Title: Why are some countries rich and others poor?
1- Why are some countries rich and others poor?
- An ensuing 21st-century paradox
Europe Supported by Africa and America William
Blake (1796)
Jelte Harnmeijer Schishuney / fishing place with
a pole / Waldron Island 10 July MMX
2For unto every one that hath shall be given, and
he shall have abundance but from him that hath
not shall be taken away even that which he
hath. - Matthew XXV29, King James Edition
3Outline
- 1. What are Poverty and Inequality?
- 2. What patterns exist in the distribution of
income? - 3. Why are some countries rich and others poor?
- 4. Neocolonial explanations for persistent
21stcentury poverty - 5. The link with Sustainability
41. What are Poverty and Inequality?
5Mohotlong, Lesotho
Guandong, Chinese-occupied Tibet
6Maputo, Mozambique
7New York, USA
8Kaokoveld, Namibia
9U.S. of A.
10(No Transcript)
11Nepal
12Money Happiness
13What do people think makes them happy?
After Cantril (1965)
14What do people think makes them happy?
What is well-being?
After British Social Science Research Council
(1975) In Douthwaite (1999)
15Income happiness
16Income happiness
Reported life satisfaction increases with income
to US10,000 15,000, then levels off at higher
levels
17The case for greaterequality
18Income inequality correlates with ...
social capital
19(4) Inequality
Income inequality correlates with ...
infant mortality
20(4) Inequality
Income inequality correlates with ...
mental illness
21(4) Inequality
Income inequality correlates with ...
drug abuse
22(4) Inequality
Income inequality correlates with ...
high-school drop out rates
23(4) Inequality
Income inequality correlates with ...
incarceration rates
24(4) Inequality
Income inequality correlates with ...
obesity
25(4) Inequality
Income inequality correlates with ...
trust in fellow humans
26(4) Inequality
Income inequality correlates with ...
homicide rates
27(4) Inequality
Income inequality correlates with ...
teenage pregnancy rates
28(4) Inequality
Income inequality correlates with ...
child well-being
29(4) Inequality
Income inequality correlates with ...
national altruism
30(4) Inequality
Income inequality correlates with ...
recycling
312. What patterns exist in the distribution of
income?
32What patterns exist in the distribution of income?
33(4) Inequality
What patterns exist in the distribution of income?
Compiled from 2003 World Bank country dataset
34What patterns exist in the distribution of income?
Per-capita income for white and black Brazilians.
Source IBGE Census 2000.
35What patterns exist in the distribution of income?
Where are the people?
100
10000
1000
100000
Income (US, PPP)
(AFRAfrica EAPEast Asia ECEEast- and Central
Europe LACLatin America OECDOrganisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development SASSouth
Asia)
Source Dikhanov, Y. and Ward, M. (2003)
36What patterns exist in the distribution of income?
Where is the dough?
Income (US, PPP)
100
10000
1000
100000
(AFRAfrica EAPEast Asia ECEEast- and Central
Europe LACLatin America OECDOrganisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development SASSouth
Asia)
Source Dikhanov, Y. and Ward, M. (2003)
373. Why are some countries rich and others poor?
38Why are some countries rich and others poor?
Summary of interviews conducted between February
2002 and June 2006.
39Categories of responses
40Categories of responses
41Categories of responses
42- Evolutionary explanations
- because some people are clever and others are
stupid. - - Anonymous white South African of Boer ancestry,
Hazyview, South Africa, July 2004. - The idea that some populations are more
energetic than others perhaps deserves some
consideration. - - J.P. Cole (1979), The Development Gap, page 111.
43(No Transcript)
44Categories of responses
45Categories of responses
46- (ii) Cultural/societal explanations
- ... the explanations offered for the contrasting
records in growth have most often focused on
institutions and highlighted the variation across
societies in conditions relevant to growth such
as the security of property rights, prevalence of
corruption, structures of the financial sector,
investment in public infrastructure and social
capital, and the inclination to work hard or be
entrepreneurial. - - Sokoloff Engerman (2000), page 218.
47GDP/capita relative to US in selected New World
economies, 1700-1997
Source Sokoloff and Engermann (2000)
48Categories of responses
49(No Transcript)
50(No Transcript)
51- (iii) Environmental explanations
- These areas were settled because the climate was
similar to that of Europe. - - Prof. Wolfram Latsch, personal communication,
April 2004. - I think that tropical diseases are largely to
blame. - - Prof. Roger Buick, North Pole, Australia,
August 2004.
52Koppen classification climatic zones
53(No Transcript)
54(No Transcript)
55(No Transcript)
56(No Transcript)
57- (iv) Historical explanations
- European countries have been around for a long
time. We are young. We just simply need time to
catch up. - - Nxobo Masika, Johannesburg, South Africa, March
2004.
58(No Transcript)
59(No Transcript)
60Dates of recent independence of developing
countries.
61Early dates of independence of South American
countries
62(No Transcript)
63(No Transcript)
64- (v) Inept-leadership explanations
- African leaders themselves have also failed the
resource-rich continent. They continue to
unscrupulously harp on historical injustices to
cover up for their political and economic mess
that are sic a sad manifestation of their
suppression of democratic governance. Corrupt and
inefficient management of economies, greed, power
hunger, disrespect for human rights, cronyism,
among other vices, have contributed to the
underdevelopment of Africa today. - Charles Mangongera, Should We Continue to Blame
Colonialism?, Financial Gazette (Harare,
Zimbabwe), September 19, 2002. - A district our size should have a much better
soccer field, but the money was pocketed. There
is corruption at all levels. Its a top-down
problem. - - Unemployed 27-yr-old Sidhinhyo, Morongulos,
Mozambique, April 2004.
65Evolution of Corruption by Regions of the World,
1984-1999
Source Lederman, D, Loayza, N. and Soares, R.R.
(2001)
66Who has the most to gain from corruption? (or
the most to lose from ending it?)
67(No Transcript)
68(No Transcript)
69- (vi) Psychological explanations
- There exists among us a strong feeling of
inferiority which comes from our awareness of
past white/European oppression. - - Anonymous fisherman, northern Mozambique, April
2004.
70(No Transcript)
71(No Transcript)
72- (vii) Neocolonial explanations
- We were told, and accepted, that our poverty was
caused by our poverty in the now famous theory of
the vicious circle of poverty and we went round
in circles seeking ways and means of breaking
that circle. Had we asked the right questions
we would not have exposed our economies to the
ruthless plunder brought about by foreign
investments which the exponents of the vicious
circle theory urged us to do. For, it is clear,
foreign investment is the cause, and not a
solution, to our economic backwardness. - - Former Tanzanian minister A.M. Babu, In Walter
Rodney (1965), How Europe underdeveloped Africa,
page 312.
73(No Transcript)
74(No Transcript)
75(No Transcript)
76(No Transcript)
77Economies are like fires ...
785. The link with Sustainability
79Neocolonial explanations for persistent
21st-century poverty
Earths ecologically productive surface
21.42?109 hectares
Per-capita surface required to support American
lifestyle 9.57 hectares
Global population on July 10th, 2010 6 795
329 623
Acreage required to support worldwide American
standards of living 3 Earths
80Fact
Present American standards of living for the
entire global populace are a physical
impossibility.
81(a)
(b)
Cartograms illustrating (a) country-level wood
and paper imports (by volume) for the year 2000
(b) country-level net forest loss between 1990
and 2000.
82Flows of raw material and fuel
83the case for greaterglobal equalityalmost
everyone stands to gain
84http//www.realfuture.org
the tide is on Our side