Many African nations with good resources are poor because the people are lazy.
True
False
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1
Answer:
yes but some how many of them are not like them
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0
False
Explanation:
- In Africa, poverty is the lack of opportunity to fulfill those African people's essential human needs. African nations usually slide to the bottom of a limited scale, with a limited of natural capital such as small size economic activity, for example per capita revenue or per capita GDP.
- Although Africa is very rich but has benefited very little from this abundance of resources and given the mining boom of the last decade yet still remains one of the poorest regions in the world, with almost 50 % of the population surviving on less than $1,25 monthly.
- The exploitation of natural wealth has all too frequently contributed to inequality and much of the continent 's money and profits has been valuable not to the general public, but to local and international leaders.
- Bad governance, which is one of Africa's major reasons of hardship, involves numerous state and workers' malpractices. This corruption has driven other African politicians to force away people's needs. Such leaders freely nominate unskilled employees in the main positions in State agencies and government departments after having established the personal law framework in which they view their offices as a form of control and financial gain. This form of governance affects and renders the poorest people vulnerable, because basic needs, such as safety, food and shelter, are denied.
- Lack of education also leads to deprivation factors in Africa. Lack of education. This absence is especially apparent in Sub-Saharan Africa, where educational exclusion rates are highest.
- Poor health is a big cause of poverty in Africa, because the poor can not afford to buy what they need for good health, including adequate affordable food and healthcare. The lack of awareness in the prevention of infectious diseases such as malaria, HIV / AIDS and the costs of treatments, testing and medication has a significant burden that just perpetuates the cycle of deprivation.
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