Africa and the Middle East

 

 

Sub-Saharan Africa

Map: Africa

Map: Sub-National Human Development

Map: Electricity in Sub-Saharan Africa

Map: Language Groups in Africa

Country List (48) and Charts: Sub-Saharan Africa

 

A.  West Africa - largest region in Sub-Saharan, including Nigeria and 16 other countries.

B.  Central Africa - dominated by D. R. Congo (former Zaire), has the lowest average income, but Gabon and Equatorial Guinea are relatively wealthy exceptions.

C.  Southern Africa - with mineral wealth and unique polity,  this is the wealthiest region of Sub-Saharan Africa, led by Botswana, Republic of South Africa, and Namibia.

D.   East Africa - many troubled countries, some showing new signs of stability and growth. Kenya, for example, was a leader in adoption of cell phone technology in Africa

Sub-Saharan African HDI Ranking in 2021




Human Development Index (HDI)  Life expectancy at birth Expected years of schooling Mean years of schooling Gross national income (GNI) per capita
HDI rank Country Value (years) (years) (years) (2017 PPP $)


2021 2021 2021 2021 2021
63 Mauritius 0.802 73.6 15.2 10.4 22,025
72 Seychelles 0.785 71.3 13.9 10.3 25,831
109 South Africa 0.713 62.3 13.6 11.4 12,948
112 Gabon 0.706 65.8 13.0 9.4 13,367
117 Botswana 0.693 61.1 12.3 10.3 16,198
128 Cabo Verde 0.662 74.1 12.6 6.3 6,230
133 Ghana 0.632 63.8 12.0 8.3 5,745
139 Namibia 0.615 59.3 11.9 7.2 8,634
144 Eswatini  0.597 57.1 13.7 5.6 7,679
145 Equ. Guinea 0.596 60.6 9.7 5.9 12,074
146 Zimbabwe 0.593 59.3 12.1 8.7 3,810
148 Angola 0.586 61.6 12.2 5.4 5,466
151 Cameroon 0.576 60.3 13.1 6.2 3,621
152 Kenya 0.575 61.4 10.7 6.7 4,474
153 Congo 0.571 63.5 12.3 6.2 2,889
154 Zambia 0.565 61.2 10.9 7.2 3,218
158 Mauritania 0.556 64.4 9.4 4.9 5,075
159 Côte d'Ivoire 0.550 58.6 10.7 5.2 5,217
160 Tanzania  0.549 66.2 9.2 6.4 2,664
162 Togo 0.539 61.6 13.0 5.0 2,167
163 Nigeria 0.535 52.7 10.1 7.2 4,790
165 Rwanda 0.534 66.1 11.2 4.4 2,210
166 Benin 0.525 59.8 10.8 4.3 3,409
166 Uganda 0.525 62.7 10.1 5.7 2,181
168 Lesotho 0.514 53.1 12.0 6.0 2,700
169 Malawi 0.512 62.9 12.7 4.5 1,466
170 Senegal 0.511 67.1 9.0 2.9 3,344
171 Djibouti 0.509 62.3 7.4 4.1 5,025
172 Sudan 0.508 65.3 7.9 3.8 3,575
173 Madagascar 0.501 64.5 10.1 5.1 1,484
174 Gambia 0.500 62.1 9.4 4.6 2,172
175 Ethiopia 0.498 65.0 9.7 3.2 2,361
176 Eritrea 0.492 66.5 8.1 4.9 1,729
177 Guinea-Bissau 0.483 59.7 10.6 3.6 1,908
178 Liberia 0.481 60.7 10.4 5.1 1,289
179 Congo DR 0.479 59.2 9.8 7.0 1,076
181 Sierra Leone 0.477 60.1 9.6 4.6 1,622
182 Guinea 0.465 58.9 9.8 2.2 2,481


African and South Asian GDP

Global Population

History

A.  Early History

1.   Rise of the Humans:  The first hominids (great apes) that used tools appeared in Southern, Eastern, and Central Africa about 4 million years ago, and the first Homo sapiens appeared in the fossil record in about 350,000 years ago. Evidence of long-distance trade begins about 320,000 years ago.

2.   Desertification: The Sahara region alternates between desert and savanna grassland in a long cycle caused by changes in the Earth's axis as it rotates around the sun, moving the locations of monsoons. In around 5000 BC, the Sahara entered a dry phase (that should reverse itself about 15,000 years from now), forcing much of the population to move north to the Nile valley and others to move south.

3.   Egyptians of the Old Kingdom: 2700-2200 BC, the "Age of the Pyramids," hieroglyphic writing, broad education, developed mathematics, plotted movement of stars and planets, prepared 365-day calendar.

4.   Kingdom of Kush - In part of what is now Sudan, there were wealthy merchants of ebony, ivory, perfume, and gold. During the 8th century B.C., conquered Egypt and controlled N.E. Africa. Discovered how to make iron; developed a major industry and spread technology to other regions of Africa.

Fun Fact: In Acts 8:27 (NRSV), "[Philip] got up and went. Now there was an Ethiopian eunuch, a court official of the Candace, queen of the Ethiopians, in charge of her entire treasury. He had come to Jerusalem to worship..."
"Candace" was the name given by Greco-Romans to the female rulers of Kush.  "Ethiopian" was a Greek term for Blacks more generally. The Biblical eunuch evidently was not from the land now known as Ethiopia, which corresponds to the ancient Kingdom of Aksum (below).

5.   Aksum - In the region that is now Ethiopia and Eritrea, a wealthy kingdom arose in the 5th century BC, based on trade links between the Red Sea and the Mediterranean, accessing Egypt, Israel, Greece, and Rome, and reaching to India and China. Aksum exported ivory, hippopotamus hides, gold dust, spices, and live elephants, and it manufactured glass crystal, brass, and copper for export. A Christian church was recently discovered in Aksum that was built in the fourth century A.D., about the same time when Roman Emperor Constantine I legalized Christianty and then converted on his deathbed.

3.   Kingdom of Ghana- First major power of West Africa, based in modern Mauritania and Mali during 5th - 8th C., A.D. Most people were farmers, but wealth derived from gold mining and iron production. Iron production supported military power, tribute from neighbors.

4.   Mali Empire - Replaced Ghana during 13th C; gaining control of the gold-salt trade. Led confederation of 3 states and 12 provinces.

5.   Songhai Kingdom - Based on Niger River, gained control of gold-salt trade from Malis in late 1300s. By end of 15th C., built largest empire known in W. Africa. Established efficient  provincial government and enforced system of weights and measures. Timbuktu became center of Islamic learning.
 

B.  Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade

1.   Slavery (usually of conquered people/tribes) was practiced within several regions of Africa before the Europeans arrived, and was conducted with Europe and the Middle East for many years, but grew enormously after Americas were discovered in 1492, revealing a huge labor shortage in the Western Hemisphere. Native populations were decimated, creating labor shortages. Slaves first exported from Africa to the West Indies in 1510. Continued more than three centuries.

2.   Africa lost 23 million to the slave trade, including many of the healthiest, strongest, and most skilled workers and craftsmen.

3.   The trade was abolished in England, the U.S., Holland, and France during the early 1800s. Sierra Leone and Liberia provided settlements for returning slaves.

UPDATE: Nunn (2012) argues that the slave trade caused long-term and continuing harm to economic development, because it damaged trust within and between tribal groups, reducing cooperation and the effectiveness of local governments.
Recent Afrobarometer surveys indicate that trust levels are still very low. When asked, "Can most people be trusted" in 2019-2021, only 14%
in 34 countries said "Yes." Most said , "I must be very careful." Many of the major countries, including South Africa, Zimbabwe, Nigeria, Kenya, and Botswana, had even lower levels of trust.

C.  The Colonial Period

1.   Short period of "legitimate" commerce between Africa and Europe during mid-1800s.

2.   During 1870s-1890s, during the "Scramble for Africa," all African territories except Ethiopia and Liberia were divided into 23 colonial possessions, held by 7 European countries. Africans adopted official languages and legal systems of the colonizers.

3.   Results of colonialism:

a.   Focus on low-cost extraction of primary products. Each colony became dependent on exports of a small number of commodities.

b.   Transport routes were built for a single purpose—to move the products of mines and plantations to their external destinations.

c.   Dual pattern of export enclaves in the center, migrant labor in periphery.

d.   Political boundaries ignored African ethnicities; interrupted indigenous nation-building.

e.   Little attention devoted to education of Africans.

f.    Little infrastructure built in rural areas where most of the population lived.

D.                         Independence, State Ownership, and Import Substitution
Independence movements started soon after WWII, but continued in many countries until the 1960s, and many countries followed the Latin American models of import substitution.

E.                              Socialism, Capitalism, and Authoritarianism
While the East-West Cold War continued, some countries were influenced by the Soviet Union, which had supported their independence movements. In some cases, though, such as in Ghana, initial socialist programs led to economic instability, leading to military takeovers.

Cultural Norms

Hofstede Culture

Education
School enrollment rates have improved enormously in most African countries during the past 20 years, especially at the primary level, so "expected years of schooling" is now much higher than "mean years of schooling" in the HDI table above. Still, all of the numbers are low by global standards. Schooling opportunities tend to be much lower in rural regions, especially at secondary levels and above.


Along with enrollment in education, equally important are problems related to the quality of education. In a recent World Bank survey of fourth-graders in 9 Sub-Saharan African countries, less than half of children in public schools could correctly read a simple sentence out loud, and less than 40 percent could correctly perform single-digit multiplications. The problem is larger for students who are taught in an official language that's different from the language spoken at home (which may be a tribal language). Another problem is related to the presence and quality of teachers. "On average, 22 percent of teachers are absent from school during a surprise visit. If teachers who are not in the classroom during this visit are also counted, the teacher absence rate rises to 38 percent."  "Teacher knowledge and pedagogical skills are also low in this SDI sample. The average teacher in any of the countries cannot correctly answer more than 80 percent of the math and 65 percent of the language knowledge assessment questions." Teacher competence was especially low in Niger where only a small fraction of the teachers tested have the minimum level of knowledge to teach French and mathematics at the primary education level. Still another problem in some countries is the scarcity of educational infrastructure: blackboards, functioning toilets divided by gender (important for giving access to female students), textbooks, desks, etc. 

Linguistic Divisions
In the discussion of education above, we noted the difficulties caused by teaching in official languages rather than the languages spoken at home. An enormous number of national, tribal, and colonial languages are spoken throughout Africa (see map). In Chad alone, 135 languages are spoken. This may be explained, in part, by the geography of the continent and by historically limited transportation, but also by other tribal practices. Research by several scholars, looking across a broad cross-section of countries, has found a negative relationship between linguistic heterogeneity and economic development: "In our data, the 10% most diverse countries had an average per capita growth rate of a meager 0.54% over the period 1960–2004, whereas the 10% least diverse countries posted a much more sturdy figure of 2.59%." (Source: Klaus Desmet, Ignacio Ortuño-Ortín, and Romain Wacziarg, “The political economy of linguistic cleavages,” Journal of Development Economics, 2012).  Extreme linguistic diversity seems to stand in the way of cooperation, trade, and higher productivity.


Agriculture
Sub-Saharan Africa has more than 25% of the world's arable land, and, in 2019, about 53%% of the African labor force was engaged in agriculture, compared with 43% in India, 25% in China, 9% in Brazil, and 1% in the United States.  However, it produces only about 8% of the world's food, and crisis countries, such as Somalia and South Sudan, are facing famine.

Today, about 85% of Africa’s farms are smaller than two hectares (5 acres), compared with only 11% at that scale in the U.S. and Brazil.



Africa Irrigation
Sources: This and the following charts/tables on agriculture are taken from Tavneet Suri and Christopher Udry,
"Agricultural Technology in Africa," Journal of Economic Perspectives, Volume 36, Number 1, Winter 2022, Pages 33–56.
https://pubs.aeaweb.org/doi/pdfplus/10.1257/jep.36.1.33

Africa Ferilizer Use

Africa Ferilizer Prices

Africa Agriculture Research


A.  Historical Farming Practices

1.   Shifting cultivation - nomadic lifestyles

2.   Settled cultivation - made possible by crop rotation techniques

3.   Colonial cash-crop production
 

B.  Land Tenure Systems

1.   Tribal communalism - insecure property rights with no legal title or protection. Continues to be a major system of tenure in many countries.

2.   European private ownership

3.   Gradual transition to African private ownership and to titling and protection of communal lands (see this chart)
UPDATE: Many studies have demonstrated that effective land reforms can contribute to agricultural productivity and economic development. Unfortunately, in Zimbabwe and other African countries, land has been redistributed to political cronies, and has reduced access to skill and investment.  See this article.

From World Bank 2014 report: At the end of apartheid in 1994, 86 percent of all farmland was held by the white minority (10.9 percent of the population). Although a land reform program was launched in 1994 to reduce land ownership inequality by transferring land from white South Africans to the majority and poor black population, as of March 2013, nearly 80 percent of the land was still owned by white minorities. In Kenya, three powerful political families were estimated to own more than 1 million acres of rural land, while at least 4 million rural Kenyan citizens were landless and at least 11 million owned less than 1 hectare.

Governance
According to Freedom House assessments, only 5 African countries were free or partly free in 1990, and that number rose to 30 in 2009. Progress on that front has apparently stalled, because the number still stood at 30 in the 2021 data.

Infrastructure
Lack of power and transportation infrastructure is a major impediment to growth in most of Sub-Saharan Africa. Mexico generates 14 times more power per person than Nigeria, and inadequacy of roads and other transport facilities hamper both internal and international trade. (Illustration: In Benin, you have to include replacement of a generator in your business plan to get a bank loan).

Health and Development
Research by Bhattacharyya (2008) indicates that malaria, AIDS, and other infectious diseases have a stronger negative influence on African development than the lingering effects of slave trade or colonialism. Disease, morbidity, and mortality reduces the level and growth of income by (1) directly reducing labor productivity and its growth, and (2) reducing saving and investment (including education) by reducing the expected life span.

Resource Curse
According to IMF analysis of exports, Africa is home to eight of the world’s 15 least-diversified economies: Algeria, Angola, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon, Libya and Nigeria (oil), Botswana (diamonds) and Eritrea (livestock). As we have seen, that can be recipe for instability of export earnings, rent-seeking behavior, and corruption of governments. See this.

 

Middle East and North Africa

MENA Maps

Country List and Charts


MENA HDI Rankings in 2021



Human Development Index (HDI)  Life expectancy at birth Expected years of schooling Mean years of schooling Gross national income (GNI) per capita
HDI rank Country Value (years) (years) (years) (2017 PPP $)


2021 2021 2021 2021 2021
22 Israel 0.919 82.3 16.1 13.3 41,524
26 UAE 0.911 78.7 15.7 12.7 62,574
35 Bahrain 0.875 78.8 16.3 11.0 39,497
35 Saudi Arabia 0.875 76.9 16.1 11.3 46,112
42 Qatar 0.855 79.3 12.6 10.0 87,134
50 Kuwait 0.831 78.7 15.3 7.3 52,920
54 Oman 0.816 72.5 14.6 11.7 27,054
76 Iran  0.774 73.9 14.6 10.6 13,001
91 Algeria 0.745 76.4 14.6 8.1 10,800
97 Egypt 0.731 70.2 13.8 9.6 11,732
97 Tunisia 0.731 73.8 15.4 7.4 10,258
102 Jordan 0.720 74.3 10.6 10.4 9,924
104 Libya 0.718 71.9 12.9 7.6 15,336
106 Palestine 0.715 73.5 13.4 9.9 6,583
112 Lebanon 0.706 75.0 11.3 8.7 9,526
121 Iraq 0.686 70.4 12.1 7.9 9,977
123 Morocco 0.683 74.0 14.2 5.9 7,303
150 Syria 0.577 72.1 9.2 5.1 4,192
183 Yemen 0.455 63.8 9.1 3.2 1,314


Historical Background:

570 C.E. - The Prophet Muhammad was born in Mecca in what is now Saudi Arabia.

610 C.E. -  According to Muslim belief, Muhammad received his first revelation, recorded in the the Quran, from the angel Gabriel, giving birth to the Muslim faith.

622 C.E. - In Medina, Muhammad established an Islamic state and started expanding it.

633 C.E. -  Muhammad died, but his father-in-law, elected caliph, continued territorial expansion. By 750 C.E., the caliphate expanded to include virtually all of today's MENA region (see map).

1099 C.E. - European Crusaders captured Jerusalem, but Muslims regained control of the Holy Land under Saladin, the Sultan of Egypt and Syria, in 1187 C.E.

1299 C.E. - The center of Islamic military power started shifting to Turkey with establishment of the earliest Ottoman state in Anatolia.

1453 C.E. - Ottomans conquered the Byzantine capital, Constantinople, and changed its name to Istanbul.

1699 C.E. - The Ottoman empire reached the peak of its territorial expansion, covering most of today's MENA, but not Persia/Iran (see map).

1914 - The Ottoman empire is defeated during WWI and European colonial powers start carving the MENA region (see map).

Timur Kuran's analysis: "Why the Middle East is Relatively Poor: Historical Role of Islamic Law"

Under Islamic law, businesses were based on partnerships, which had no continuity, unlike European corporations. So businesses had limited lives and didn't grow.

Social services were/are provided by waqfs (trusts) with inflexible missions, set by their founders, perhaps centuries ago.

Islamic laws of inheritance required  divisions of property, which probably was beneficial for social equality, but limited accumulations of wealth, compared to primogeniture in Europe, so Islamic businesses remained small.

Islamic lending practices, with relatively strict limits on payment of interest, hindered the development of financial institutions.

Sources of conflict in the region:

The resource curse.  Poor development of democratic institutions in oil-rich countries and the activity of foreign forces.

Conflict with Israel over failure to move forward on a two-state solution for the Palestinians (complicated by divisions in the Palestinian leadership).

Competition between Saudi Arabia and Iran for leadership of the region, magnified by sectarian divisions between Sunni and Shia and by the presence of external forces (Russian, American, and others).


Mena Statistics

Instability of economies that are dependent on international oil prices - see chart

MENA Organizations

The Arab League attempted to start a common market, but with little success. Serves more as a forum for security issues and to protest Israeli treatment of Palestinians. In April 2018, when Turkey invaded northern Syria, the Arab League passed a resolution calling on Turkish forces to withdraw.

OPEC is known, of course, for its attempts (sometimes successful in the past) to control global oil markets, but they have lost much of that control.

Although it includes only 6 of the 21 countries in the region, the Gulf Cooperation Council is probably the most important multilateral organization in the region. It has many of the same long-range objectives as the EU - a unified market, a customs union, a single currency, etc.

2014 - Cooperation was damaged in 2014 when Qatar was accused by the U.S. and other members of the GCC of allowing financial supporters of the Muslim Brotherhood, Hamas, and other Islamist groups to live in its borders.

2017 - Saudi Arabia (emboldened by its strong relationship with the Trump administration), Egypt, the UAE and Bahrain (but not Kuwait or Oman) claimed that Qatar was supporting terrorist groups, and cut diplomatic ties, closing borders and airspace, and imposing an economic blockade.

2017 (December) - Trump administration recognized Jerusalem as the capital of Israel, farther obstructing progress toward a two-state solution.

2018 - Brutal murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi by agents of the Saudi government, evidently working for crown prince Mohammed bin Salman (MBS), at the Saudi consulate in Istanbul, Turkey. 

2020 (September) - Abraham Accords signed in Washington, DC, normalizing relations between Israel, the UAE, and Bahrain. Morocco joined the accords in December 2020 when the Trump administration recognized its control over the disputed Western Sahara region, and Sudan joined in January 2021 when the Trump administration removed it from the list of "state sponsors of terrorism"and extended a $1.2 billion loan.

2021 (January, just as Trump was leaving office) relations between GCC countries were restored - travel and trade resumed.

2022-2023 - During the recent war in Ukraine, most of the Middle Eastern countries have attempted to remain neutral. In July 2022, President Biden met with MBS during a Middle East tour, encouraging MBS to increase Saudi oil production to ease Europe's boycott of Russian oil, but OPEC+ has agreed on the opposite - several rounds of cuts in oil production, contributing to global inflation.

 

 

 


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