I don't subscribe to Thomas Sowell's worldview, however, I found his geographic explanations for Africa's lack of development pretty convincing.
Here is the video below:
true , landlocked countries can be poorer but they don't have to be chaotic or undemocraticIMO, culture and institutions are way more important than geography.
West vs East Germany during the cold war, North vs South Korea currently, Nogales USA vs Nogales MX prove this.
Why Nations Fail by Acemoglu is a much better book and theory than Guns, Germs, and Steel by Jared Diamond.
IMO, culture and institutions are way more important than geography.
West vs East Germany during the cold war, North vs South Korea currently, Nogales USA vs Nogales MX prove this.
Why Nations Fail by Acemoglu is a much better book and theory than Guns, Germs, and Steel by Jared Diamond.
People really underestimate geography. It would always annoy me when I saw people on Anthropology forums deriding mostly nomadic cultures like the steppe Indo-Europeans and Turko-Mongols, peninsular Arabs or even the nomads of East Africa. Exactly what do you expect them to do? Most of that land, especially before modern technology, was completely useless for anything other than pastoral nomadism. For the environment they lived in the Scythians, Mongols, Arabs and even groups like your own ancestors did pretty well for themselves.
IMO, culture and institutions are way more important than geography.
West vs East Germany during the cold war, North vs South Korea currently, Nogales USA vs Nogales MX prove this.
Why Nations Fail by Acemoglu is a much better book and theory than Guns, Germs, and Steel by Jared Diamond.
When Moldova joins the EU either via merging with Romania or on its own while Ukraine doesn't, it will prove the cultural/institutional theory.
Especially over a time horizon like 50 years.
I definitely agree that culture and the institutions of a State are the biggest determinants, however, we've only recently been able to address geographic limitations and environmental conditions through the use of technology; think of all the lands that were unsuitable for agriculture before the use of phosphate + ammonium.
African Countries are still largely individual States rather than institutional States -- and this I think is one of the reasons why they're so unstable. Culture is undoubtedly the greatest determinant and African Nations are in a sorry state when it comes to culture.
I hate to say it and I only say this because I got it from various Africans themselves on forums over the years but the issue is that most African countries are fake countries. That is to say that they are propped up colonial states that are usually not based on any historical kingdoms or ethnic boundaries.
Look at Nigeria or Kenya as prime examples and Somalia and Ethiopia as opposite examples where one exists based on the dominant local ethnicity and their own lobbying for independence and the other is based on the borders and acquisitions of an actual historical empire. In contrast, there is no real cultural or historical basis for why a lot of African countries like Nigeria or Kenya should even exist, though ironically even countries like Somalia and Ethiopia are hilariously fragmented nowadays.
Anyway, I've seen for many years how some types online from some of these countries will argue that their own home country like Kenya shouldn't even exist and they, as a Kikuyu for example, feel no real kinship with their fellow countrymen who are Maasai or Somali or Swahili or whatever and you can't blame them. Africa would benefit from some border restructuring, me thinks. Perhaps some of these politicians would care more if there was a real country they truly felt was theirs they in turn felt loyal to. Would at least make nationalism easier to inspire.
African States are entirely fictional; the tribes are the real Nations and it's the tribes most of us owe our loyalty to; there is no patriotism in Africa.
@Nilotic @Shimbiris
Tbh, it is a mix of both, early on in human history it leaned heavily towards geography and local biology, but nowadays the thing that is the biggest factor explaining relative wealth vs poverty is IMO almost exclusively institutional.
PS. Institutional doesn't mean only laws, but also the entire culture and actual implementation/execution of laws. Many former colonies got Western laws, but the corruption level and implementation (rule of law, actual power of regulations) is totally different from the West.
This is precisely why I think it would take decades to create new cultures that are not only philosophically and ethically coherent, but also superior; African Nations are corrupt because Africans are corrupt; the poverty almost neccesitates the corruption, but a dearth of ethical and political philosophy is the biggest culprit.
All of this reminds me of Clifford Hugh Douglas and his notion of 'cultural inheritance'; 'cultural inheritance' extends to science, economics and production.
Correct, geography had more say in the past (it still does a lot, of course) now the quality of institutions is more crucial than anything, one can argue. But then we have to say, these successful nations expanded their influence and power in so many ways throughout modern history that has made it hard for people that inherited difficult geography to facilitate something synthetically more functional because they are locked in these human-made structural forces and power dynamics that are part of a global phenomenon. Not only that, Africans have inherited and created negative cultures around power practice and the lack of respect for the institutional functionality, where traditional forces and tendencies did not mature well with the complexity of the modern world and the need for a coherent layered framework building formation, yet are still highly merged in a manner that is dysfunctional on the formal political landscape.@Nilotic @Shimbiris
Tbh, it is a mix of both, early on in human history it leaned heavily towards geography and local biology, but nowadays the thing that is the biggest factor explaining relative wealth vs poverty is IMO almost exclusively institutional.
PS. Institutional doesn't mean only laws, but also the entire culture and actual implementation/execution of laws. Many former colonies got Western laws, but the corruption level and implementation (rule of law, actual power of regulations) is totally different from the West.
That may be the case today, but before the industrial revolution I would say geography was much more important.IMO, culture and institutions are way more important than geography.
West vs East Germany during the cold war, North vs South Korea currently, Nogales USA vs Nogales MX prove this.
Why Nations Fail by Acemoglu is a much better book and theory than Guns, Germs, and Steel by Jared Diamond.
That may be the case today, but before the industrial revolution I would say geography was much more important.