the changing economic world Flashcards
where is Nigeria found?
Nigeria is in west Africa, next to Cameroon and Benin on the west coast.
why is Nigeria economically influential in the world?
Nigeria has the largest GDP in Africa and it has a large supply of oil to sell.
how big is Nigeria’s population?
7th largest population in the world, with approximately 200 million people living there
what is special about Nigeria’s film industry?
Nigeria’s film industry - ‘Nollywood’ - is the second largest film industry in the world.
does Nigeria have a good government?
the government is corrupt, as many officials take bribes. therefore Nigerians have lost trust in their government
what is the biggest industry in Nigeria?
agriculture since 70% of the population are farmers.
what is the life expectancy in Nigeria? how does this compare with the rest of the world?
54 years which is 19 years less than the average life expectancy for the world
what is the literacy rates in Nigeria? how does this compare to the rest of the world?
65.1% which is low as the UK has 100% literacy rates.
what is Nigeria’s rank in the human development index?
158 out of 188
why is oil important to Nigeria?
oil can be traded to make large profits
name two TNC’s in Nigeria
Shell - an oil and gas company
Total - a French oil company
name an NGO that gives aid in Nigeria, and how do they help Nigerians?
christian aid - protecting displaced Nigerians , supporting people with HIV, medical treatment for children
action aid - helping girls go to school, food parcels during COVID, pressuring TNCs to pay taxes.
demographic transition model
a model which describes how the population, birth and death rates change as a population develops. overall, the death rate then birth rate falls, whilst total population increases.
what is development
the progress of a country as it becomes more economically and technologically advanced
- can also be applied to improvements in people’s quality of life e.g. educational opp. increased incomes, human rights and good living conditions
LIC
low-income country
HIC
high-income country
NEE
newly emerging economy
GNI
total value of goods and services made in a country + investments made abroad. measured as GNI per capita
literacy rates
percentage of adults that can read and write to a basic level
access to safe water
percentage of population that has access to water that does not carry a health risk
infant mortality rate
number of babies that die before the first year of birth per 1000 live births
limitations of GNI
hides inequalities because it is a mean, does not include the informal sector (large problems in LICs and NEEs)
limitations of literacy rates`
hard to compare across diff. countries as there is no standardised test, data particularly hard to collect in rural LICs and slums
limitations of access to safe water
data particularly hard to collect in rural LICs and slums
limitations of infant mortality rate
- requires countries to have good administrative systems that register births + deaths
- data particularly hard to collect in rural LICs and slums
human development index
composite measure using data from income (GDP/capita), life expectancy and education (literacy rates) to calculate an index from 0-1
stage 1 of demographic transition model
birth and death rates are both high and fluctuating. they tend to cancel each other out, accounting for a low but stable pop. high birth rate reflects high infant mortality resulting from poor healthcare, diets, etc. high death rate results from disease and very poor health care and living conditions.
stage 2 of demographic transition model
in stage 2, countries are not very developed and they have high birth rates and falling death rates. the economy is mainly agricultural-based so people have lots of children to work on the farms. infant mortality is still high because of an under-developed vaccination programme and poorly funded maternal care system. healthcare overall is improving due to economic development and so death rates are falling.
stage 3 of demographic transition model
death rate continues to fall before levelling off. birth rate starts to fall rapidly. the total population grows as the birth rate exceeds the death rate. further improvements in health care and living conditions (safe water and sanitation) cause the death rate to fall further and then level off. fewer children are needed to work the land and higher survival rates cause the birth rate to fall.
stage 4 of demographic transition model
In Stage 4, birth rate is low as women prioritise their careers and have less children and there are more service jobs that are better paid so women give birth to less children. the death rate is also low as better paid jobs increase the quality life and there is more tax money that can be reinvested in public services so there is very good healthcare and high education levels. there is a stable population and there is a large workforce to grow the economy. this means this stage is where high income countries are found with most working in the tertiary sector.
stage 5 of demographic transition model
the birth rate dips below the death rate as more woman choose to follow careers rather than having large families. this results in a natural decrease creating and ageing and declining pop.
physical causes of uneven development
land locked/location of country:
- stops trade with other countries, have to rely on neighbours
- africa has the most landlocked countries in the world which limits development
tropical diseases:
- limits development due to higher death rate - less people go to work or get an education
- DRC has climate related diseases like malaria
- stops growth of a country
extreme weather:
- can cost money to rebuild from it and causes a high death rate - limits development and growth
- Sudan in east Africa experiences years of drought
- however this isn’t always the case e.g. Australia and USA are rich and have extreme weather.
economic causes of uneven development
unfair trade agreements:
- powerful TNCs and HICs dictate terms of trade
reliance on sale of raw materials:
- raw materials when processed makes lot of money > so value is made in HICs + NEEs
- overproduction
- the price of cocoa beans halved in 1980s due to overproduction leading to an economic crash
- zambia is very dependent on copper . fluctuation of price of copper caused a 2% decrease on all exports
- don’t have the ability to process their own raw materials
historical causes of uneven development
colonialism resulted in:
>taking raw materials
- this didn’t leave colonised countries with enough resources to begin to develop which meant they couldn’t progress
- colonial powers in Europe took resources from Africa for free that made them rich
> slave trade
- this meant that there wasn’t a strong workforce that could bring income for the country so they couldn’t develop further.
- people were taken from Africa and sold into the slave trade
- 1650 - 1900s, 10 million people were taken
- didn’t invest in infrastructure, healthcare + schools
- didn’t have money to invest in good healthcare so their birth and death rate increases as well and they struggle to develop
> dividing up countries
- badly divided countries forced rival tribes together which caused civil wars that are ongoing today
what happened in 2016 (uneven development)
the bottom 99% and top 1% owned the same amount of wealth
what has the trend of uneven development been like? (wealth)
since 2009, the top 1% has been getting richer whilst everyone else has been getting poorer. the wealthiest regions of the world remain USA and Europe but Europe is about to be overtaken by China who, as recently as 1980, had less than 2% of the world’s wealth. Africa’s share of world wealth remains less than 1%
what has happened to the world’s wealth
+ health gap
over the last 200 years, the world’s wealth gap has increased, over the same time the world’s health gap has also increased. there is a positive correlation between wealth and health.
distribution of AIDS deaths around the world.
mainly occur in Africa and India, part of the reason for this is Anti- Retroviral Treatments are very expensive.
how has migration changed?
since 2004, the number of Polish economic migrants to the UK has increased significantly, there are now more than 750,000 poles in the UK.
what was the reason for the influx of polish migrants.
- high unemployment rates in Poland (PUSH)
- UK had a skills gap particularly in construction (PULL)
where did most asylum seekers to Europe come from
Syria where a civil war has been raging since 2011. - greatest no. went to Germany.
what country were the vast majority of asylum claims rejected
Kosovo, Albania and Serbia.
foreign investment
TNC’s set up a business and employ local workers
how does foreign investment help development
- business creation and investment in
- this then creates a multiplier effect due to more businesses setting up around it.
what are the problems with foreign investment
- exploitation of workers - can reduce people’s quality of life
- host countries can be left vulnerable if TNCs pull out quickly
examples of foreign investment
- in 2020, shell awarded contracts worth more than $0.8 bn to Nigerian registered businesses
- China needs resources so has invested in oil fields
industrial development
the building and growing of industries within an economy
how does industrial development help
- you move your economy from primary to secondary to tertiary so that he country can earn more money
- these profitable countries are then taxed which can then pay for education and healthcare.
- more affordable goods can be made for the home market
what are the problems with industrial development
- requires investment in education, expertise and investment in industry which is sometimes unaffordable
examples of industrial development
- Dangote is the richest man in Africa - his company is called Dangote cement
- Nigeria is in need of cement as it has a rapidly growing urban pop.
aid
a gift of money, goods or services to a developing country
how does aid help development
- money can be invested in economic and social development to improve quality of life in poorer countries
- builds relations between two countries
what is the problem with aid
- corrupt governments can waste aid money
- risk of mismanagement of money
- creates a reliance on aid
- if aid money is removed, projects can stop
- aid is quite unreliable
examples of aid
- 60 million mosquito nets distributed by the world bank, IMF and US government in Nigeria to stop malaria - multilateral aid
- Oxfam works in North Eastern Nigeria to support displaced people from conflict with Boko Haram
what is fair trade
the aim to give better prices and guarantees for the goods farmers produce, protecting their quality of life