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Africa’s cultural economy and economic geography BA International Studies The Hague; November 9, 2012 Ton Dietz www.ascleiden.nl HUGE AFRICA Source; the Economist October 20, 2012, p. 34 Africa: Remarkable Economic Growth Source; The Economist October 20, 2012 p. 23 Source: De Volkskrant, October 25, 2012, p. 23 And visit: www.africaworks.nl However: growing inequality; and desperately in need of more inclusive development G =Gini coefficient; X = proportion of population Y = proportion of Income Source; The Economist October 20, 2012 p. 23 https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/ What about the Netherlands and the USA? < source: De Volkskrant Nov 3, 2012, p. 22 source: De Volkskrant Nov 3, 2012, p. 12 Sub Sahara Africa: position in the world (around 1990) Method of the American geographer John Cole • • • • • • • Population: 10% Area: 18% Productive Land: 13% Sweet water: 15% Fossile fuels: 4% Minerals: 18% Total natural resources: 14% • Natural resources index: 137 (world average 100) • Economic index (GDP/capita): 25 (idem) Africa’s poverty level % under poverty level of 1$/day: Dev countries Africa 1990 28 45 2001 21 46 2007 19 41 http://www.un.org/millenniumgoals/pdf/mdg2007.pdf Rich but also poor • Many different reasons: • Natural environment: relatively many poor, exhausted soils; major climate-related risks (droughts; floods) = low agricultural labour productivity; not a lot of agricultural surplus for sale • But in some areas; natural abundance: no ‘push for innovation’? Climate fluctuations in the Sahel, example Mali 1920-2000 Health: Exposure to tropical diseases (e.g. malaria) and HIV-AIDS, but also impact of malnutrition: undermines physical and mental strength + low labour productivity + high costs for society Impact of heat and rainy-seasons on labour input and effectiveness Geography: Many people live in places that are isolated; far from coasts and far from cities; long and expensive transport routes; agroecological/natural barriers north-south and eastwest Knowledge: low investments in knowledge infrastructure (‘modern education’); low skills to deal with global competition Labour (skilled) labour is expensive and not ‘disciplined’ and skilled enough to compete with Asia Lack of entrepreneurship: A lot of investment in social relations, to spread risks : family, religious groups, ethnic groups. Barriers to invest in ‘modern’ companies and difficulties to grow from micro to large-scale companies. Old images of Africa’s lack of progress: scientific racism and stereotypes Sub-Sahara Africa and the world: differences in ‘human capital’ around 2000 • Life expectancy: SSA: 47 jaar • Child mortality: SSA: 162/1000 • Analfabetism: SSA: 39% (adults = > 15 jaar) World: 66 jaar World: 78/1000 World: <15% Colonialism, imperialism, dependency! • Continued impact of colonialism; colonial mentality: lack of initiative; lack of entrepreneurship • Exploitation at world scale; Africa’s mineral and agricultural exports underpaid; African labourers subsidize the world economy; no real value added; frustrated/killed industrialization • The world dumps goods in Africa and does not accept Africa’s produce (import tariffs; quality rules) Exploration and exploitation Or is it “governance”? • ‘Bad governance’: corruption, kleptocrats, internal exploitation, elites do not care; precolonial patron-client relations still survive • Development aid has made dependent; elites have to convince donors and not their own population: undermining of democracy : Etc. Or is it war and violence? • Insecurity because of civil wars, weak governments, threats of coups and political strife; continuous ethno-territorial tensions; continuation of colonial state structures and boundaries • Whenever there is investment in physical infrastructure: damage because of war, lack of maintenance, theft. • A lot of investment in human capital’ not very effective because people die young due to wars and diseases Maps of violence and wars Enormous demographic change! • Sub-Sahara Africa: From 100 million in 1900 to 600 million in 2005; Africa as a whole now > 1 billion • Enormous migration: people on the move • Very fast urbanization: 1960: 20% = 65 million; now 45% = 460 million • Big differences within Africa: in some areas population decline! Urbanisation West Africa 19602020 Understanding the cultural economy of Africa • In many households: diversity of labour activities and sources of income Of the produce of labour • a lot goes to next of kin • and to in-laws (bridewealth arrangements; credit brides; old age support) • and to clan elders and ethnic leaders • and to ritual consumption ‘explosions’: marriages; funerals; etc. But also • Lots of payments to religious leaders (zakat; 10% Christians), to local government; to women group leaders, to village leaders, to owners of land, water or forests, to the central government (taxes, fines), to army/police/militias; to other types of ‘protectors’, to moneylenders, etc, etc And from what remains • Part can be consumed; part can be bartered; part can be stored; part can be traded, but often for low rewards to the primary producers. • And a considerable part is lost because of waste, theft, violence, war, fires, floods, and other forms of loss. Understanding Africa • By a combination of different scientific sources of information: • Climatology, soil science, physical geography; agronomy • Demography, health sciences, cultural anthropology, economics, governance studies • Precolonial, colonial and postcolonial history • Cultural studies (languages, art, religion) • And social geography to study regional diversity, scale, and connections Africa’s diversity • Climate: from very dry to ultra wet • Soils; from very fertile to badlands • People; from very innovative to very conservative • Economy; from fast growth to stagnation or decline; and often with major fluctuations • Governance: from good, effective and democratic to very bad, coercive and exploitative Thank you! and please go to www.ascleiden.nl or if you want to know more about my own work: https://home.medewerker.uva.nl/a.j.dietz but also: regularly consult: www.thebrokeronline.eu and if you read Dutch: take a free subscription of Oneworld: www.oneworld.nl/