One in Five African Adults Work on Farms
Gallup released a detailed research report that stated that 1 in 5 sub-Saharan African adults work on farms. This fact has broad implications for international development, GDP, the nations' Current Account and internal growth of industry.
Gallup interviewed 31,000 adults throughout Africa and found that these 20% of African adults are working on farms, causing little to no upward mobility for families of the workers since, by in large, the African workforce is older and less educated. Taking the 20% figure, and extrapolating it to the region's population, it means that 84 million adults are employed by the industry.
In order for the industry to thrive in Africa this 20% population (84 million) will need to grow, but it will need to grow in a more sustainable, future-forward way so as to implement new methods, technology and engage in partnerships to assure that the industry can yield enough to feed the sub-Saharan region, and eventually post a surplus to trade with.
An "out of touch" labor force working on farms means that implementation of modern agricultural methods and technology will lag. These advances would increase crop yields, provide methods to better survive inclement conditions, as well as bear fruit that would become a source of export.
Non-farm workers make early twice as much in a year.
In order for the industry to grow, and sustain itself, it must begin to find ways to compensate its laborers better that begins to march closer to non-farm workers. Currently a farm worker makes about half as much as non-farm workers. This might provide enough purchasing power within the agricultural regions in which they work, but it is probably not enough to sustain growth and development in a way that can change an industry.
There was an interesting positive note: families of farm workers had a higher average number of children within the household. As the sectors' labor force is getting older, an above average amount of young blood entering the work force (maybe entering agriculture) could rejuvenate the industry, force it to adopt more disruptive technologies and force a change from subsistence to surplus farming. This would mean more partnerships with NGOs, industry and governments to ensure that no adverse policies, tariffs or any other impediments would prevent growth.
The Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) mentioned in a report that investing in the "enhancement of agricultural productivity and engagement of youth, smallholder, and family farmers are among the key priority areas" The FAO have identified that these policies are important to "accelerate agricultural transformation and eradicate hunger in the region."
UPDATE: The Cynicism of the USA; Our Decline and Fall? (Part 1)
Via The Boston Globe
Curious. In this morning's Boston Globe there was an article titled, "Middle class eroding, gap widening in Bristol, R.I." which speaks directly to the issues that were mentioned in yesterday's blog post, "The Cynicism of the USA; Our Decline and Fall? (Part 1)". The article states:
"Like many other places in America, Bristol is increasingly a community of extremes, home to both great wealth and a shrinking middle class as more residents slip closer to poverty. Nearly one of every 10 households in Bristol County uses food stamps, more than double the number just a few years ago, representing one of the largest increases in New England."
Unemployment Rates for Bristol, RI and the Nation.
More than one third of households that are using the available food pantries (located about two miles away from Poppasquash Neck, where a mansion just sold for $5.2MM) have more than one wage-earner.
You can see that Bristol has a seasonal trend with their unemployment rate (blue line, and not surprising, it is a vacation destination), but it is consistently higher than the national average (red line). Note however that the lines are starting to separate indicating a growing inequality.
The Cynicism of the USA; Our Decline and Fall? (Part 1)
CIvic Virtue
The United States has entered a slump, but one that is not able to be programmatically fixed like other cultural-economic events such as the Great Depression, the bond craze fall-out in the mid-1980s or the bursting of the Tech Bubble in the 2000s. I am actually talking about a deep-seeded pit in the stomach, so severe that people are not sure how best to process their feelings. Our entertainment industry has never been a better barometer of the national mood, or zeitgeist, than when we regard it as a mirror to analyze the current culture of the nation. Remember the 80s? Movies during that time had a clear theme of exploration and exceptionalism, as an industry our entertainment division is tapped into our consciousness. But lately this mirror has started to project more than reflect: movies are getting far more graphic, wrestling and boxing have given way to the supremely more violent UFC, and headlines are made when a celebrity releases a sex tape, implodes on national TV or enters rehab, not for reaching out to the impoverished making lives better, or (ironically) not for exceptional work within their craft.
Lacking that ability to articulate the larger nature of popular displeasure - but broadcasting our displeasure anyway - has opened up opportunities for entertainment and music to reflect our overarching schadenfreude.
This is not the first time that history has reported on a general popular malaise. Indeed nations can swing in and out of these slumps rather often and quickly. It is when it becomes entrenched (as I believe it has in the USA) that we have to worry about the future. The last empire to fall victim to this was that of the Romans.
"The Oath of the Horatii" Jacques-Louis David's 1784
The painting was an 18th century touchstone on the ideals of "civic virtue" which became foundational political theory.
Source: Wikimedia
Historian Edward Gibbon penned this theme about Rome in his book "The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire" (publication dates: 1776-88). He attributes the long decline of the Roman Empire to a growing sense of malaise, loss of Civic Virtue and the empire's outsourced security to paid (stateless) mercenaries -- not to mention a whole host of other internal political and social issues.
However, it is the ideal of civic virtue and the related general malaise that I want to focus on. Gibbon states:
The decline of Rome was the natural and inevitable effect of immoderate greatness. Prosperity ripened the principle of decay; the causes of destruction multiplied with the extent of conquest; and as soon as time or accident had removed the artificial supports, the stupendous fabric yielded to the pressure of its own weight.
Through the decline of the Roman Empire, the multitude of historical accounts mention theories such as widespread malaise of the populace, outsourced military protection to stateless entities, agricultural stagnation (and lack of agricultural innovation) and a highly debased currency which started all the way back with Nero. Of these possible cause of decline, one theme does seem to pull through, and that is the theme of civic virtue, or the ability for society to instantiate habits that are deemed beneficial to the larger society. Ultimately, the situation that the Roman Empire found itself in saw many functional attributes that did not allow for agency within its populace and for civic virtue to erode.
Through the slow erosion of civic virtue was the increased need for security as levels of wherewithal increased. Rome disintermediated much of their workforce through outsourcing allowing the richer classes to retain more money and forced the poorer classes to look for work elsewhere.
As one would expect with a destabilizing empire the wealthy began to find ways to maximise and protect their wealth. They imposed policies through the Senate that would create, facilitate and enable laws to protect their way of life, how that life was funded and how that funding was protected. Hence, the rich get richer and the poor got less.
The widening devide between the rich and poor is something that we are experiencing in the USA. This blog post is one in a series of posts that speak to the theme of the loss of American Exceptionalism and focuses on the widening gap between the "haves" and the "have-nots" and its manifestation in our entertainment culture.
Widening Gap
Gini coefficient by OECD country (where available)
Source: OECD
Let us begin this thinking by reviewing a graph (left).
The Gini Coefficient is a measure of dispersion of income distribution of a nation's residents where "0" is perfect equality (all residents make the same income) and values that approach "1" show greater and greater inequality.
I have ranked nations into tiers, where tier 1 is closest to '"0" and tier 4 is closest to "1". Additionally, the countries along the x-axis are rank ordered from 0 to 1, left to right. It is interesting that the US is ranked between India and Turkey -- two of the more corrupt countries, known to be more unequal in their distribution of wealth.
Tiers 1-3 show a pretty stark difference in countries' income distribution, but tier 4 certainly shows the runaway nature of income inequality. Developing countries will tend to be out of balance as a wealthy class will form first and (ideally) expertly develop industry to begin to develop a middle class that ultimately distributes the wealth more evenly across the country (Slovenia is a great example of that, and it's not a surprise that they are ranked #1 in the list). Perhaps this is the sign of a maturing empire, but those empires that enabled such loss of civic virtue, and did not step in to correct and guide society, ultimately lost out to more disruptive empires (Rome, Russia, France, Macedon, etc).
As the wealthy become wealthier, and the gap widens, there is less of an expectation that the renowned "American Dream" can be attained. It takes more money than ever to differentiate ourselves through education, abilities to network, and even clothing. Professional (and alumni) networks are becoming more siloed and insular making it harder for those with less to succeed in affording what once was the key differentiator: education.
Loss of civic virtue along with the increasing disparity between the "haves" and "have-nots" leads to rampant pessimism and rampant pessimism needs an ally. People need to see their discontent in culture and culture has answered in spades: Flawed and tragic hero television shows (Mad Men, Breaking Bad, House of Cards, etc), schadenfreude in pop culture figures' personal implosion, 24hr news coverage, and an overall lack of hope contribute to fueling the fires of our despair: we believe we cannot be great and those that society deems great are met with rabid excitement when they fall from grace.
It is clear that we are not a happy nation, but we are not allowing ourselves to show our discontent, instead we fester and brood; anyone can tell you that that is not a healthy solution to a major underlying problem.