My RSS Feed is a collection of inspirational Thinkers and Has Just Posted the Following:

Casson at the
TEDPrize.org blog (
get the RSS feed) points us toward this cover story in the May/June
Boston Review: "
Is It Africa's Turn?"
Reacting to recent economic data from Africa -- showing some growth and progress across the continent -- economist Edward Miguel writes: "Economic growth rates are at historic highs and democratization appears finally to be taking root. The question emerges:
Will Africa be the world’s next development miracle?"
Nine other activists, economists, and political scientists offer commentary on Miguel's thesis. Economist
Paul Collier (
watch his 2008 TEDTalk) makes an elegant point -- that aside from the growth due to democratization and commodities booms, there's a deeper process going on in some African economies of learning from what
doesn't work:
There is a process at work that does not depend on democracy and is so simple that analysts generally miss it: learning from mistakes. Since 1970 African societies have accumulated a huge stock of experience in how not to manage an economy. For example, from the mid-1970s until the mid-1980s Tanzania adopted regulatory policies that proved to be ruinous. The knowledge they gained through failure is valuable. Tanzania is now one of the best-managed of all Africa’s economies.
The full package of stories offers a rich set of perspectives on African economies.
Read it online here >>
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