад +2

      If I do something heinously wrong, the long-term consequences of that thing would mainly be be my fault, not nearly as much the fault of the people who suffered the damage.

  • @RuiEspinha
    @RuiEspinha Месяц назад +224

    Nice vídeo but I missed the point. Is the ground breaking MIT conclusion that countries with less stable or robust institutions are harder to develop? The video is called "MIT Study reveals why Africa is still poor" and then kinda reveals what everyone already knows.

    • @PM2022
      @PM2022 Месяц назад +20

      The only 'groundbreaking' thing about that study would have been that it was produced by MIT profs...

    • @ththim7785
      @ththim7785 Месяц назад +9

      The Berlin conference and the doctrine of discovery. Still in effect!!

    • @Ludo045
      @Ludo045 Месяц назад

      ​@@ththim7785
      mUh wItE fAuLt
      While having the most backward culture in the world

    • @TebogoMotlhale
      @TebogoMotlhale Месяц назад +8

      Howwwwwww did you arrive at the word "EVERYONE" ?? are you literally implying that "EVERRRRYONE ALREADY knows, including 13 year old kids and 17 year old kids" ??

    • @WiseOwl_1408
      @WiseOwl_1408 Месяц назад

      ​@@TebogoMotlhaleno babies and infants didn't know. You are the smartest troon around

  • @gamej7946
    @gamej7946 Месяц назад +196

    I live in Ghana and what I've realized was the missed opportunity when Nkrumah was overthrown. He had his way of steering through the obstacles of international affairs. He created a lot of factories that collapsed after his overthrow.
    The problem now we face is the devaluing of the cedi against the dollar which makes costs go high because we mostly import with the dollar. Our exports, unfortunately, don't exceed our import demand and so the cedi continuously depreciates. Ghana needs to do more exports and it is challenging because we need to find the market for our products. Worst of all, most of our products exist in other countries and so penetration is costly as a lot of money has to go into expensive marketing.

    • @GB-ez6ge
      @GB-ez6ge Месяц назад +10

      Kwame suffered the same fate as other intellectuals turned leaders like Trotsky who was outmuscled by Stalin. I've been to Ghana about ten times but only during Jerry John who did what he could but, as technically a coup leader, international cooperation was difficult.
      "Africa Must Unite!" -- KN

    • @darth3911
      @darth3911 Месяц назад +8

      @@GB-ez6geTrotsky and Stalin are not the best examples as they almost completely agreed on everything except one detail.
      That being whether it was time to export communism to the world or continue to solidify its growth within Russia.
      Trotsky wanted to go on an offensive war and bring communism to all of Europe while Stalin did not.
      That’s literally the only major difference in their ideology.

    • @GB-ez6ge
      @GB-ez6ge Месяц назад +4

      @@darth3911 Please read what I wrote before commenting. It does not state that Stalin was an example. The "example" (really, metaphor) was Trotsky, in his capacity as an intellectual. Their political views and actions are irrelevant to one being an intellectual and the other being forceful. (Whatever their disagreements, Stalin thought them severe enough to assassinate Trotsky while exiled in Mexico.)

    • @Pedgo1986
      @Pedgo1986 Месяц назад +8

      But why it collapsed? I don't know reason but it baffled me few years ago and i don't remember country but they decided kick out white farmers but they didn't take over and work fields for whatever reason and result was famine.

    • @rexadebayo3380
      @rexadebayo3380 Месяц назад

      I can bet you 1k dollars that the CIA had a hand in the overthrow of Nkrumah. The same Americans who destroy our best leaders gather themselves in their ivory towers (which they built with ivory they stole from us) to discuss why we are poor. Insult to injury! Why is every nation around America that is not dominated by Caucasians, war torn and poor? Why is Mexico poor? Why is Panama poor? Why is Columbia poor? Why is America so rich and everyone else so poor? Americans shouldn't be talking about other peoples poverty. Their government is the cause of a lot of it.

  • @draoi99
    @draoi99 Месяц назад +61

    It's a bit weird because there is another video on this channel investigating why Australia is rich when in fact it shouldn't be.

    • @xpusostomos
      @xpusostomos Месяц назад

      Ha... Ignoring the obvious, Australia is full of Europeans and Africa is full of Africans.

    • @alansailing1387
      @alansailing1387 Месяц назад

      The native Australians have about as many entrepreneurial skills as the native Africans.

    • @friendlyfire7861
      @friendlyfire7861 Месяц назад +9

      Does anyone have a clue as to what the reason is?

    • @JKnksrsly
      @JKnksrsly Месяц назад +13

      ​@@friendlyfire7861no one can say

    • @friendlyfire7861
      @friendlyfire7861 Месяц назад +8

      @@JKnksrsly🤔

  • @Tespri
    @Tespri Месяц назад +66

    Different ethnic groups is just poor excuse. Reminder... Most European countries are made out of different tribes who used to fight each others in the past.

    • @waithakakangethe6549
      @waithakakangethe6549 18 дней назад +5

      For context, there are only 87 ethnic groups in the whole of Europe. A considerable part of European history has been wars between those groups. In fact, before the start of the Russia-Ukraine war, Europe had been experiencing the longest period of peace and stability (and that's due in part to nuclear weapons). And that's because only 87 ethnic groups could not agree on a lot of things. In Nigeria, there are 371 ethnic groups. Imagine the level of disagreement all that deiversity would have on one country let alone a whole continent. You somehow have to find a way to make all those ethnic groups feel included all else there will be trouble.

    • @Tespri
      @Tespri 18 дней назад +5

      @@waithakakangethe6549 More than that. They just became more united. Finland for example has loads of different tribes and they all identify as Finnish. Not just that, but before the "era of peace" for almost 100-years. Europe was still prosperous and filled with highly advanced societies. In fact it's argued that reason why we were ahead of others is precisely because we had conflicts among ourselves.
      But you need to ask yourself... why are people in Below Sahara so racists that they can't tolerate each otehrs? ;)

    • @TreyDeuce109
      @TreyDeuce109 16 дней назад +3

      It's poverty. Why so poor? Legacy of colonialism. Between resource extraction, continuing "soft colonialism", and lacking infrastructure, we had the rise of rampant corruption among a few and with substantially less economic upward mobility for the masses.

    • @TreyDeuce109
      @TreyDeuce109 16 дней назад +3

      @@Tespri Clearly you've forgotten your history. Look at how poorly the English treated the Irish, Welsh, and Scottish. Even when they came to the US, that same tribalism persisted. "Irish/Italian Need Not Apply" signs were still in store fronts in the early 20th century. And how are you defining "racist" when you're talking about what I assume you believe to be peoples of the same "race".

    • @Tespri
      @Tespri 16 дней назад

      @@TreyDeuce109 excuses. Loads of previous colonial countries, even recent ones that are flourishing. Best counter to your argument is... South Africa. IT was on same level as western nations until certain group got into power. Now they figured out how to time travel entire country before white men visited there ;)

  • @magnusdanielsson2749
    @magnusdanielsson2749 2 месяца назад +341

    ”corruption have been known to happen” was a understatement if I ever heard one 😅

    • @calicoesblue4703
      @calicoesblue4703 Месяц назад +5

      Actually Colonism, have you seen what France has being doing in Africa???

    • @rachejohnson5427
      @rachejohnson5427 Месяц назад

      @@calicoesblue4703 *MUd hUT iz fREnCh fRY prOBLEM*

    • @jaewok5G
      @jaewok5G Месяц назад +13

      @@calicoesblue4703 is it as bad as what africans have been going to france? france hasn't been influential since napoleon died.

    • @calicoesblue4703
      @calicoesblue4703 Месяц назад +3

      @@jaewok5G Is it as bad as how Europeans have been doing to all of Africa???

    • @jaewok5G
      @jaewok5G Месяц назад +2

      @@calicoesblue4703 where? in a given year 10x as many people leave africa as arrive.

  • @africadreamin
    @africadreamin Месяц назад +284

    As an agricultural engineer working at ground level since 1978 with government institutions both ministerial and research the greatest problem that many African countries suffer from is the lack of skills, engineers tend to be desk-bound with little or no practical skills, artisans acquire skills but never seem to develop them, content to keep reproducing the same item year after year. This can best be seen in the craft sector where high-quality items are the exception, not the rule, most crafts are rudimentary lacking detail or finish. Research institutions produce products that already exist in the marketplace of better quality and at a lower price but are kept alive by governments to show they do research however they are never subject to an audit so it is impossible to access their contribution to the national economy.

    • @Websitedesignersshop
      @Websitedesignersshop Месяц назад +6

      i couldnt agree more

    • @kofig5519
      @kofig5519 Месяц назад +4

      Well said

    • @arewecrazyyet
      @arewecrazyyet Месяц назад +14

      So real entrepreneurship and innovation would help solve the issues?

    • @PEDROSOARESALVES
      @PEDROSOARESALVES Месяц назад +8

      ​@@arewecrazyyetYeah the government don't encourage them enough to be an entrepreneur nor prepares for capitalism

    • @falseprogress
      @falseprogress Месяц назад

      You mean lack of intelligence to practice higher skills, don't you?

  • @denismundere1165
    @denismundere1165 Месяц назад +2

    I loved this video and the interview with Professor Daron Acemoglu. Would it be possible to do a video/podcast on the country of Kenya? I hear a lot of people talking about how great it is economically, however, as who lives in the US but was born in Kenya and his family there, I do still see plenty of economic woes. Also I'm hearing that recent developments are now stifling investments in the country. I would love any insights your team could shed on its current situation.

  • @shatter382
    @shatter382 14 дней назад +6

    "This time period on the continent was truly horrific, to the point where we can't go into too much detail or this video will just be taken off RUclips"
    If that is true, then something is very wrong with youtube

    • @19ate4
      @19ate4 14 дней назад

      It’s crazy to me that they think we should take European political, social values and force non-Europeans to abide by them
      Africa will never be like Europe or Asia and sooner people realize this the better off Africans can be in developing their own continent

  • @kmlgraph
    @kmlgraph 2 месяца назад +524

    Tribalism is also probably one of the biggest challenges holding back Africa. Dictators on down to regional governors and lowly civil servants are more likely to help their tribe than help the overall population or national interest.

    • @trollingisasport
      @trollingisasport 2 месяца назад +37

      from what I heard from my friend who's from Ghana, this seems to be the problem there. the local leaders will make ridiculous laws making life difficult

    • @ems4884
      @ems4884 2 месяца назад +21

      That's an old post-colonial problem. It's still present but this criticism is often overused to explain away problems, even in nations which have been modernizing quite a bit - where's it is really doubtful whether these inter-ethnic biases are really still a major factor.
      I would be careful not to generalize about it. Especially since this particular criticism has its origins in European colonialist excuses for "why the Africans can't govern themselves.". That's not what you seem to be saying, but I promise you others still do on occasion.
      The other colonial trope that has an ounce of truth to it, but gets overused? "It's a problem with the culture.". Most people recognize what's wrong with that one. (Uhh. Which culture? Where?) 😊
      Even if tribalism of "culture" is a barrier in some places, the way out of that is to build strong institutions and traditions of governance and civil society.

    • @TASCOLP
      @TASCOLP 2 месяца назад +6

      I think the biggest problem is the transfer of value. If the value that a country produces through unequal exchange (the main mechanism of value transfer, but by no means the only one) is constantly flowing out of their economy, they simply lack the resources necessary for economic development. What flows back in the form of foreign aid is only a fraction of what flows out. The production of many African countries is at the beginning of the value chain, the least profitable part of the chain. However, the big profits are only realised in the final processing steps and the final sale.

    • @kuwa333
      @kuwa333 2 месяца назад +44

      @@ems4884 lol always blaming colonialists won't do you good, look at Southeast Asia, they were colonized the longest by foreign powers but they're thriving economically.

    • @LiamHunt
      @LiamHunt 2 месяца назад +15

      Also true of the middle east. I lived in Iraq for a while and everyone said the same thing - the new democratic institutions are basically just proxies for the tribes and clans to compete with one another, while the old dictatorship allowed them to unite under common interests. Although the younger generation, and especially the Kurds and minority groups, despise Saddam, they are very nostgalic for the old autocracy.

  • @orboakin8074
    @orboakin8074 2 месяца назад +311

    Thank you so much for making this video. As an African myself (Nigerian, specifically) it always annoys me when most people only attribute Africa's current problems to "colonialism or racism", effectively removing personal responsibility of us Africans, and ignore more important factors like geography, climate, socioeconomic systems, political unity, culture, and leadership. Thanks for focusing on those areas.

    • @kennyking9667
      @kennyking9667 2 месяца назад +4

      Biafra woupd come

    • @orboakin8074
      @orboakin8074 2 месяца назад +41

      @@kennyking9667 friend, I don't care. We have so many wannabe secessionists in Nigeria, it's not funny anymore. Oduduwa nation, Arewa separatists, Biafra separatists, Sokoto caliphate fanatics, Fulani insurgents etc. The simple reality is that these groups have very little support or clout, even among their own tribes. They can't sustain themselves without the nation and they know it but choose to remain delusional.

    • @anthonyyawtwumasimensah197
      @anthonyyawtwumasimensah197 2 месяца назад +40

      Both can be right at the same time.
      Ignoring foreign interferance whilst only highlighting corrupt African leadership is no better than Ignoring corrupt African leaders whilst only blaming foreign interference.
      Your all the same just shilling for different sides.

    • @orboakin8074
      @orboakin8074 2 месяца назад +25

      @@anthonyyawtwumasimensah197 both can be right at the same and one can be more responsible for the problem than the other, also.

    • @anthonymanderson7671
      @anthonymanderson7671 2 месяца назад +1

      ​@@kennyking9667not funny at all.

  • @nosonoliento
    @nosonoliento Месяц назад +7

    Everywhere in the world where people live is the same: It's the kind of people we are. That cultures aren't better or worse, just different, is an enormous lie.

  • @rappers5719
    @rappers5719 Месяц назад +48

    Had Africa only been discovered this morning, where would they be in their industrial revolution?

    • @tenthousanddays2103
      @tenthousanddays2103 Месяц назад +9

      🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @MrZetor
      @MrZetor Месяц назад +35

      In the mud hut stage.

    • @JKnksrsly
      @JKnksrsly Месяц назад +7

      less pumas and nikes

    • @newadam573
      @newadam573 Месяц назад

      There's no reason to beleive they would have ever developed an industrial revolution. Even now they need assistnace from China to develop one.

    • @kwakukwakye885
      @kwakukwakye885 Месяц назад

      Good question😊.
      I think the obvious (politically incorrect) answer to especially Sub Saharan Africa's underdevelopment & backwardness is; below average intelligence and the lack of intellectual prowess on the part of the critical mass of the population.

  • @juniormichael354
    @juniormichael354 2 месяца назад +252

    "Africa has less productive land" then the main colonial settlers economic activities were agriculture and mining the had huge plantations of sisal,cocoa,coffee,and cotton in Tanzania for example the Germans built railroad the agricultural reasons. Most RUclipsrs who talks about Africa poverty have never been into Africa 😅

    • @MVK123
      @MVK123 2 месяца назад +39

      The wheel thing is shocking

    • @matthewsalmon2013
      @matthewsalmon2013 Месяц назад +11

      But did that form of agriculture destroy the soil? And do Africans own the land or do Western (or East Asian now) corporations own it?

    • @danielthuku8192
      @danielthuku8192 Месяц назад +37

      you need to see Europe and the American plains to understand what real agriculture is. I'm Kenyan and geography is a much bigger problem than you think it is. in comparison to Europe and USA, we don't have any arable land in our country.

    • @NamhadiNdemufayo
      @NamhadiNdemufayo Месяц назад +16

      Those aren't grains. You can't feed yourself with those.

    • @vilena5308
      @vilena5308 Месяц назад +8

      I think he explains what he means really well. Have you stopped the video the moment he said that?

  • @JustSomeWeirdo
    @JustSomeWeirdo 2 месяца назад +220

    Better help has been a known scam for a while, they keep getting in trouble but fines are cheap to pay off rather than raise their business practices.

    • @halfwaysleet
      @halfwaysleet Месяц назад +11

      Yep very shady. I'm glad i have sponsorblock

    • @TheWolfXCIX
      @TheWolfXCIX Месяц назад

      EE also promoted Masterworks which is another known scam. They don't care about their audience.

    • @friendlyfire7861
      @friendlyfire7861 Месяц назад +3

      And there is zero chance he actually uses it. Just a lie like the rest of this video.

    • @Shajirr_
      @Shajirr_ 29 дней назад +1

      Seems like they expanded their advertisement massively. I hear about this scam everywhere now.

    • @BigBADSTUFF69
      @BigBADSTUFF69 28 дней назад

      it's not really a scam, they did have shady practices but it's not like they didn't offer people therapy and it's still cheaper than therapy generally is out of pocket.

  • @Loneranger670
    @Loneranger670 Месяц назад +1

    Africa's persistent poverty stems from a systemic failure by individual political leaders and governments to establish and maintain a stable infrastructure conducive to private business operations and employment opportunities for its populace. Rather than prioritizing the welfare of their citizens, many leaders prioritize self-enrichment, exacerbating the continent's economic woes.
    Essential infrastructural elements such as reliable electricity, clean water, and access to nutritious food are fundamental for economic development. However, inadequate provision of these basic necessities hampers the growth of businesses and perpetuates widespread poverty. Consequently, only a small fraction of the population contributes to the tax base, while the majority rely on welfare assistance, creating an unsustainable economic dynamic.
    This stark imbalance between tax-paying citizens and those dependent on grants undermines economic stability and perpetuates poverty cycles. Without meaningful reforms and effective governance, Africa will continue to struggle under the weight of widespread corruption and fraud, impeding its progress and perpetuating its status as the world's poorest continent.

  • @karlostj4683
    @karlostj4683 Месяц назад +3

    Egypt and South Africa are both more economically successful than the rest of Africa - how is that possible?

    • @akikalliatakis9892
      @akikalliatakis9892 26 дней назад

      South Africa?! Probably one of the most corrupt and incompetent governments in the whole world, and the ruling party have destroyed a thriving economy in less than 30 years. The country is a failed state. I know. I live there.

  • @wolfy8006
    @wolfy8006 2 месяца назад +908

    “Why nations fall” is one of the most interesting book I’ve ever read. Glad you guys made a video dedicated to his paper.

    • @djVania08
      @djVania08 2 месяца назад +1

      Is it? Why? :)

    • @loneIyboy15
      @loneIyboy15 2 месяца назад +37

      IQ and the Wealth of Nations

    • @SignalCorps1
      @SignalCorps1 2 месяца назад +36

      So is Guns, Germs, and Steal. Both amazing reads

    • @JLchevz
      @JLchevz 2 месяца назад

      Me too

    • @someguy5977
      @someguy5977 2 месяца назад +9

      I read "Cows, Pigs, Wars, and Witches" a little over 20 years ago and I still remember the point the author made about cultures and why they do things.

  • @redstream1237
    @redstream1237 2 месяца назад +745

    Only thing Africa lacks is good leadership! Botswana is clear example of how good leadership can change the country

    • @orboakin8074
      @orboakin8074 2 месяца назад +108

      As a Nigerian, I absolutely agree with you, friend. We have other issues like bad geography and climate but good leadership and political structures and institutions can negate all of the other issues.

    • @katnicole7274
      @katnicole7274 2 месяца назад +176

      Stop saying it’s about good leadership when Europeans and Americans have assassinated leaders, sponsored coups and terrorist organizations, and use other forms of political meddling which have made all regions of Africa struggle. Everyone wants to focus on what Africa is doing wrong. But nobody wants to talk about how France has the 4th largest gold reserve but no gold mine, and yet holds 90% of the gold from 15 African countries, some of which don’t have their own gold reserves. Let’s talk about how many of the industries extracting resources from Africa are European, American, and Chinese businesses that give little profit or benefit to the countries and local people. Good leadership gets you assassinated bc there’s too much money flowing out of Africa. Almost all of the resources needed to build electric cars are on that continent and this is the moment they should be benefiting but instead we have children in lithium mines

    • @iank.2162
      @iank.2162 2 месяца назад +1

      For those who don't know en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ruth_Williams_Khama

    • @xandercorp6175
      @xandercorp6175 2 месяца назад +102

      @@katnicole7274 No, let's not talk about _how,_ let's talk about _why._ The discourse you describe is a discourse of grievance and acrimony, not a discourse about understanding and solutions. Africans will not be fooled by such talk forever.

    • @niklasmolen4753
      @niklasmolen4753 2 месяца назад

      @@katnicole7274 I know the West has assassinated some leaders, but as far as I know they have all been corrupt or communists. So there has been no loss to the country.
      I don't know the French neo-colonial empire too well, so no comments there.

  • @azsegrxdhtfgvijnkomlewrhtg9508
    @azsegrxdhtfgvijnkomlewrhtg9508 3 дня назад +2

    I don't know if my speculation would be considered racist but basically I don't think they're ready to live in modern civilization. They need something less advanced at least for now. You see that it's not just in Africa that they're not doing well.

  • @hb9145
    @hb9145 Месяц назад +56

    If colonialism made Africa poor, Ethiopia and Liberia (never really colonies) would be among the most wealthy countries in Africa, while (heavily colonized) countries like Algeria and South Africa should be among the poorest. Let's take a look at GDP per capita:
    Team non-colony:
    Ethiopia is 26th in Africa
    Liberia is 44th in Africa
    Team former colony:
    Algeria is 9th in Africa
    South Africa is 7th in Africa
    As we can see, two of the most colonized countries are much wealthier than the two countries that never was a colony. Therefore, the idea that colonization created poverty is not supported by plain facts.

    • @cameronashford5744
      @cameronashford5744 Месяц назад +11

      You only look at two countries that were colonised: One was colonised so much, that europeans started living there, taking over and creating apartheid which still has left many traces up to this day. The other country is in Northern Africa and has a stronger tie to Europe, even though I am not too sure of its history. Instead of looking at the two cases Liberia and Ethiopia, how about we look at the other 52 other countries that were colonised and their GDP per capita.
      Africa is a continent and each individual country may have its own reasons for underdevelopment of course. However drawing such general and dangerous conclusions like colonisation was good for African countries is twisting the facts, spreading misinformation and is giving white saviour and victim blaming. Of course it wasn't only colonisation but saying it didn't play a big role would be very wrong.

    • @mcboat3467
      @mcboat3467 Месяц назад +4

      ​@@cameronashford5744Liberia was colony of USA ngl. USA purposefully suppressed them

    • @punishedksen9135
      @punishedksen9135 Месяц назад +7

      People don't want to discuss the fact that Africa simply has a human capital issue.

    • @lorenzopassero8509
      @lorenzopassero8509 Месяц назад

      ​@@punishedksen9135Let's discuss neocolonialism first

    • @lorenzopassero8509
      @lorenzopassero8509 Месяц назад +2

      Colonialism comprises neocolonialism too, but ok I guess. Yall feel so attacked personally that aren't even capable of accepting that, yes, maybe these phenomena left a huge trace that partly explains Africa's situation still to these days

  • @mattlange00
    @mattlange00 2 месяца назад +426

    I have a hard time with the argument that a main reason for lack of technology adoption was erratic tyrants. Europe and Asia were both absolutely filled with despots, tyrants of all kinds, hordes of barbarians like the Huns and Danes who pillages and burned down places, yet people still developed commerce and metallurgy.

    • @EverythingCameFromNothing
      @EverythingCameFromNothing 2 месяца назад +98

      Agreed. Widespread corruption may be a better argument. Nothing can get done if there’s absolutely no trust 🤷‍♂️

    • @azziemarrie7457
      @azziemarrie7457 2 месяца назад +52

      That not only what he said was the cause . He said the fact that the land in a Africa was big, people could easy leave their communities and settle somewhere else with out the oppressive leader thus they did not developed a sense of nationalisation to come together and fight back.

    • @raam1666
      @raam1666 2 месяца назад +42

      Its in the jeans

    • @schalkvandermerwe3838
      @schalkvandermerwe3838 2 месяца назад +48

      As a South African, I always got the idea that Africa's greatest problem (at least where I am from) seems to be that the chiefs and king is too often still seen as infallible, or unchallengeable... there have never been a revolution against their hierarchy structures as there was in Europe... it was more of a softening, but never a complete rejection. The lack of adoption of tech for the greater good is also mindboggeling... there appear to be traces of this tech-rejection that precedes European influence on the Southern part of the continent.

    • @wowowofjfsdfd7349
      @wowowofjfsdfd7349 2 месяца назад +34

      You missed what he said, couple the tyrany with the land and the environment allowed groups to escape and set up their own communities and be virtually isolated from the rest preventing ideas they learnt from being spread. Europe never really had that problem, all the natives of the european countries today mainly derive from 1-4 ethnicities. And about metallurgy you should look into how slaves from the carribean helped in the industrial revolution theres a guardian article about it.

  • @almeidaserra
    @almeidaserra 2 месяца назад +135

    This is the biggest intellectual gymnastics stretch I've seen ever! Both Africa and Latin America could have some of the wealthiest countries on earth, but have been continuously mismanaged and riled with corruption.

    • @rc3398x
      @rc3398x 2 месяца назад +24

      they think short term not the long game

    • @penderyn8794
      @penderyn8794 2 месяца назад +17

      Not being left with strong institutions was crippling.
      Before European colonialism they used to have strong institutions if you actually read to the history of those kingdoms

    • @malachi-
      @malachi- 2 месяца назад +24

      @@penderyn8794 😂

    • @malachi-
      @malachi- 2 месяца назад +2

      Evolutionary protocol.

    • @LRLocs
      @LRLocs 2 месяца назад +12

      Did we watch the same video? His whole point was that strong and inclusive institutions are conducive to prosperity while corrupt and extractive ones lead to the situations we see in SA and Africa.
      Same thesis by Acemoglu and Robinson in their book.

  • @willshish5270
    @willshish5270 2 дня назад

    My optometrist was born in Kenya but moved to New Zealand as a kid. I was curious as to his accent. He explained it. I asked if he would ever go back. He said there is nothing for him there. That is what is wrong when there is a tribal mentality.

  • @ItsHatlolOfficial
    @ItsHatlolOfficial 2 месяца назад +1095

    I'm a simple man, I see Betterhelp, I click dislike.

    • @ramr7051
      @ramr7051 2 месяца назад +114

      Good that not everyone has forgotten this

    • @InCognito-vx8gi
      @InCognito-vx8gi 2 месяца назад +34

      Based

    • @oyo4629
      @oyo4629 2 месяца назад +37

      Glad to see someone with a functioning brain

    • @Horible4
      @Horible4 2 месяца назад +17

      And he still gets his resources from MIT lol

    • @Smitty_Werbenjagermanjenson
      @Smitty_Werbenjagermanjenson 2 месяца назад

      I recommend using sponsorblock then

  • @jakeave
    @jakeave 2 месяца назад +99

    There's a reason why most of my African friends have no plans of living in Africa. I'm paraphrasing, but one guy told me "imagine me going back and telling people 'hey we should follow traffic rules and make stop lights.' Everyone would look at me like I was crazy." And that's a small example of how culture and nurture means much more than geography. You have pockets of places with awesome cohesion, property rights and education, but it has to reach a critical mass to be safe from total annihilation.

    • @kamal777VVV
      @kamal777VVV Месяц назад

      This kind of culture is a result of corruption, If only half the people have to follow the rules and the other half has a connection in the government or can bribe and get away with a lot of things, people will start to hate the rules and they will lose all respect to them, and with enough time people will start to see it as the norm since that all they know their whole life, specially when the rules are not even enforced properly or fairly

    • @Bell_plejdo568p
      @Bell_plejdo568p Месяц назад +6

      Yea u made this whole things up, and Africa is a huge diverse continent

    • @jakeave
      @jakeave Месяц назад +10

      @@Bell_plejdo568p my buddy from Nigeria, neighbors from DRC, met someone whose family is threatened if they go back to Sudan, talked to an ambassador from Ghana and I think Uganda was the other guy. Like this isn't hidden information. Granted all of these people were no longer living in Africa, so maybe their bias is skewed, but that's the point. People that want a certain way of life (property rights, self determination, education) are going overseas, so everyone left are more intrenched in their ways.

    • @Avalanche-Ice1950
      @Avalanche-Ice1950 Месяц назад +3

      "how culture and nurture means much more than geography"
      EXCEPT the Africans IN the western world -- who are benefitting (and taking advantage of) what the WESTERNERS have built -- did not and DO NOT believe "hey we should follow the rules" unless they are continuously and continually "forced" to do so! They have come to a different "geography" and changed hardly at all! ALLLLL the years of living in a different "culture and nurture" has NOT changed Africans into people who desire to -- and CAN -- live in a different culture and nurture!
      EVERY "African group" living in EVERY other 'culture and nurture' has an exceedingly HIGH of out-of-wedlock, no-fathers-present, birth rate. EVERY single one. It's PART of their culture and nurture. It exists in Africa, it exists and every African group across the planet. The exceptions do NOT prove the rule! (I'd point out: in the 1920s and 30s in the U.S -- when the African family structure was FORCED to live within the (then-extant) "rules of (White/western) society" -- they had actually a LOWER divorce rate than White/Westerners. Once that force was let up -- they mostly returned to the 'African culture and nurture' of reproduction without marriage, which has only increased since then.

    • @reasonablespeculation3893
      @reasonablespeculation3893 Месяц назад +1

      @@Avalanche-Ice1950 OUTRAGIOUS. I'm shocked...
      You must never speak of these things again

  • @CurtHowland
    @CurtHowland Месяц назад +9

    I didn't hear "foreign aid" mentioned. When people are supported by outside money, they do not develop the means to make do for themselves. Dependency.

    • @The_Reality_Filter
      @The_Reality_Filter 2 дня назад +2

      The Bell Curve doesn't lie...

    • @Doitallgp
      @Doitallgp 19 часов назад

      @@The_Reality_Filterunderdeveloped prefrontal cortexes is the correct answer that is glossed over by the entire world

    • @The_Reality_Filter
      @The_Reality_Filter 18 часов назад

      @@Doitallgp well they are intrinsically linked...

  • @danstewart2770
    @danstewart2770 3 дня назад +1

    Is there a difference in the average intellect of the local population compared with other populations?
    If there is a deficit, what role, if any, does it play in the development and growth of the region?

  • @Soulheads-yy3zq
    @Soulheads-yy3zq Месяц назад +124

    This video shows how difficult it is to speak openly and honestly about Africa’s reality without putting your shoe in your mouth.

    • @nickfedor210
      @nickfedor210 Месяц назад +6

      Is that shoe a Nike?

    • @pukavoket
      @pukavoket Месяц назад

      You don't have to "put your foot in your mouth", read my comment up top. That is Africa's reality...@pukavoket.

    • @fireboltaz
      @fireboltaz Месяц назад

      Africa's poverty is due to lack of white colonizers.

    • @The_Reality_Filter
      @The_Reality_Filter 2 дня назад

      The Bell Curve doesn't lie...

    • @Soulheads-yy3zq
      @Soulheads-yy3zq День назад

      @@The_Reality_Filter I am definitely in agreement with you. And I understand the importance of manipulating the circumstances of populations in order to maintain the beliefs preferred by certain members of society.

  • @voodoopig4601
    @voodoopig4601 Месяц назад +97

    I am South African, and South Africa stands out amongst most of the African Nations as the most "developed", or used to be. Here - and to some extent I would say in most european settled regions (colonialism implies that the wealth was being shipped away, not utilised in country, which is what happened here) - the european conquest broke the inhibiting authority of local rulers that you assert prevented widespread development. In South Africa, it was replaced by a National Authority that, while still authoritarian and oppressive, DID develop enormous amounts of capital - railways, harbours, airports, mining, schools, hospitals, roads, dams, which benefitted everyone, even if the ruling whites under apartheid benefitted more. It doesn't make it right, but an oppressed South African had much better access to healthcare, education, transport, employment, clean water and food than an oppressed NON-South African. The tragedy is that when democracy was introduced - which should have been a wonderful thing - , the new leaders didn't maintain any of the practices or principles that had made the region prosperous. They didn't continue with improving or developing the infrastructure, education, etc. Instead, all they did was exhaust the capital that was previously developed and re-distribute wealth into non-sustainable social aid programmes, which kept their voter base loyal. The result is that any good that came from the suffering under the decades of oppression has been lost. It was all for nothing. They took the silver lining from that dark cloud, cut it into pieces so small that it blew away into the wind as dust. Now we have failing infrastructure, no electricity, no water, no functioning local authorities, 40% unemployment, a collapsing tax base, a prohibitively expensive international credit rating, and no light at the end of the tunnel. Africa is poor, because it insists on doing things its own way. And that way doesn't work, if your goal is to develop along the lines of other non-african industrial and post industrial nations. Other regions of the world - notably South East Asia, embraced industialisation, academicism, national planning etc. etc. and still retained their regional/ cultural identity. But in Africa rejection of "The West" is part of the mindset, and is a rallying cry for the leadership, who drive around in Mercedes Benz's wearing Armani suits. Africa will remain poor, until Africans decide that that rejecting the practices of the wealthy isn't what makes you a real African.

    • @PompaTG
      @PompaTG Месяц назад +13

      This is what happens when you don't have to fight to develop yourself. European nations that have been built up by centuries of hardship now find themselves with leadership that don't have any clue of how the nations wealth was achieved and are set on squandering it to purchase a voting base using taxation of those who actually work to keep building that wealth.

    • @Tespri
      @Tespri Месяц назад +14

      Explain estonia then. Most of it's wealth was taken away by Russians same with development. After getting out of soviet union they growth was growing with insane numbers. Same with Poland. The "muh colonialism" is just excuse.

    • @debarshidas8072
      @debarshidas8072 Месяц назад +3

      ​​@@Tespri That some countries could rise above the hurdles erected by colonialism does not imply that colonialism is not an overwhelming impediment. Estonia and Poland are where they are despite their colonial/oppressive past, not because of or uncoupled from it.

    • @Tespri
      @Tespri Месяц назад +15

      @@debarshidas8072 Finland as well.. Hong Kong after British rule... Singapore after british rule. In fact it seems that the general trend is that only colonies in Africa are incapable to "overcome this hurdle".
      It's just overwhelming excuse and cope mechanism.

    • @Tespri
      @Tespri Месяц назад

      @@debarshidas8072 Finland as well.. Hong Kong after British rule... Singapore after british rule. In fact it seems that the general trend is that only colonies in Africa are incapable to "overcome this hurdle".
      It's just overwhelming excuse and cope mechanism.

  • @alfredopampanga9356
    @alfredopampanga9356 Месяц назад +5

    Wrong. Comparing Asia of 80 years ago with Africa today misses the key difference. Asians who found thenselves in advanced economies did remarkably well. It was their countries that held them back.
    Africans in advanced economies are universally poor and violent. It ’s they that’s the problem.

    • @ugoekwegh4581
      @ugoekwegh4581 24 дня назад +2

      This is a big lie

    • @danstewart2770
      @danstewart2770 3 дня назад

      I tend to agree. But, what is it about them that makes it true?

    • @alfredopampanga9356
      @alfredopampanga9356 3 дня назад

      @@danstewart2770 If dog breeders are right and certain dogs are innately companion animals others, innately guard dogs , others innately herders then why is it a stretch to think that Africans embody these destructive characteristics?
      No one has trouble with the observation that they enjoy a superiority as runners , ability to jump in basketball. etc

  • @elijahforsyth2332
    @elijahforsyth2332 Месяц назад

    Love the 4x strategy gaming references, and the cheeky aussie mate at the end

  • @dumarudolf3976
    @dumarudolf3976 2 месяца назад +118

    I love hearing about how diversity in African countries is the reason why they remain poor and underdeveloped; however, the same people are quick to point out that diversity is a strength anywhere else... just not in Africa. There is so much dissonance, and I bet these people don't even realise it.

    • @david-arthur8166
      @david-arthur8166 2 месяца назад +1

      Africa is super developed

    • @christianknuchel
      @christianknuchel Месяц назад +10

      I'm probably one of the people you're referring to, at least tangentially. However, I don't claim that diversity is the problem in Africa, but statements of mine (and perhaps others arguing in a similar way as I do) might be mistaken that way. What I'm saying is this: Countries in Western and Central Europe had favourable conditions for development, such as being able to develop and industrialize on their own terms and not being subject to any form of colonialism or forced liberal market reform. Most of them chose the way of the language or ethnicity based nation state, but there's also Switzerland, for example, which chose a different route, which, for the time, was quite diversity embracing.
      The problem with colonies is that the way they're organized, the economic structure and power structures, is for extraction by colonizers. They're (very likely) not what the people in the region would build if they could structure their societies on their own terms, if they could go through their own process, their own societal negotiations and conflicts, like Europe once did. That, however, is almost impossible in the current environment, with multi-national corporations teaming up with western governments and their international organizations (e.g. the IMF and the World Bank) to stabilize an environment that is conducive to extraction, and international law and diplomacy set up in a way that make it very hard for countries to reform themselves, or even develop away from the European nation state model.
      Yes, in numerous cases, the lack of such an independent process surfaces as strife between ethnic groups. However, that is, at least in part, a symptom of a region greatly disrupted by colonial extraction, both in times of traditional colonialism, and (neo)colonialism. Even conflicts that are rooted in pre-colonial structures are exacerbated in a situation where people now have to make do in the results of colonial oppression - and, on top of that, they are conflicts that never had a chance of being resolved on the people's own terms, using the vessels of their own, organically developed civilizations.
      The root of the problem aren't these surface level symptoms, however, but the lack of an organic process for a region to "find itself", so to say. Looked at from the surface, it may seem like a diversity issue, but it really isn't.
      Also, in cases where a country is ruled by a government that discriminates against some ethnic groups, and doesn't take into account that some groups might have been dealt a particularly bad hand by past oppression, or worse, engages in direct oppression, violence or even genocide, that's neither a colonial (albeit, of course, being a (neo)colony doesn't help having sound political structures) issue nor an issue of diversity, but moral bankruptcy of those responsible. Blaming diversity in those kinds of situations isn't even a surface-level mistake like in the case of symmetric tribal conflicts, but simply a cheap excuse for a bigoted political agenda (or the very concept of having such an agenda when using Africa as a proxy token in Western political discourse).

    • @dumarudolf3976
      @dumarudolf3976 Месяц назад +9

      @@christianknuchel We all know you took the time to provide this answer; however, I will not similarly return the favour. I appreciate the effort, which is only designed for the viewers and not as an answer directly to me. On the other hand, your reply, in my opinion, is just a more sophisticated way of throwing an insult, which is also okay, as I would not have expected otherwise.
      I'm afraid I have to disagree with many levels that Africa or most African countries do not have the power to change their course. Unlike other countries throughout history, they didn't have to "invent the wheel" (like the Spanish had to for the Incas - to talk in your "colonialist" language; obviously, there is a lot more than the mere wheel here as it goes profoundly into what a civilisation can achieve). Africa is entirely responsible for their well-being, and they have the power in their hand; they choose to deal with Russia and China these days and appear perfectly happy with it.
      You must have some form of selective memory when referring to European countries having time to develop, or you must not know history. I must remind you of the recent two world wars that have led to unimaginable destruction and loss of both human and material capital. Even before that, Europe was not peaceful or united, as can be noticed in a brief history review. No, my friend, no one had time to do anything; it was a simple game of survival of the fittest, which is perfectly fine at a cosmic level as we are not yet playing outside this game. We either move forward, or we will be forgotten.
      As a background, I was born in a diverse communist country (remember, USSR was very diverse), and I lived more time in extreme poverty than in decency. I did not blame anyone for my misfortune. At no time in our previous history did one have more power to change his own fortune than today (with some minor exceptions - not Africa).

    • @orangemoonglows2692
      @orangemoonglows2692 Месяц назад

      but countries in europe have figured out a way to actually work together to be great. ex. europe warred against one another. however, when it came time to slice up africa, they worked together to make that happen so that they could all prosper. africa does not work together to be great and prosper. if they did, they have good roads that linked east to west africa, north to south, etc. to facilitate commerce throughout the continent.

    • @christianknuchel
      @christianknuchel Месяц назад +7

      ​@@dumarudolf3976 I didn't mean to imply that Europe didn't have strife, but that it had the opportunity to develop on its own terms, as it was the first region to emerge global empires. There's a huge difference between symmetric conflict in the way that Europe had internally, and being subject to perpetual oppression.
      To make a long story short: Europe (and I'm counting the US and Australia as European countries here) won the game for the current political era, it's just that its power projection's gotten a bit more subtle over the past 70 years, which is why some people believe that colonialism is over, even though it's not.
      As a bit of background for me: As you might have guessed from my earlier example, I'm Swiss. Your rhetoric reminded me very much of discourse I've heard before, including in my own country, where people find excuses to argue against people from other places joining our society. However, Switzerland was founded on people speaking different languages and from different denominations of Christianity, which, as you know, had been at war with one another at various points in History, joining together and making a country. If there's hypocrisy there, it's people who claim themselves to be patriots, but who oppose immigration of people from different places.
      That issue is even more pronounced in US discourse, a country that was founded on global immigration outright, and US discourse has a lot of influence on the political discourse on the internet, and even local politics - at least over here.
      Personally, I don't care much about whether diversity is a strength or not. What I care about is the *fulfillment* of the individual, and if people come closer to that fulfillment by means of immigration, so be it. However, it doesn't stop there: Anti-immigration arguments are also used to target refugees, their rights and their chances of being granted asylum. This even leads to things like teenagers who are in the middle of an apprenticeship (!) getting deported back to their country of origin. People who have started to integrate, to build a life! Children with hopes and dreams. Just people, like you, me, everyone else. But because of a mix of nationalist bureaucracy and xenophobic bigotry, they get theirs destroyed - people who've already gone through so much, who were just starting to rebuild. And then there's the inhumane treatment, and sometimes even murder, of refugees before they even get here.
      Besides the Humanist aspect, I also believe that it's important for the world to interweave and not separate, to facilitate a better understanding of one another, and make it less likely for monstrous views of people from other parts of the world to become widespread. It also begets cultural exchange and expands a society's social horizon and flexibility. Also, I've always loved the cultural bounty of the world, and have had a cosmopolitan mindset pretty much my entire life. I like living in an international place.

  • @ebaab9913
    @ebaab9913 2 месяца назад +198

    As an ex South African, and who studied that part of Africa from the inside, can I suggest having a very close look at Botswana. There are a number of very important differences to other African countries, first being mainly a single tribal group. A lot depended on one man, Seretsi Khama, but his policies remind me of Norway.

    • @loetomagang1438
      @loetomagang1438 2 месяца назад

      I am a Motswana. Are you smoking crack? Mainly one ethnic group? You are actually mad, we have over 20. We just don't go to war with one another and only have dialectic differences in our language.

    • @vladimirmuianga
      @vladimirmuianga 2 месяца назад +9

      I envy you because you can say "as an ex South African".

    • @ebaab9913
      @ebaab9913 2 месяца назад +31

      I lived as a white SAfrican, pulling my weight, but privileged. It was not a hard life unlike most Black SAfricans. I did consider that I had paid my way, but it was time to leave and let the country be run by indigenous people. All power to them, I long for them to take their rightful place in the World.

    • @vladimirmuianga
      @vladimirmuianga 2 месяца назад +12

      @ebaab9913 my parents migrated to SA from Mozambique. I was born in SA but I've never felt like this is home, I never felt welcomed. I'm not impressed with the leadership or how things are done. I look forward to the day I leave. Whatever opportunity I can find, I'm taking it. I'm so fed up with the way things are done on this continent.

    • @afrovarangian
      @afrovarangian 2 месяца назад

      Nation states do not equal prosperity.

  • @Chavagnatze
    @Chavagnatze Месяц назад +2

    There are no easily navigable rivers in on the continent of Africa other than the Nile River. All the developed nations and continents have major transportation of goods via rivers.
    The wheel requires good roads and will easily get stuck in non-ideal conditions. The bearing and structure of the wheel are hard to make. Animals are better at traversing harsh or muddy trails.

  • @orgorg239
    @orgorg239 Месяц назад +9

    Why is Africa poor? The answer is obvious but even if we were allowed to honestly say it without being banned from RUclips. We cannot change the problem. It is permanent and unchangeable.

  • @tertiusgous8348
    @tertiusgous8348 2 месяца назад +57

    Born in Africa and living in Africa, I can tell you, but in my country, I can not say anything because I will be called a racist and coloniser if I do.
    Not owning their own short falls and looking to place the blame on past generations is the name of the game for our leaders.

    • @majorpwner241
      @majorpwner241 Месяц назад +2

      You should be the leader, bro. You're a real one.

    • @KevinN44
      @KevinN44 Месяц назад +3

      True. It’s all about leadership

    • @itn-nq5tn
      @itn-nq5tn Месяц назад +1

      Mismanagement, corruption, greed is destroying Africa

    • @blink182bfsftw
      @blink182bfsftw Месяц назад

      I mean if you're going to blame black people for being black as a white person yeah people will call you out for being racist

    • @mauriceanderson5413
      @mauriceanderson5413 Месяц назад

      Odd, I thought racism is about power structure and minority components!
      Whites shouldnt be racist to blacks in Africa with this, was US left word police wrong? What a shock

  • @Pangolier
    @Pangolier 2 месяца назад +118

    Please change the thumbnail to: "Exactly what you think", it saves lots of everyone's time.

    • @DesmondKarani
      @DesmondKarani 2 месяца назад +2

      You must be disappointed 🙂

    • @siliwhiz
      @siliwhiz Месяц назад +4

      😂😂You're not lying. I actually watched it to the end when I saw two names associated with the study - Daren Acemoglu and James A. Robinson. They know their stuff in this area, so I hoped to hear something new. But only confirmed to me what I already know - Botswana is doing well.

  • @ap5606
    @ap5606 Месяц назад +5

    I am an African and the reason Africa is poor is because we are shamelessly corrupt, lazy, greedy and envious of one another. We also take no accountability for ourselves and we are the only group of people that is not united in any shape or form. The rest is secondary.

  • @lavenderlilacproductions
    @lavenderlilacproductions 14 дней назад +2

    Why also did Chicago, Baltimore St Louis and Detroit fall apart in the last 60 years?

  • @alicelund147
    @alicelund147 Месяц назад +35

    Sahara is a problem as a barrier? Why is not Australia and New Zeeland poor? Why would fertile lands not lead to development/civilization in Africa but it did in China, Egypt, India, Eufrat/Tigris? I didn't get the reason, Malaria? There used to be malaria also in Europe. Bad infrastructure is not a "reason", the question is why don't they build infrastructure.

    • @tubetorpedo
      @tubetorpedo Месяц назад +5

      _"Bad infrastructure is not a "reason", the question is why don't they build infrastructure."_
      That is a question. It's not like any nation had their infrastructure ready. Every nation had to build their basic stuff and foundations first, so they could then develop further. The basic steps of development.

    • @marcv2648
      @marcv2648 Месяц назад +7

      @@tubetorpedo They're not capable.

    • @user-kk5nq3yx2v
      @user-kk5nq3yx2v Месяц назад

      ​@@marcv2648 They're capable. Corruption and greed is the problem

    • @xpusostomos
      @xpusostomos Месяц назад +5

      It's called 70 IQ.

    • @user-kk5nq3yx2v
      @user-kk5nq3yx2v Месяц назад

      @@xpusostomos That means American politicians have 70 iq too

  • @seleciaa
    @seleciaa 2 месяца назад +71

    I believe the primary issue is the myopic perspective and extreme levels of corruption throughout the continent. Africans are their own worst enemies. We see the same issue in the nations born of its diaspora, such as Jamaica and Haiti, where my immediate ancestors come from. Corruption exists in all countries, but in other places, the elites at least recognize that the peasantry needs SOMETHING. In Africa and throughout the Caribbean, they horde everything.

    • @theevermind
      @theevermind Месяц назад

      No, it isn't that elites recognize that peasants need something--it's that they can't stop the "peasants." A wannabe tyrant won't be a tyrant if he fears the people will kill him at the very moment he oppresses them. If the people are sufficiently able to succeed without the govt, then the govt lacks certain power to keep them from succeeding.
      Rights, success, are things that people secure for themselves--they are never given by those in power. Waiting on a dictator to give them is futile and foolish.

    • @dsparr1010
      @dsparr1010 Месяц назад +3

      African governments 👎👎
      African people ❤️🎉🎊 consistently some of the nicest, hardworking folks I’ve ever met.

    • @BalkanGod23
      @BalkanGod23 Месяц назад +15

      @@dsparr1010 isnt the african government or any government created by its own people? are we adults or children and always everybody else is at fault except us lol

    • @Orxbane
      @Orxbane Месяц назад +1

      But we can't talk about why that is the case

    • @blackmancer
      @blackmancer Месяц назад +1

      People who annoy you.....

  • @ruthlessrubberducky5729
    @ruthlessrubberducky5729 9 дней назад +2

    I think back often to the massive and wealthy African megacities in the halo games, and think about what it would take to get them there. The main problem is that they must do it themselves. I hope for the best future possible for all.

  • @toxadodo
    @toxadodo 21 день назад

    Africa has one primary problem: the people.
    And, what is wrong with the people is a lack of a vision as one people either as nations, tribes, or a race.
    When the vision is united, there is unity in purpose, direction, and strength to overcome obstacles and resolve issues.

  • @MikeZ8709
    @MikeZ8709 Месяц назад +73

    Videos like this have become harder to watch since I began noticing the rampant use of vague stock footage on RUclips. It makes me appreciate shows like Forensic Files or Air Disasters that produce their own reenactments based on specifics of the story.

    • @bojangles2492
      @bojangles2492 Месяц назад +10

      Not everyone has the budget or time for that, as long as it gets the message across I am more concerned with what he is saying.

    • @Bell_plejdo568p
      @Bell_plejdo568p Месяц назад

      Yea it’s filled with misinformation and nosense

    • @persel_hd
      @persel_hd Месяц назад +3

      @@bojangles2492 Yeah, but sad part of this story is, the channel covered this topic like one or two years ago and is more basic this time around. It's like if he can't find any better topics or other countries are just not clickbait enough.

    • @jimboswe
      @jimboswe Месяц назад +3

      I agree on this topic. In many cases I would prefer just a static screen with information than random clips that may be close to the subject, but still obviously stock photo. I just feels a little off and takes my focus away. This video I was manly listening to, instead of viewing though.

    • @fcukyou2_
      @fcukyou2_ Месяц назад +1

      ​@bojangles2492 and not everyone should make videos.. its just laziness really. Especially the ones who strictly use AI.. I can't stand then, and block every page I come across, especially if you use clickbait titles.

  • @diarrasarr7407
    @diarrasarr7407 Месяц назад +50

    I wish countries like senegal were discussed in this video only because it has always been politically stable and peaceful but it's still very poor. All the foreign investment benefit those already in power and many say the west African currency is one of the biggest reasons it's remained poor.

    • @debbiefox8675
      @debbiefox8675 Месяц назад

      the west keeps the african continent poor. look there are inherent problems but the strategy is there

    • @AK-gu4jq
      @AK-gu4jq Месяц назад

      The currency is not the main reason Senegal is not thriving at all. Ivory Coast and Benin have the same currency but they have better economic growth annually than many country in the world. Senegal has strong institutions, but it is less economically attrative to investors than Ivory Coast for exemple. Mainly because it lacks natural ressources (cocoa, gold etc.) and its agriculture is very unproductive. That's why when they have the choice, private investors go to countries like Ivory Coast instead of Senegal.

  • @mickymcl8359
    @mickymcl8359 18 дней назад +1

    A good indication of the progress a country is to a very simple question who owns the land, the resources and the wealth. You don't need to be a genius to guess the answer.

  • @johannaclemence7104
    @johannaclemence7104 22 дня назад +1

    I think if you slowed your speaking down it would be easier to follow. It feels like your rushing through to get to the end and with your accent I found it hard to follow.

  • @taylorshipman1045
    @taylorshipman1045 2 месяца назад +185

    The diversity in their countries should help since its obviously our biggest strength

  • @MrBenMcLean
    @MrBenMcLean 2 месяца назад +207

    You flat out state that European colonists weren't going to have Europeans doing the labor in the Americas but in fact, European indentured servitude was extremely common in this period.

    • @VMohdude-
      @VMohdude- Месяц назад +21

      Not as common as using Africans

    • @curiousmind111
      @curiousmind111 Месяц назад

      Muslins used to use africans as slaves way before europeans@@VMohdude-

    • @monzerfaisal3673
      @monzerfaisal3673 Месяц назад +7

      Relatively speaking, they weren't doing much or as much horrible labof

    • @lacky9320
      @lacky9320 Месяц назад +45

      @@VMohdude- depends on the place and time. In Canada and USA there were relatively few slaves (even in the south, there were far more white laborers than slaves). This is flipped in the Caribbean with the vast majority of the populace being enslaved.

    • @TheBillyBowlegs
      @TheBillyBowlegs Месяц назад +9

      @@VMohdude-and your supporting data is?

  • @JamesTheFantastic-yg3wy
    @JamesTheFantastic-yg3wy 29 дней назад

    We all came from Africa. Some groups had the ability and wherewithal to venture out to explore, discover, & settle the rest of the world. Some groups did not have the ability, nor the wherewithal to leave Africa. So, they remained Africans and here we are today talking about them as if we just can’t figure out what the problem is.

  • @bodbyss
    @bodbyss 2 дня назад

    6:02 This seems impossible. Farming is ALWAYS preferably to hunting-gathering. Any group that is in an area where farming is possible, should be engaging in it. Because it makes their little society more stable, more well-armed, and simply more competitive than groups that won't farm.

  • @merrymachiavelli2041
    @merrymachiavelli2041 2 месяца назад +124

    On the population thing. The trajectory of Africa's population is nuts:
    1700: 61 million Africans (10% of the global population)
    2024: 1464 million Africans (18.5%)
    2100: 3900 million Africans (38%)

    • @lochnessmunster1189
      @lochnessmunster1189 2 месяца назад +15

      Exactly. Africa is nowhere near as poor as it was 200 years ago. The videos' title is misleading.

    • @musonobari2560
      @musonobari2560 2 месяца назад

      😂😂😂 I guess African women have a special taste to their men

    • @dioniscaraus6124
      @dioniscaraus6124 2 месяца назад +44

      Keep in mind they'll start making less kids as they industrialise and less hands on a farm. Other developed nations followed the same trend

    • @vitalifoma9189
      @vitalifoma9189 2 месяца назад

      ​@@loneIyboy15this is the dumbest thing I have ever read on the internet, like seriously 😁 . Most african countries were vast rural before independence . For instance more than ninety percent of the tarred roads in nigeria was constructed after our independence . What of access to electricity , clean water and medicine . Mehn you are either filled with hate or ridiculously ignorant

    • @jghifiversveiws8729
      @jghifiversveiws8729 2 месяца назад +21

      @@loneIyboy15 This is just not true save for a few warzones.

  • @vilefly
    @vilefly Месяц назад +56

    Well, I was going to say tribalism is a big factor, but so many beat me to it. So, I will simply say selfishness is a grand factor, fueled by tribalism. Instead of "all for one and one for all", there is "all for me, and none for you". Such division of thought makes for a weak nation in a continent of nations. It would make me happy to see all rise up and reach their potential. So much senseless suffering. Botswana looks to be leading the charge on development, so I wish them success.

    • @TheJeffcurran
      @TheJeffcurran Месяц назад

      Seems to me that I heard today that Botswana has a bunch of elephants for sale.

    • @crawford1083
      @crawford1083 19 дней назад

      African nations have been described as "kleptocracies" where different tribes and groups have taken it i turn to thieve and asset-strip and purge opposition, until another group takes its tuen in chare, ribnse and repeat!

  • @nhr2008
    @nhr2008 Месяц назад

    I am surprised that the most important factors have not been listed. For the most part they are non-quantifiable and seen as marginalities. We have become far too focused on quantifiable variables that easily give a straight answer.
    The most important factor that affects an economy and/or a society is the environment, environmental factors like water, climate, etc.
    The second most important factor are the infrastructures, with the most important one water ways.
    Everything else comes next, and one can argue over order of importance. Personally, I put the human element on top, and again, this is a marginality that cannot be quantified.
    If we look at history, then societies developed along infrastructures and environmental changes lead to migrations and ended many highly evolved civilizations rather quickly. The environment has determined every aspect of the African societies.
    We do know that the environment is a major reason why the hugely succesful European colonization in the world failed utterly in Africa, more specifically the tropical diseases. Historically, the most important infrastructure has been waterways, but so happen, so many diseases are directly or indirectly linked to waterways.
    We humans have something most other organisms do not have: We have been capability to modify the environment to make it hospitable for us. Where we can modify it societies evolve and where we cannot there are none. African has huge potentials, also a reason why we “Global West” have no interest for it to evolve one better accepts, but unless we can make it hospitable it can’t happen.

  • @daveoatway6126
    @daveoatway6126 Месяц назад +1

    I hate censorship that blocks telling a true story! Move to X! Excellent video, with a hopeful ending! Good job!

    • @M-yb1cc
      @M-yb1cc Месяц назад +2

      Unless the true story is about Musk 🤣

  • @tombougan
    @tombougan 2 месяца назад +163

    You state that when the European powers left, they took with them their tools, ruling structures and industrial relations - but that is a bit one sided, in most cases they were chased out and the locals immediately rejected those very tools, ruling structures and industrial relations that had been brought by the Europeans, and in many cases also chased out the European ex-patriots who were running them, so they lost not only the advances that had been brought to the continent but in many cases regressed terribly afterward. Simply look to South Africa and Zimbabwe to see - they were initially very successful after independence when a significant portion of those expats were still there, or to other cases like Botswana which did not reject the benefits they had gained by embracing those institutions left by the colonists-- further, many of those countries in rejecting their former colonist's institutions, embraced marxist ones- and that has never ended well

    • @sellis2819
      @sellis2819 2 месяца назад +31

      many of the nations in africa which have shown great promise just devolve into race politics once given the chance.

    • @wowowofjfsdfd7349
      @wowowofjfsdfd7349 2 месяца назад +20

      They were not chased out, that is a lie. Go and look at the congo the belgiums literally took the entire administration with them when they left and killed the leader which actually seemed to want progress in the country, same with Ghana, same with burkina faso. But I do agree with your point and that is often overlooked they all decided to follow marxism.

    • @ShubhamMishrabro
      @ShubhamMishrabro 2 месяца назад

      They all followed african socialism which failed when ussr died

    • @frequentlycynical642
      @frequentlycynical642 2 месяца назад

      Africa: "You colonists raped our country and people. Our poverty is all your fault."
      India: "Thanks for all the physical and institutional infrastructure, Britain! "

    • @Kosithegod
      @Kosithegod 2 месяца назад +15

      Most successful countries are offshoots of previously successful countries. Australia, US, Canada, all well supported offshoots of the brittish empire and benefited heavily from inheriting an already functioning system of government, trained officials and strong financial backing during it's formative years. African nations didn't have the same luxury, and when faced with a choice between stable, violent subjugation and unstable freedom they chose, what they chose.
      You judge them for being of two minds about whether or not to embrace the system that oppressed them for centuries but i think thats beyond understandable.

  • @Glaucidius
    @Glaucidius Месяц назад +189

    Poor Switzerland: Cut off from the sea, lots of mountains, ...

    • @jfkst1
      @jfkst1 Месяц назад

      High IQ people will succeed in any environment. Low IQ people will fail in any modern environment.

    • @1terminatorr
      @1terminatorr Месяц назад +29

      well its dependent on economically stable neighbours though, hence wealth creates wealth

    • @jfkst1
      @jfkst1 Месяц назад +1

      @@1terminatorr
      Must be why South Africa and Rhodesia were so successful with whites in charge and then collapsed once blacks took over.

    • @romeopeter1922
      @romeopeter1922 Месяц назад +9

      I saw what you did there!

    • @tellesu
      @tellesu Месяц назад +2

      🤦‍♂️🙄

  • @ryanevans2655
    @ryanevans2655 17 дней назад

    My dumbass just learned about Svalbard, Norway from the GDP per capita map. “WTH are those rich islands at the North Pole?” Oh, just more Norway

  • @MrSaywutnow
    @MrSaywutnow 24 дня назад +3

    Prosperous, industrialized economies are highly complex systems that require a certain level of intelligence in order to build and maintain.
    There.
    That's your reason why Africa is poor.
    The main reason I cannot take economists seriously is because nearly all economic theory is based on the assumption that all people are equally interchangeable units with identical abilities and behaviours, as this makes the mathematics easier on a macroeconomic scale. Any engineer (such as myself) will tell you that any calculations you perform are only as valid as the underlying assumptions you base them on, which makes the macro calculations economists perform utterly useless, bordering on pseudoscientific.
    This is why economic theory is sometimes so ludicrously detached from reality, and why economists can spectacularly fail to reach the correct answer on some questions, such as the one presented in this video's title.

    • @Odthean
      @Odthean 22 дня назад +1

      Cogent take! Makes sense

  • @number2and3
    @number2and3 2 месяца назад +48

    They had no problems with agriculture in Rhodesia….. Zimbabwean can’t relate

    • @danstewart2770
      @danstewart2770 3 дня назад

      That's true. But why do you think it's like that? Why did the Europeans do well, but today, under the local people, agriculture is in such disarray?

    • @number2and3
      @number2and3 2 дня назад +1

      @@danstewart2770 They do not understand the farming techniques, lack the education, and the application of equipment itself.
      Historically Africans are bad farmers because game was so populous the tribes were formed and based around hunting. Meanwhile European advancements saw techniques in farming continue to evolve and "modernize". This is an extremely simplified answer but it is kind of the root of the issue.

  • @Quantum-1157
    @Quantum-1157 2 месяца назад +56

    You’d be surprised how the endemic corruption problem is pretty much identical in non-African countries like Lebanon, Pakistan, Tukmenistan, Colombia, Peru, Uzbekistan, Sri Lanka, etc

    • @ephraimlusansu9807
      @ephraimlusansu9807 2 месяца назад +3

      yes, counties that are also down bad. what's your point. Sri Lanka is probably in a worse state than most African countries, but not all the countries in the region are in the same boat as Africa.

    • @ArawnOfAnnwn
      @ArawnOfAnnwn 2 месяца назад +15

      Every developing country has had high corruption, and developed countries are hardly corruption-free. Corruption is just this vague airy thing people wave their hands at to explain anything bad about their country. It's also a convenient one size fits all explanation, with no attention paid to the specific circumstances and context of that country. But no, it's never that simple. Reducing corruption happens alongside development, it isn't a prerequisite for it.

    • @Quantum-1157
      @Quantum-1157 2 месяца назад

      @@ArawnOfAnnwn really so Russia ‘isn’t developed’ and keeps tumbling in blatantly corrupt authoritarian regimes last 1,000 years?

    • @Ratinevo
      @Ratinevo Месяц назад

      Exactly!
      But here are people claiming genetic inferiority. Racists!

    • @manjeetgill1
      @manjeetgill1 Месяц назад +2

      Add India to that list

  • @netizencapet
    @netizencapet 22 часа назад

    "Economic success tends to lead to economic success, whereas economic distress leads to the same"...by which he meant "the opposite".

  • @sulaak
    @sulaak Месяц назад +1

    Corruption is a problem, but ethnicity is also a bigger problem; if you try to fight corruption, the ethnic group that is in power will take it as an attack on their own ethnic group. The FT editorial clearly summarised Nigeria's problem - The deeper problem is the failure of the Nigerian state. The country had a challenging start. Post-independence governments inherited a country that jammed together people from two major religions, three large ethnicities, and 350 language groups. The discovery of oil did not help, transforming government business into divvying up rent rather than creating wealth. Four of the largest ethnic groups in Africa are in Nigeria: Hausa, Yoruba, Igbo and Fulani, and all that dominate Nigeria.

  • @karlostj4683
    @karlostj4683 Месяц назад +11

    The best examples of side-by-side success/failure countries are:
    - East Germany and West Germany during the post-WW2/pre-Communist collapse era.
    - North Korea and South Korea today.
    - Haiti and the Dominican Republic today.
    In all of the above cases, the failures were caused by the Government, with the countries having less restrictive governments exhibiting success. And with the example of East (failure) and West (success) Germany, once the two nations were reunited and the Communist dictatorship expunged, Germany today is in the "Success" category.

  • @apangel100
    @apangel100 2 месяца назад +76

    A lot of the reasons spelt out in this video for why Africa is so poor often sound more like excuses. Many European countries for example are also land locked but have access to international markets. A book called Dead Aid by Dambisa Moyo is a great read that addresses many of the questions.

    • @Spacemongerr
      @Spacemongerr 2 месяца назад +23

      Many "landlocked" European countries are not in practice landlocked, because it is easy to transport goods on the large rivers like the Rhine and Donau. For example, even Switzerland and Austria has some large ports. There is not actually a single European country that does not have ports with ocean access because of all the deep rivers across the continent.
      This is not the case for the vast majority of landlocked African countries

    • @NullSeries
      @NullSeries 2 месяца назад +8

      Things sound like excuses when you aren't willing to listen

    • @deaththekid3998
      @deaththekid3998 Месяц назад

      They are advanced NOW, for most of history those landlocked European countries have been sh*tholes. The only exception is Switzerland 🇨🇭 who is a very special case.

    • @bobsemple9341
      @bobsemple9341 Месяц назад +1

      ​@@NullSeriesnope. He's right

    • @ftftyffghfvghfcht6701
      @ftftyffghfvghfcht6701 25 дней назад

      @@Spacemongerr interesting. and what is the excuse for the ones that border the oceans?

  • @weasylife5600
    @weasylife5600 Месяц назад +58

    Tyranny, greed and corruption of a nation's leadership has always been a barrier to lasting success for any country without a doubt. This was true in Africa as well even before the colonials arrived. But that isn't really the root of the problem. Authoritarian regimes can, for a time, create a reasonably prosperous and orderly society (e.g. China). When Western colonial powers left or were overthrown, one set of shackles was often simply replaced with another (e.g. South Africa). In addition to the corrupt governments many African nations have the additional hurdle of widespread and systemic religious and ethnic discrimination especially in regards to education (e.g. Nigeria). Most African nations will never realize their full potential so long as they (the people and their leaders) continue to choose to segregate themselves along religious and tribal lines.

    • @davidmackie3497
      @davidmackie3497 Месяц назад

      A lesson for us?

    • @AaronOmole
      @AaronOmole Месяц назад +1

      I have one big problem with your summation. There was no choice for multi-ethnicism. If we compare ourselves to europe. You see that they only became multi ethnic in the last hundred years while have having mostly the same religon (eg. Belguim was a catholic and language split from the protestant the Nederlands). African countries can have not only religious, language and Lifestyle barriers, but also resource and power imbalances that were enforced during colonialism (eg. Hausa in nigeria are 60-90 of the african giants military. Thus military coups tended to have an hausian islamic undertone.). The country also interact with a world that doesnt want development but extraction of the continent.

    • @thegiggler2
      @thegiggler2 27 дней назад +1

      @@AaronOmole They started out with kings and rulers. Colonialism neither caused it nor exacerbated it.

  • @julinawak9272
    @julinawak9272 Месяц назад

    The shame is that so developed countries talk about poverty in a continent as it is so important in their own

  • @TJ-hs1qm
    @TJ-hs1qm Месяц назад

    There is also a lack of animal species that can be domesticated, and agricultural technology cannot be easily applied from north to south and west to east, as there is not only the Sahara but also massive jungles and rivers broad enough to allow two different species of bonobos to develop on each side.

  • @JCNL871
    @JCNL871 2 месяца назад +23

    Africans shouldn’t complain about the colonial borders that combine different ethnic groups in the same country. Have they never heard of the wonders of a multicultural society? Diversity is our strength after all and thus Africa should be the strongest continent.

    • @philwaller4379
      @philwaller4379 Месяц назад +2

      Say what we all know. Diversity is NOT our strength. It merely ampllfies our differences. In China, this was addressed by adopting a National language and National Borders and customs. It's called the One China Policy.

    • @kingalfred3902
      @kingalfred3902 Месяц назад +2

      Diversity is NOT strenght .!!......Unity is Strenght....!!.

  • @nikitagrishin1569
    @nikitagrishin1569 2 месяца назад +42

    There's a simple answer to this question (just look at Haiti, South Africa, Zimbabwe), but I'm afraid I'd be banned for saying it out loud

  • @kx4532
    @kx4532 Месяц назад +3

    There's always a king stealing

    • @squidward66
      @squidward66 27 дней назад

      True. We in the United States traded King George III for an unelected federal bureaucracy and ended up right where we started.

  • @mtg9587
    @mtg9587 Месяц назад

    So the problem with colonial powers drawing borders that included a number of different ethnic groups was that the countries ended up including different ethnic groups. Is that correct?

  • @EMan-cu5zo
    @EMan-cu5zo 2 месяца назад +45

    Investing in Africa is just not worth the risk for most. The governments are too unstable and corrupt to trust to do as they say they would get done. The leaders just figure it’s easier to just take the money, shut down or take over the business and run it to the ground. The place has great potential the people just need to see the larger picture.

    • @fadbtx
      @fadbtx Месяц назад +4

      Sitting on a box full of gold and saying that it is "not worth it"...

    • @Mr.Universe
      @Mr.Universe Месяц назад +6

      @@fadbtx yeah its usually just racial bias...The continent is ready for the investment I can a bunch of nations where its good but people in the west still hold on to these barbaric ignorant beliefs about the African continent.

    • @loganmedia1142
      @loganmedia1142 Месяц назад

      Investors don't care about corruption. In fact they're more than happy to take part in that corruption if it will bring them profits. Which it generally does.

    • @konaguzzi1
      @konaguzzi1 Месяц назад +1

      the big three are very stable but highly corrupt, corruption and conflict are the number one things too affect the all the countries on the continent by quite some margin certainly not colonialism.

    • @EMan-cu5zo
      @EMan-cu5zo Месяц назад

      @@loganmedia1142 until the government nationalizes your business and takes it for themselves. You do the work and put up the money and they just take it away leaving you with nothing. Some will take that risk but many won’t.

  • @FlamingManofIron
    @FlamingManofIron 2 месяца назад +115

    So where's the link to the MIT study?

    • @knusperkeks2748
      @knusperkeks2748 Месяц назад +35

      Too busy shilling his product to provide source.

    • @Whobgobblin
      @Whobgobblin Месяц назад +29

      I mean he gave you the title and the authors, use google

    • @dragonniz
      @dragonniz Месяц назад

      Daron Acemoglu & James A. Robinson - Why is Africa Poor?. Google it 😮‍💨

    • @josephman1488
      @josephman1488 Месяц назад

      You have google you know.

    • @josephman1488
      @josephman1488 Месяц назад

      @@knusperkeks2748 Google it.

  • @DonquijoteDC
    @DonquijoteDC 18 дней назад

    Having lived in South Africa and Europe, I am not sure why the banks have not been highlighted more in this analysis. Interest rates are much higher in African countries, wages are lower. So the barriers to become successful are much higher. Poor people side into an abundance of dept offer by the banks. And help to perpetuate the system.

  • @Pattern-Noticer.Its-tea-juice
    @Pattern-Noticer.Its-tea-juice Месяц назад +56

    Looking at the comments, I'm surprised that 'IQ' is not a banned phrase yet 😂

    • @fuzzy9294
      @fuzzy9294 Месяц назад +11

      It is impossible to measure a persons IQ without using an appropriate IQ test. One way to get a rough idea. If a person mentions another persons IQ then they are probably at the lower end of normal IQ. If they mention a whole continents IQ? Maybe below normal.

    • @nickkorkodylas5005
      @nickkorkodylas5005 Месяц назад +5

      @@fuzzy9294Lynn et al 2012

    • @fuzzy9294
      @fuzzy9294 Месяц назад +4

      @@nickkorkodylas5005 I have not studied Lynn et al's paper on National IQ's. For anyone who has not studied national IQ's at his level AND does not have academic knowledge of what an IQ actually is to comment on a national IQ or to guess an individual's IQ based on observed or reported behavior is ignorant and/or malicious. What I said about being at the lower end of IQ is a contradiction of what I just said an was said tongue in cheek.

    • @Pattern-Noticer.Its-tea-juice
      @Pattern-Noticer.Its-tea-juice Месяц назад +14

      @@fuzzy9294 Please stop talking nonsense. And do you also need a peer reviewed paper to realize that the sky is blue?

    • @JKnksrsly
      @JKnksrsly Месяц назад +1

      ​@@fuzzy9294ooohhhh. thank you for that. I'll be sure to let my right-wing friends know. you must be an administrator or someone important

  • @gravitascascade5798
    @gravitascascade5798 2 месяца назад +34

    I can think of another explanation

    • @duxxboi2298
      @duxxboi2298 Месяц назад

      ?

    • @fadbtx
      @fadbtx Месяц назад +24

      The real reasons are not discussed...

    • @reignman30
      @reignman30 Месяц назад +15

      Yeah the party of science sure does love to ignore uncomfortable truths.

    • @JJ_Smilez
      @JJ_Smilez 13 дней назад

      @@reignman30so I’ve seen this hinted at a few times in the comment section, and I’m genuinely curious what you mean by this? What is this other explanation? What is this video dancing around? Would you mind explaining this to me?

    • @maxboiiyeeet1041
      @maxboiiyeeet1041 День назад

      @@fadbtx colonization

  • @paegr
    @paegr 2 месяца назад +77

    "Not what you think" It's exactly what you thiNk

    • @bb.buchanan
      @bb.buchanan Месяц назад +31

      $900 billion+ worth of aid since the 60's and counting and I find it endlessly amusing how absurd the lengths are that academia will go to in order to avoid accepting what is so painfully, exhaustingly and obscenely obvious about the problems in Africa.

    • @ijustwannaleaveacommentony6511
      @ijustwannaleaveacommentony6511 Месяц назад

      well said
      @@bb.buchanan

    • @ijustwannaleaveacommentony6511
      @ijustwannaleaveacommentony6511 Месяц назад +23

      the glaringly obvious reason is unutterable esp in these comments. SA pre mandela and rhodesia put the lie to any geographical argument
      a better question - why is SA so poor NOW when it was incredibly prosperous within living memory

    • @bb.buchanan
      @bb.buchanan Месяц назад

      definitely climate change dude and oh, let's say... America? Can't think of any other reason@@ijustwannaleaveacommentony6511

    • @Mr.Universe
      @Mr.Universe Месяц назад +1

      @@ijustwannaleaveacommentony6511 Rhodesia was never a Bread Basket...Africa is a continent the Geography is obviously not going to be the same everywhere. South Africa is Poorer but you seem to omit that Nigeria is the wealthiest country on the continent. This video is definitely leaving a lot out. Also aid doesn't go to the common folk...much of that money cant even be accessed by these governments. Africans outside of Africa send in more money to Africa than aid from foreign governments (nearly 50 billion in Remittances)

  • @Sanguen666
    @Sanguen666 Месяц назад +44

    TLDR; The problem of Africa is the population...

  • @kevinmartin3345
    @kevinmartin3345 Месяц назад

    Interesting study. Some past and ongoing external factors were left out. I'll leave it at that.

  • @theultimatesuhak
    @theultimatesuhak 2 месяца назад +289

    Ladies and gentlemen. There is no elephant in this room! I repeat, there is no elephant! We just need to study the issue a bit closer. And we will do it around the perimeter of the room, because the middle section of the room is currently unavailable to us.

    • @RustingVagina
      @RustingVagina 2 месяца назад +1

      Hahahaaha idk mate, I think there's a pretty fn huge elephant in this room

    • @jfkst1
      @jfkst1 Месяц назад +16

      LOL

    • @astk5214
      @astk5214 Месяц назад

      Its cause they are more pigmented?

    • @boomperson818
      @boomperson818 Месяц назад +16

      I couldnt finish the video

    • @Jomchen
      @Jomchen Месяц назад +33

      The elephant is capitalism.

  • @killa3x
    @killa3x 2 месяца назад +6

    No one want to discuss the continent's average IQ is at a level that could never catch up to east Asia or the west. A lot of root cause talk but no one wants to look at that?

  • @Derzull2468
    @Derzull2468 Месяц назад +12

    Geography, climate, ground resources, IQ. There ya go.

    • @Hopesprings4ever
      @Hopesprings4ever Месяц назад

      Your comment regarding IQ reveals what your are