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Did European Colonialism Benefit Africans?

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“We find it difficult to bring the available evidence together with plausible counter-factuals to argue that there is any country today in Sub-Saharan Africa which is more developed because it was colonized by Europeans. Quite the contrary.”

That is Leander Heldring and James Robinson writing in a new paper on the negative impact of colonialism on Africa’s economic prospects.

Source: Wikipedia

Source: Wikipedia

Interesting attempt at positive analysis of a difficult subject (esp. with regard to counter-factuals), although normative undertones drive most of the analytical narrative.

The negative legacies of colonialism – despotism, negative ethnicity, aid dependence, and general underdevelopment, etc – certainly do persist.

But for those unwilling to submit to the gods of path dependence, the question remains of how long incompetent African leaders will continue to blame outsiders for their own ineptitude. After half a century of independence, many Africans are wary of being the only ones left in the “bottom billion” once the East and South Asians climb up.

To paraphrase Achebe, the trouble with Africa is simply and squarely a failure of leadership. There is nothing basically wrong with the African character. There is nothing wrong with the African land or climate or water or air or anything else. Even external conquest and subsequent colonialism was not unique to Africa.

H/T Chris Blattman.


Filed under: africa Tagged: african colonialism, african dictators, benefits of colonialism, bottom billion, bula matari, Chinua Achebe, Chris Blattman, colonialism and development, cooper, crawford young, development economics, did colonialism benefit africa, effects of colonialism in africa, how africa can develop, institutional development, Institutions, James Robinson, leander heldring, legacies of colonialism, legacies of colonialism in africa, moradi, path dependence, poverty in africa, the trouble with africa, the trouble with Nigeria, underdevelopment in africa

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