How Nations in Africa agonize economically
How Nations in Africa agonize economically 98Llr
African is the second largest content runner-up to Asian. It seems that size does matter when it comes to economic development. Economic is the branch of knowledge concerned with the production, consumption, and transfer of wealth. It seems leaders of nations in African only know consumption and transfering of wealth into their pockets. While the rest of the world's economy grew at an annual rate of close to 2 percent from 1960 to 2002, growth performance in Africa has been dismal. From 1974 through the mid-1990s, growth was negative, reaching negative 1. 5 percent in 1990-4. As a consequence, hundreds of millions of African citizens have become poor: one half of the African continent lives below the poverty line. In sub-Saharan Africa, per capita GDP is now less than it was in 1974, having declined over 11 percent. In 1970, one in ten poor citizens in the world lived in Africa; by 2000, the number was closer to one in two. That trend translates into 360 million poor Africans in 2000, compared to 140 million in 1975.
African is the second largest content runner-up to Asian. It seems that size does matter when it
comes
to economic development. Economic is the branch of knowledge concerned with the production, consumption, and transfer of wealth. It seems leaders of nations in African
only
know consumption and
transfering
of wealth into their pockets. While the rest of the world's economy grew at an annual rate of close to 2 percent from 1960 to 2002, growth performance in Africa has been dismal. From 1974 through the mid-1990s, growth was
negative
, reaching
negative
1. 5 percent in 1990-4. As a consequence, hundreds of millions of African citizens have become poor: one half of the African continent
lives
below the poverty line. In sub-Saharan Africa, per capita GDP is
now
less than it was in 1974, having declined over 11 percent. In 1970, one in ten poor citizens in the world
lived
in Africa; by 2000, the number was closer to one in two. That trend translates into 360 million poor Africans in 2000, compared to 140 million in 1975.
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