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Africa’s geography isn’t likely to produce a super power so as to make the continent the “center of humanity’s future” at least in terms of the center of power. The lack of fertile farmland, lack of navigable rivers, lack of deep water ports, lack of self sustainable regional security, and general difficulty getting goods to markets is going to leave Africa seriously capital poor. That is, unless there is some technological development that turns off the geographic disadvantages.

If trends continue then it will exceed Asia as the most populous continent, but, due to the lack of capital it will also suffer a severe brain drain as regions with excess capital scoop up the best and the brightest to augment their falling or stagnant populations.

> The lack of fertile farmland, lack of navigable rivers, lack of deep water ports, lack of self sustainable regional security, and general difficulty getting goods to markets is going to leave Africa seriously capital poor.

Do you have spruces to back up these claims?

It's the geography, not the fact they have the worst corruption in the world - https://www.transparency.org/en/cpi/2020/index/cod

OP's point is totally off topic to the article, the actual article title is - "How Africa will become the center of the world’s urban future"

Africa's cities are big already and they will keep climbing. There's no reason to doubt this, they can support large cities, that's easy, it just won't be pretty.

No one is claiming they will be any sort of "Super power". Technology would have to change things in a big way for that to be true. Everyone getting drones in Africa isn't going to help with stability any time soon. OP is strawmanning it.

That average 60-70 iq is from a very severe lack of education and high end jobs not genetic as far as we know.

Either way, parent post explained what the article is about.

Yeah absolutely also iq tests aren’t standardized to the culture region etc. Severe malnutrition and lack of education are a real problem to progress though
Africa is also the most diverse by far, I'd love to have much more detail on how that intelligence is distributed.
It's vital that we improve access to nutrition and early childhood education in Africa for these reasons. Those are the main factors depressing IQ. Outright famine is no longer common, but malnutrition is still a persistent problem.
I'm not sure I buy everything he says, but it might be worth finding a Peter Zeihan talk, if you haven't heard one before. That'll at least introduce you to these arguments.

Unless this was a tree joke I missed.

Human capital far outstrips natural capital in terms of value. Geography has some importance obviously, and Africa does face significant risk due to warming from climate change.

What is really needed in Africa is infrastructure, more advanced education, and access to credit and investment capital. One good thing Africa has going for it is free trade between African Union countries. Access to such a large market is certainly a boon to potential businesses. Though language barriers can be a challenge.