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The main causes as to why a developing nation remains developing are:
1. Corruption
2. Food security/environmental
3. Overpollution
4. Exploitation
There are no institutions in 3rd world nations, people are encouraged to be corrupt and scam as much as possible, take Brazil as an example, corruption is like the weed that grows with a crop, in the case of Brazil it grew into gangs and organizations which de-facto control parts of their country.
Food security and environmental factors, Sudan is a good case of this and most of the middle eastern countries are aswell, Sudan is an arid nation which relies heavily on imported food, thereby becoming reliant on others to survive, this combined with racial and religious problems turned it into a warzone. Everyone is encouraged to rape and pillage and fend for themselves, there are no institutions or safety nets that keep the Sudanese society united.
In the case of overpollution and exploitation you can look at Indonesia and Nigeria. All of these points are tied together. Companies from developed nations export their labour into poorer nations, because the labour value provided by a Nigerian is equal to that of someone in a developed nation, except the the people in poorer nations hold very little global economic value. Cities in China, Indonesia, Vietnam, etc experience heavy amount of smog from factories.
Not only do undeveloped nations have to deal with domestic problems, companies from developed nations want to also create an environment which would have your country rely on these companies.
The cycle of going from an impoverish nation to a developed one goes something like this from my observations:
1. Agricultural state (undeveloped)
2. Labour state (semi-developed)
3. Service exporting state (developed)
Though you have to keep in mind many of the countries today are artificially created and can barely reach the first state. Being a developed country means your primary exports are services to other countries. It would be imperative to your own growth to create an environment in which undeveloped countries would keep providing your country with cheap labour.
1. Corruption
2. Food security/environmental
3. Overpollution
4. Exploitation
There are no institutions in 3rd world nations, people are encouraged to be corrupt and scam as much as possible, take Brazil as an example, corruption is like the weed that grows with a crop, in the case of Brazil it grew into gangs and organizations which de-facto control parts of their country.
Food security and environmental factors, Sudan is a good case of this and most of the middle eastern countries are aswell, Sudan is an arid nation which relies heavily on imported food, thereby becoming reliant on others to survive, this combined with racial and religious problems turned it into a warzone. Everyone is encouraged to rape and pillage and fend for themselves, there are no institutions or safety nets that keep the Sudanese society united.
In the case of overpollution and exploitation you can look at Indonesia and Nigeria. All of these points are tied together. Companies from developed nations export their labour into poorer nations, because the labour value provided by a Nigerian is equal to that of someone in a developed nation, except the the people in poorer nations hold very little global economic value. Cities in China, Indonesia, Vietnam, etc experience heavy amount of smog from factories.
Not only do undeveloped nations have to deal with domestic problems, companies from developed nations want to also create an environment which would have your country rely on these companies.
The cycle of going from an impoverish nation to a developed one goes something like this from my observations:
1. Agricultural state (undeveloped)
2. Labour state (semi-developed)
3. Service exporting state (developed)
Though you have to keep in mind many of the countries today are artificially created and can barely reach the first state. Being a developed country means your primary exports are services to other countries. It would be imperative to your own growth to create an environment in which undeveloped countries would keep providing your country with cheap labour.
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