
"Conditions in Africa Are Medieval."
Not in the slightest. It's true that some countries in the region are as poor as England under William the Conqueror, but that doesn't mean Africa's on the verge of doomsday. How many serfs had a cellphone? More than 63 million Nigerians do. Millions travel on buses and trucks across the continent each year, even if the average African road is still fairly bumpy. The list of modern technologies now ubiquitous in the region also includes cement, corrugated iron, steel wire, piping, plastic sheeting and containers, synthetic and cheap cotton clothing, rubber-soled shoes, bicycles, butane, paraffin candles, pens, paper, books, radios, televisions, vaccines, antibiotics, and bed nets.
The spread of these technologies has helped expand economies, improve quality of life, and extend health. About 10 percent of infants die in their first year of life in Africa -- still shockingly high, but considerably lower than the European average less than 100 years ago, let alone 800 years past. And about two thirds of Africans are literate -- a level achieved in Spain only in the 1920s.
"Africa Is Stuck in a Malthusian Trap."
Hardly. Malthus's world was one of stagnant economies where population growth was cut short by declining health, famine, or war. Thanks to the spread of technologies and new ideas, African economies are expanding fast and population growth has been accompanied by better health.
The continent of Africa has seen output expand 6½ times between 1950 and 2001. Of course, the population has grown nearly fourfold, so GDP per capita has only increased 67 percent. But that's hardly stagnation. Indeed, only one country in the region (the Democratic Republic of the Congo) has seen GDP growth rates average below 0.5 percent up to this year -- the run-of-the-mill growth rate when Malthus was writing in early 19th-century Britain. And though there have been all too many humanitarian disasters in the region, the great majority of Africa's population has been unaffected. The percentage of Africans south of the Sahara who died in wars each year over the last third of the 20th century was about a hundredth of a percent. The average percentage affected by famine over the last 15 years was less than three tenths of a percent. Africa has seen child mortality fall from 26.5 to 15 percent since 1960 and life expectancy increase by 10 years.
"Good Health and Education Are Too Expensive for African Countries."
Only sometimes. Some widespread health conditions in the region -- notably HIV/AIDS -- are still expensive to treat. But the most effective interventions for promoting health in Africa are remarkably cheap. Breast-feeding, hand-washing, sugar-salt solutions, vaccines, antibiotics, and bed nets together save millions -- and could save millions more -- and none need cost more than $5 a pop. Rollout of a vaccination program, for example, has slashed annual measles deaths in the region from 396,000 to 36,000 in just six years. And though Chad isn't going to see universal college enrollment anytime soon, some very poor countries have already achieved near-universal primary education based in large part on free schooling. In Nigeria, an estimated 76 percent of children expected to be completing primary school, based on their age, did so in 2005.
That even the poorest countries can afford to provide a basic level of health services and education to all of their citizens is one reason why many African countries that are as poor today as ever have still seen considerable progress in health and education. Take Niger, a landlocked country largely made up of desert. With a per capita gross national income of $170, it was desperately poor in 1962. And it is not much richer today -- income per head is just $280. Yet life expectancy has increased from 40 to 57 years over that time, and literacy rates have more than tripled.
"Adding More Schools and Clinics Is the Key to Education and Healthcare."
If only. Building schools and increasing access to medical help is a vital first step -- and the thousands of new primary schools and the rollout of primary-care programs are real regional success stories that have played a big role in improving quality of life. But access is only the first step. For a start, the quality of provision is often atrociously low. A recent survey of primary-school math teachers from seven countries in southern Africa found them scoring lower on math tests than their students. Also, there are social forces that play a huge role in determining outcomes. Deon Filmer of the World Bank looked at school location and enrollment data across 21 countries and estimated that if every rural household was next door to a school, it would increase attendance just 3 percent. The bigger factor is attitudes: Some survey respondents in Burkina Faso, for example, suggested that sending girls to school was the surest way for them to end up as prostitutes.
As for healthcare, survey data from across 45 developing countries suggests that if parents were a little better educated and knew more about treatments, this alone might reduce child mortality by about a third, according to analysis by Peter Boone and Zhaoguo Zhan. That suggests the importance of education and social marketing to health outcomes. In Bangladesh, for example, NGOs have encouraged the construction and use of latrines in rural areas by spreading the message that defecating in fields ends, in effect, with people eating their own feces. This approach has had more widespread success than traditional programs which just subsidized latrine construction.
"TV Is the New Opiate of the Masses."
That depends on what people are watching. More than a billion people worldwide have seen Baywatch, and you have to wonder whether that time could have been better spent. Still, the importance of knowledge and attitudes to development outcomes suggests a big role for communications technologies. And studies from around the world suggest TV watching in poor households can have a big impact. In Brazil, women watching soap operas on the Rede Globo network have fewer kids possibly as a result. In India, the majority of households in the state of Tamil Nadu have cable access -- and according to Emily Oster and Robert Jensen of the National Bureau of Economic Research, that access is associated with greater gender equality in the household, greater female schooling, and (once again) lower fertility. In Africa, TV campaigns have increased AIDS awareness in a number of countries. And it isn't just television that can change attitudes -- there have been considerable successes using community education programs to increase immunization, improve hygiene, raise land-mine awareness, and promote breast-feeding.
"Development Means Economic Growth."
It's more than that. The argument that sub-Saharan Africa is in a crisis of development is usually buttressed by grim statistics on the region's economic performance. Average per capita growth rates over the past 45 years have only just surpassed half a percentage point. About half of the people in the region still live on less than a dollar a day. They need more economic growth. But this is a limited perspective on what actually contributes to quality of life. If basic education and health services are affordable even in the poorest countries, and if there's a big role for knowledge and ideas in creating demand for these services, this suggests that income growth alone is unlikely to be a panacea.
And that's what the cross-country evidence points to as well. Economic growth is a comparatively minor factor in determining improvement in health and education as well as a whole range of other elements of the quality of life. Economist Bill Easterly's study of "life during growth" around the world found that changes in per capita income were the driving force behind improvements for perhaps three of 69 measures of broad-based development -- calorie and protein intake and fixed phones per person. But for the other 66 measures -- covering health, education, political stability, and the quality of government, infrastructure, and the environment -- income growth was not the driving force in change. There's much more to life than money, and people concerned with development need to think more broadly if they are to help sustain Africa's progress.
The United Nations' Millennium Development Goals, which set global targets for progress in areas including health, education, and the environment alongside income, are a welcome step in this direction. Some of the targets are too ambitious for a number of countries south of the Sahara to reach by the 2015 deadline, even with continued dramatic progress. But at least they help broaden the focus of the development community beyond GDP per capita.
"Aid Doesn't Work."
Sometimes. Sure, a lot of aid to Africa is wasted, and some goes to support silly ideas or countries that can't use it well. But aid has also supported some programs that have made a real difference in quality of life -- things like supporting the measles vaccination program, helping to eradicate smallpox, fighting river blindness, funding educational radio programs, building sewage networks, and providing scholarships so that poor children can afford to stay in school. Even the conclusion of the vast literature regarding aid's impact on economic growth is more positive than you might think. Researchers Hristos Doucouliagos and Martin Paldam recently conducted a "metastudy" of aid effectiveness that aggregates results from 543 estimates made in 68 papers. The exercise suggested a small positive impact of aid on per capita growth rates -- though the result is a statistically weak one. And with a greater understanding of what drives development in Africa and beyond, aid could play an even bigger role.
Too many people in Africa suffer under dictatorial regimes; too many parents see their children die of diseases that can be treated for cents; too many children leave school uneducated or never make it to class in the first place. Nonetheless, there is a lot of good news about Africa -- not least evidence of considerable improvements in average quality of life across the region and of a positive role played by both governments and donors in that process. Understanding that progress and its causes is an important step in ensuring it continues, so that ever fewer parents suffer the loss of a child, ever more children are educated, and an ever larger proportion of Africans can live life in peace.
Correction: The article originally stated, "In Nigeria, an estimated 72 percent of children who start primary school successfully complete it through the last year." In fact, 76 percent of children who were expected to be completing primary school in 2005, based on their age, did so. Foreign Policy regrets the error.
SIMON MAINA/AFP/Getty Images
Charles Kenny, a Washington-based development economist, is author of the forthcoming book The Success of Development: Innovation, Ideas and the Global Standard of Living. A draft is available free at www.charleskenny.blogs.com.
Thank you for writing a more balance article about Africa. However this article puts too much emphasis on vaccination. Vaccine programs do not work and are use as a tool of eugenics. AID/HIV was caused by a vaccination program to eliminate small pox but was really use to curb the population growth in Africa 1978. People soon discovered the real cause of AIDS/HIV vaccines and the inexpensive cures such as tetrasil and ozone therapies. Another eugenics program going into effect is the H1N1 'Swine Flu' or I called when pigs fly flu vaccine program. H1N1 'Swine Flu' is a manmade bio-weapon design to reduce the world population by 85%. It is the 1918 flu pandemic all over again that was caused by vaccines 40 million deaths. If anyone tries to impose mandatory vaccines on me or my children there will be a .45 magnum and 30 odd six waiting for them and your vests are useless.
Now the best way for Africa to develop is dumping the US dollar and switching to the Gold Standard and have all African banks and central banks complied with Basil III banking regulations. This will make them Gold reserve chartered banks. All African central banks must be government operations only and only the government can print its own interest free currencies that are back by Gold Palladium Platinum Silver and Rhodium bullion. Never allow private central banks to exist at all.
The reasons for this are because the United States Federal Reserve bank will be insolvent 09/30/2009 midnight EST. Once Africa has its Gold reserve banking system in place it will be well prepared for the 21st century.
If you look at Africa in a world context, a different picture emerges.
Witness this chart: http://bit.ly/1pJjHg
Given the degree of improvement in the rest of the world, these small gains in Africa are a crime, not a victory.
Thanks for the reflections on Africa. But I would like to add that Africa will progress if Africans are left to be in charge of most of the systems in Africa without having World Bank 'professionals' from the west deciding what a poor farmer in my village should do. If only African based innovations are given big chance to thrive then the continent would be a better place. For instance we have relied so much on western education which at times is not applicable to the situations in Africa. Most African school curriculum is pretty much what colonial governments left behind. Otherwise good commentary.
Education, health care, technology etc might be accessible to Africa but at whose expense? Africa hasn't yet attained that minimal rate of economic development that can cushion its trade deficits, Africa now need to invest in skills, services, infrastructure. Other wise Africa will remain a market as long as it chose to ignore and take the position of the global last born.
Cell phones and TVs don't bring hope
When I was in West Africa with the Peace Corps, I saw a lot of families with televisions and VCRs. I saw plenty of people with cell phones, even in the remote village where I lived. When 'development experts' list off how many cell phones people have in Africa as a measure of how far they've come, they're really missing the mark. People in the village had three or four TVs a piece, but they had no access to running water. Electricity was there, but people were sick all the time because of poor hygiene (again, due to lack of running water). People drank out of wells that animals had fallen into and died in. Sure, there was a local clinic. Development experts see that there's a clinic and automatically assume that the people living near the clinic have access to some sort of health care. While I'm sure that some of these clinic are helpful, the one I went to was a joke. There was lab equipment donated but nobody used it, the doctor prescribed eight different drugs for a simple infection, and he wanted to give me an MRI for no reason at all (but, as he lamented, the only MRI machine was in the country capitol). The people in my area had HIV/AIDS awareness education drilled into them from the time they were born--they knew all about the causes and effects of AIDS and the importance of getting tested--but they chose to follow the spiritual adviser of the village, who insisted that Red Fanta or a cold shower would prevent/cure AIDS.
The above poster is right--expensive World Bank 'experts' are a waste of time and money in some places. We can bring them fancy gadgets or even basic improvements, and we can feel really good about ourselves for doing it, but the fact of the matter is that a lot of people have no hope. They have access to television to see what the rest of the world is like, and they want THAT. They want the houses and the cars and the money, but they don't want to take the baby steps to get there, i.e. sending their girls to school, washing their hands, wearing condoms, using mosquito nets, letting their women handle money and leave the compound every once in awhile, etc. I asked several people if Peace Corps even helped in that area, and they said, "Only if one of you brings one of us back to America with you." Their local language didn't even use a future tense because, as my language instructor said, "What's the point? People don't talk in the future tense because they don't plan that far ahead." It's a vicious cycle of wanting desperately to have a better existence but having no hope that it will ever come.
First, @DeeLee
There are several languages that have no future tense. Among them are Japanese and Finnish. I would caution that this is at best an absolutely terrible way to gain insight into a countries development situation.
As for the article, the general tenor is welcomed and there is a lot of reason for hope. There is, in fact, a lot of hope. The idea that "people don't want to do anything for themselves" is ludicrous. I work daily with NGO's in Africa recieving no aid or encouragement from outside or inside their nations, building schools and other kinds of infrastructure for themselves and their communities. Many of these movements would not be possible without the free flow of information and ideas that the proliferation of communications technologies makes possible. They're able to call ahead to negotiate rates on materials, talk more easily with others in their field, etc etc. No one, not even the author, would argue that this means African nations have arrived. But the fact that Ghana has better cell coverage than the US is something they should be just as good a sign as when other developed nations completed national hardline phone systems. Newsflash - America wouldn't be without the telephone.
There are two things many critics of Africa ALWAYS forget. First, many of these "countries" weren't countries until 40 or 50 years ago. In contrast, Brazil, Argentina, China, South Korea, India, even South Africa have centuries of common culture, mythologies, work ethics, and civil thought driving their economies. Second, Africa is a continent. No, really, it is. Good to keep that in mind before we visit Burkina Faso and generalize our "life changing" experience to Kanzania, Kenya, the Congo, or Ghana. Finally, I would argue that the best use of UN or International Experts would be as teachers in many of Africa's existant universities. But that wouldn't be nearly as sexy.
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