Why Do Poor Countries Stay Poor? (Unequal Exchange and Imperialism)

Support me on Patreon: / comradehakim
Podcast: open.spotify.com/show/7tk1sTZ...
Twitter: @YaBoiHakim
00:00 Introduction
00:14 Mandatory Parenti Quote
01:16 The Paper; Just how much is transferred from South to North?
02:25 History of Imperialism and Colonial Relations
03:15 Ideology
04:40 How Does The Shift Happen?
07:00 Consequences of Unequal Exchange
10:09 Aid and Other Fantasies
11:00 Excuses about Productivity
12:10 International Economic Manipulation
14:54 Conclusion

Пікірлер: 1 400

  • @YaBoiHakim
    @YaBoiHakim Жыл бұрын

    Support me on Patreon: www.patreon.com/ComradeHakim Podcast: open.spotify.com/show/7tk1sTZDeE8p9lnxYLy4Ky Twitter: @YaBoiHakim Capitalism is the reason, simple as. *Sources:* www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S095937802200005X#b9005 Naoroji, 1902, Pomeranz, 2000, Beckert, 2015, Moore, 2015, Bhambra, 2017, Patnaik, 2018, Davis, 2002 Sachs, 2005, Collier, 2007, Rostow, 1990, Moyo, 2010, Calderisi, 2007, Acemoglu and Robinson, 2012 J. Smith Imperialism in the Twenty-First Century Suwandi, 2019, Clelland, 2014 Dorninger et al. (2021), Lenzen et al., 2013, Lenzen et al., 2012, Wiedmann et al., 2015 Dorninger et al. (2021), Wiedmann et al., 2015, Bruckner et al., 2015, Chen et al., 2018, Alsamawi et al., 2014 Kikstra et al., 2021a Poore and Nemecek, 2018, Hornborg, 1998, Hornborg, 2012 Wiedmann and Lenzen, 2018, Costanza and Daly, 1992, World Bank, 2018, Hartwick, 1977, Martinez-Alier, 2021 Steinmann et al., 2017, International Resource Panel, 2019, Van der Voet et al. (2004) Hickel, 2020 Kikstra et al., 2021b, Srinivasan et al., 2008 DARA, 2012 Bringezu, 2015 Pomeranz, 2000, Patnaik, 2018 Fischer, 2011, Fix, 2018, Hunter et al., 1990 Suwandi et al., 2019 Goldman, 2012 Chang, 2008:141 Dorninger et al. (2021) Smith, 2016, Shiva, 2001, Shiva, 2016 Khor, 1995, Petras and Veltmeyer, 2002 Hickel, 2017 Moore, 2015, Patel and Moore, 2017 Harvey, 2005, Wishart, 2014

  • @wing19816

    @wing19816

    Жыл бұрын

    will you ever make a video on the soviet intervention in afghanistan

  • @macbethhm

    @macbethhm

    Жыл бұрын

    Why is this comment 4 hours old when the video released 2 minutes ago ⁉

  • @redfront6707

    @redfront6707

    Жыл бұрын

    @@macbethhm because he made the video so he has access to it early

  • @Pridetoons

    @Pridetoons

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank You but can you please put these sources in the description of your video.

  • @guyfromtheplaceshown3690

    @guyfromtheplaceshown3690

    Жыл бұрын

    Why did you not include settler nations like Mexico, Argentina and Brasil when talking about colonialism, and exploitation? If you insist on Australia or Canada, or even America but exclude Mexico and Latin America there is a massive double standard. Latin America had the fucked up encomienda systems, as well as they exploited people and land the same as any Anglo-colonies.

  • @georgekostaras
    @georgekostaras Жыл бұрын

    Remember that developing countries with a strong development oriented state are at risk of being couped or invaded

  • @aruspice

    @aruspice

    Жыл бұрын

    anyone who has ever tried to decouple from the US dollar in any way has historically been couped and or invaded

  • @goutamboppana961

    @goutamboppana961

    Жыл бұрын

    for ex india?

  • @goutamboppana961

    @goutamboppana961

    Жыл бұрын

    for ex india?

  • @jaihalai7674

    @jaihalai7674

    Жыл бұрын

    @@goutamboppana961 For India it was split and left in a state of turmoil due to Lord Mountbatten - last Viceroy of India and the person who drew the lines of partition

  • @missk1697

    @missk1697

    Жыл бұрын

    @@goutamboppana961 split into 3 parts and locked into permanent cold war with Pakistan

  • @harunsuaidi7349
    @harunsuaidi7349 Жыл бұрын

    My country, Indonesia, put a ban on raw nickel export because we want to grow downstream industries that would increase the value of nickel. There are also other war material export ban, but nickel is particularly strategic since it's an essential material in the booming EV industry, especially the batteries. EU filed a complaint and Indonesia's raw nickel export ban was ruled as violation of WTO rulings. Regardless of what you think about whether Indonesia has renege from its obligations or not, it's clear that the global north will not let the global south have full sovereignty over their own countries' economy.

  • @Bell_plejdo568p

    @Bell_plejdo568p

    Жыл бұрын

    exactly

  • @yohanesherbudisatriyanto3394

    @yohanesherbudisatriyanto3394

    Жыл бұрын

    Jokowi said that this is the new VOC. We should not give up. EU countries have pillaged, extorted and r@ped many global south countries. We should use our natural resources as leverages.

  • @petrikor4411

    @petrikor4411

    Жыл бұрын

    mantab ada org indo To add salt to the wound our biggest partners in the ev industry seem to be Chinese companies CATL group and foxconn (if I remember correctly), despite tesla being the most highly publicised.

  • @macaque791

    @macaque791

    Жыл бұрын

    The eu official economic policy is ordo liberalism, so of course they are opposed to protectionist policies. They banned similar laws in western countries. And btw when you join a trade organisation you have to respect its rules

  • @Bell_plejdo568p

    @Bell_plejdo568p

    Жыл бұрын

    @@macaque791 they only imposed those laws when it benfiets them and they ignore it when it doesn’t so stfu, the Eu policy of pillaging the planet since the last 500 years, is the exact same

  • @YaBoiHakim
    @YaBoiHakim Жыл бұрын

    Note on maps. This analysis really relies on the IMF list as stated in the video for economy classification. My editor took creative liberty and sometimes showed certain countries (i.e. Bulgaria) in imperial core or global north classification. Take that with a grain of salt, this is just footage to maintain your attention lol

  • @ravenouself4181

    @ravenouself4181

    Жыл бұрын

    Tbh, the whole of the Balkans should be excluded from the Imperial Core.

  • @Sasha-trans-fenix

    @Sasha-trans-fenix

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ravenouself4181as a Balkaner, agreed.

  • @generalKnack

    @generalKnack

    Жыл бұрын

    Russia is out of context (0:17 - 0:19)

  • @truedarklander

    @truedarklander

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@ravenouself4181 I'd argue it's peripheral within the imperial core

  • @missk1697

    @missk1697

    Жыл бұрын

    and poland should be classified as lapdog of imperial core lmao

  • @onlyabdelix
    @onlyabdelix Жыл бұрын

    When a Hakim video starts with a Yellow parenti clip just know it's a banger 💪🏿😤

  • @lochnessmunster1189

    @lochnessmunster1189

    Жыл бұрын

    Unfortunately, this video has failed to mention that the world's poorest countries are immeasurably richer than they were 100 years ago.

  • @sagedraws1000

    @sagedraws1000

    Жыл бұрын

    @@lochnessmunster1189 How does that change anything? Lmao

  • @sournois90

    @sournois90

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@Loch Ness Munster this only represents the rise in wealth concentration in these countries. no, this isn't a good thing.

  • @user-nk8zx1yw8s

    @user-nk8zx1yw8s

    5 ай бұрын

    @@lochnessmunster1189 You fail to understand that the increase in GDP has nothing to do with the increase in quality of life or the wealth of the common person in that country.

  • @lochnessmunster1189

    @lochnessmunster1189

    5 ай бұрын

    @@user-nk8zx1yw8s Please explain how the two aren't related.

  • @aliyyu_
    @aliyyu_ Жыл бұрын

    Aid is when a poor people of a rich country gives money to the rich people of a poor country

  • @johnnyflores5954

    @johnnyflores5954

    6 ай бұрын

    That’s basically what happens in Latin America.

  • @t00bgazer
    @t00bgazer Жыл бұрын

    "How Europe Underdeveloped Africa" by Walter Rodney is a good book on this topic.

  • @kambuyiblack7462

    @kambuyiblack7462

    Жыл бұрын

    Really? I had a chance to read but I looked away. After read Nkaume Book on neo-colonization it is like I understand the rise of communism and Maxist Lennin. I will definitely read your book within this year

  • @Soemrjruur

    @Soemrjruur

    Жыл бұрын

    @@kambuyiblack7462 nkrumah? you should read Babu. Here is a good quote from Babu’s “African Socialism or Socialism Africa?” on Nkrumah: “Inexperienced, and lacking in analytical thoroughness, Nkrumah for his part did not interpret the African situation in the full context of world-wide developments. He failed to see Africa as part of the global struggle between the rising sun of socialism and the setting sun of capitalism and imperialism. His socialism was a socialism of reforms, not of revolution. His anti-colonialism was partial, not universal . He saw only physical colonialism, which is but one aspect of imperialism, and he was ready to hobnob with the agents of the latter, the multinational corporations, in the hope of removing territorial colonialism..” This is unfortunately true. And in the beginning he even aligned with America. Anyways, Nkrumah is a legend. He was instrumental to African liberation. But his program was never really Marxist-Leninist. In Russia he would have been a Menshevik/Rightist at best. Though people who don’t want to do the work of analyzing revisionism’s historical roots thoroughly like to hide behind this idea that Nkrumah or Sankara or Cabral were the African Mao. It’s just lazy. Also, hardcore ML parties in Africa were suppressed by foreign agents as well. In general they were suppressed.

  • @guyfromtheplaceshown3690

    @guyfromtheplaceshown3690

    Жыл бұрын

    How Europe underdeveloped Africa? I am asking about what do they or you mean?

  • @AB-wl8kr

    @AB-wl8kr

    Жыл бұрын

    It's a very good introduction to the topic. Another one is ''open veins of Latin America''

  • @BarackLesnar

    @BarackLesnar

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@guyfromtheplaceshown3690 as Europe claimed ownership of resources and directed development, they only developed things that give them profit i.e. whatever they're extracting. They don't put any more than they have to into local infrastructure. So all the money ends up in Europe's GDP instead of Africa.

  • @adamspencer3702
    @adamspencer3702 Жыл бұрын

    The worst part of all this is we in the north don't need any of this. We can easily produce what we need domestically and import fairly what we can't. All this is to drive consumption, not to allow us to live good lives. We can live much better lives without consuming this much and bleeding ourselves and the world dry on the alter of capital.

  • @zachb1706

    @zachb1706

    Жыл бұрын

    What a dumb statement. Sure, we could produce it ourselves. How would that help developing nations? They rely on manufacturing jobs to stay afloat.

  • @BalkanSpectre

    @BalkanSpectre

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@zachb1706 under the current imperial regime

  • @guywiththepanzerhausf6478

    @guywiththepanzerhausf6478

    Жыл бұрын

    we are starting to do that actually, i see more and more made in EU stuff

  • @kenos911

    @kenos911

    Жыл бұрын

    @@BalkanSpectre they need more funding though, not less?

  • @adamspencer3702

    @adamspencer3702

    Жыл бұрын

    @@guywiththepanzerhausf6478 I do like a lot of what the EU does, though there is still a lot of work to be done. Lead forth and give us an example to follow across the Atlantic eh!

  • @plb863
    @plb863 Жыл бұрын

    I'll always be grateful to Hakim for offering an introduction to theory and for sharpening my world view from that of a confused leftist to a Marxist

  • @LifeInJambles

    @LifeInJambles

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah, all three presenters in The Deprogram are collectively responsible for me going from "maybe market socialist I guess" to an ML who recognizes the flaws inherent and helped me to understand a fair amount of intersectionality and system-focused thinking.

  • @LifeInJambles

    @LifeInJambles

    Жыл бұрын

    basically, they helped deprogram me

  • @mrsupremegascon

    @mrsupremegascon

    Жыл бұрын

    Don't worry, once you will grow up and have a job, you quickly learn how stupidly far frop reality those internet videos were.

  • @whoever79

    @whoever79

    Жыл бұрын

    Have fun at work tomorrow xD

  • @yamiart6149

    @yamiart6149

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@mrsupremegascon working is one of the main forces radicalizing people lol

  • @zacharygirgenti3790
    @zacharygirgenti3790 Жыл бұрын

    There's a great documentary called "Poverty Inc." and it really opened my eyes to how certain nations can have so much potential on paper, yet continue to languish.

  • @OneEyedMonkey9000
    @OneEyedMonkey9000 Жыл бұрын

    I remember geography lessons at school about the merits of providing aid to “third world countries”, stories about how poor people in India “bettered themselves “ and even a play from a local theatre group. Not once was the idea of colonisation as a cause mentioned.

  • @sanepillow59

    @sanepillow59

    5 ай бұрын

    I hear "corruption" mentioned as the cause for underdevelopment all the time but the second I point out that corruption is LEGALIZED in the US I hear cricket sounds

  • @hihowareyouhihowareyou3688

    @hihowareyouhihowareyou3688

    4 ай бұрын

    @@sanepillow59Corruption doesn’t affect the everyday person in the US, like it does in third world countries. Also the corruption index is proof that rich countries tend to have less corruption, especially at lower levels of society.

  • @sanepillow59

    @sanepillow59

    4 ай бұрын

    @@hihowareyouhihowareyou3688 Corruption affects every single person in the US. Corruption determines what you eat, what you pay for it, how much you get paid, whether you have healthcare or it's tied to your employer (like if you were a medieval peasant), whether you are able to find housing or new developments are blocked.... I put more faith in the reality that is plain to see than in a probably motivated index that only claims to measure a PERCEPTION of corruption (people in the US are sheepish and actually trust the smoke and mirrors they get) rather than the reality. Also I'm not gonna overlook that the organization that publishes said index has major ties to worldwide neoliberal banking

  • @sanepillow59

    @sanepillow59

    4 ай бұрын

    @@hihowareyouhihowareyou3688 Corruption affects everybody in the US. Corruption determines what you eat, what you pay for it, what you get paid, whether you have healthcare or if it's tied to your employer (like a medieval serf), whether companies pay for the environmental mess they make...and a million of other examples. As for the index you talk about, it only claims to measure PERCEPTION of corruption and not actually depict the reality. More importantly, the organization publishing it has ties to the World Bank so you be the judge of whether they have an agenda they're trying to push.

  • @mamboking0134
    @mamboking0134 Жыл бұрын

    Why do poor countries stay poor? The West: "Any reason except us."

  • @aoeu256

    @aoeu256

    Жыл бұрын

    Tropical climates are bad for farming(it rains overflooding or its completely dry), working (overheat unless you have expensive air conditioning), and tropical diseases are dangerous. The tropical people should be allowed to immigrate to cool areas, although maybe in the future things like cheap air conditioning with self-replicating solar panels, cultured food, and night vision (sleeping during the day*) will fix these problems.

  • @Mag_ladroth

    @Mag_ladroth

    Жыл бұрын

    @@aoeu256 is this satire?

  • @8is

    @8is

    Жыл бұрын

    @@aoeu256 That's been a very big problem for Sub-Saharan Africa, but modern technology has the potential to fix that. Take something as simple as the fact that no horses could survive the tropical diseases of Sub Saharan Africa which permanently neutered the economical development of that area for millenia. But in just the last 200 years, trains were invented which can circumvent this issue, which means that Sub-Saharan Africa has just recently been able to finally begin to progress into a more developed economy.

  • @8is

    @8is

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Mag_ladroth No, no it's not.

  • @kallerokanen8979

    @kallerokanen8979

    Жыл бұрын

    The entire premise is wrong. Poor countries don't stay poor. Every poor country is richer now than they have ever been in human history.

  • @jaihalai7674
    @jaihalai7674 Жыл бұрын

    This is a brilliant analysis on the report. One thing I think this definitely could be covered on a topic more close to what I'm familiar with is the Global North being responsible for the vast majority of ecological and climate damage throughout history, yet now when faced with a ticking doomsday clock, want the Global South to follow suit in their "Altruistic Climate Goals". It is clear that the Global North has the resources to allow developing countries to catch up, but will not due to their need to depress bargaining power in order to further exploit them as they need to maintain their monopoly on influence and resource flow.

  • @Tethloach1

    @Tethloach1

    Жыл бұрын

    The oldest trick in the book and people ate it up. Most nations are left overs from the Empires.

  • @mrsupremegascon

    @mrsupremegascon

    Жыл бұрын

    "We have the ressources to let poorer country to catch up". Did you ever walked in a Western city ? You didn't saw all the homeless people ? The young people struggling to afford a house ? The endless economic crisis ? Huge Inflation in Europe ? Poorer countries has a far greater gdp growth than rich countries. I will let you explain to the Westerners that are already struggling with money, that they infact are rich and exploit the rest of the world. No wonder why the West is becoming more and more nationalist with such speech against them from so called scholars.

  • @jaihalai7674

    @jaihalai7674

    Жыл бұрын

    @@mrsupremegascon All of that is a result of capitalism being a failed system. The issue isn’t a lack of resources but a lack of a fair and equitable distribution of resources. The rich horde resources while the poor suffer and are exploited. At the end of the day the resources are still being siphoned from poorer countries and sent to the Global North as shown in the video.

  • @mrsupremegascon

    @mrsupremegascon

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jaihalai7674 So what your proposing ? We stop trading with the South ? Put an embargo on their export so we makes sure no ressources leave the South ? This video explaining nothing. It just throwed some numbers, with barely any explanation and hope we believe him.

  • @cloudynguyen6527

    @cloudynguyen6527

    Жыл бұрын

    They ship trash to our country then act surprised when we refuse to recycle their trash. Their consumerism is absurd, more than whatever "primitive" technology we are using in our daily life.

  • @miguelpereira934
    @miguelpereira934 Жыл бұрын

    You should've also added that Portugal went extreme. They had a triangular route (Portugal, Brazil, and the African colonies). They enslaved Africans and took them to Brazil, they then brought the riches (Sugar, Pau-Brasil, Gold, silver, etc.) to Portugal and rinse and repeat. It is incredibily dehumanizing.

  • @sirkeeper2885

    @sirkeeper2885

    Жыл бұрын

    And despite all of that, the country was basically a third world country itself by the end of the dictatorship.

  • @niibor1

    @niibor1

    Жыл бұрын

    @@sirkeeper2885 how could they fuck up so bad

  • @sirkeeper2885

    @sirkeeper2885

    Жыл бұрын

    @@niibor1 Ah! Easy. In the beginning the colonial ventures were dominated by the crown, and nobility. Later the burghers did start to gain prominence as well. However, being imperialism, the wealth of empire got sucked up to the top. It went to palaces built by dirt-poor peasants, it went into ships manned by working men. These working men also died for said wealth but they were, of course, expendable. The majority of the population didn't get to see the riches, but they did foot the bill alongside the slaves, though not as inhumanely treated.

  • @emylily8266

    @emylily8266

    Жыл бұрын

    @@niibor1 because they slowly lost maritime influence as other, much bigger and more powerful, countries spread their influence overseas. Not to mention that from the start they were entirely dependent on countries like Britain to maintain their independence in Europe.

  • @mrsupremegascon

    @mrsupremegascon

    Жыл бұрын

    And yet Portugal is not that rich anyway. While countries that had barely any colonies (Scandinavia) even were colonies (Finland, South Korea) are more developed. It's almost as if, this video is just pure bs, and is just another demonization of Europeans.

  • @algfourty9185
    @algfourty9185 Жыл бұрын

    Excellently delivered as always, Hakim. Unequal trade is one of those things that I think most of us are aware of the existence of, but seeing the true scale of it is certainly eye-opening.

  • @frenzalrhomb6919

    @frenzalrhomb6919

    Жыл бұрын

    Seeing the scale of it was eye watering for me!!

  • @Tethloach1

    @Tethloach1

    Жыл бұрын

    Inequality can only be sustained if everyone is complacent forever.

  • @LVArturs

    @LVArturs

    Жыл бұрын

    Negotiate better then. And develop/buy technologies to make your own advanced production, so you don't have to export 5 times the mass you import. The global market is not a charitable organisation, everyone tries to squeeze out more remuneration from their skills and resources.

  • @frenzalrhomb6919

    @frenzalrhomb6919

    Жыл бұрын

    @@LVArturs "Negotiate better and buy/develop new technology ..." Yeah sure, because the poorest Countries ALWAYS approach the negotiating table from a position of strength, don't they? Buy/develop your own, better tech ... Oh yeah sure, I'll just see what kind of human resources my Universities turn up with this year, shall I? Oh yeah sorry, we've only got the one University in the whole Country, and it's mostly staffed with Junior High School level teacher's, and the only qualified Lecturers of our nationality have been head hunted ... While being educated, overseas!! Fancy that!!! The World Markets aren't a charity.... Except where and when they are, with huge Government subsidies and tax breaks by the $ Billion, I believe you call it "corporate welfare!!" Oh yeah sorry, they're what's called "incentives" aren't they? They're "incentivizing" the hell out of the corn growing industry, the oil and gas industry, the car industry, the housing industry etc etc etc, but never mind, all markets need INCENTIVES, I mean it is, after all, just HUMAN NATURE, is it not? .... PFF!!

  • @scepturer6275

    @scepturer6275

    Жыл бұрын

    @@frenzalrhomb6919 Lol, if my country Vietnam can become prosperous after a war then your country has no excuse.

  • @JustJanitor
    @JustJanitor Жыл бұрын

    I found Parenti in another video recently, and have become a fan of his talks. I might buy some of his books. I wish there were more audio books of his.

  • @KickinRadTopHat

    @KickinRadTopHat

    Жыл бұрын

    Parenti is great. Blackshirts and Reds should be required reading for any western leftist tbh.

  • @jordrider1917

    @jordrider1917

    Жыл бұрын

    kzread.info/head/PLXUFLW8t2sntyrV-cxP3yV7aNWXC8qKHM

  • @niibor1

    @niibor1

    Жыл бұрын

    There are a lot of his talks on Spotify if you haven’t looked yet

  • @bradnorthcote1301

    @bradnorthcote1301

    Жыл бұрын

    It's definitely a good time to read his book on Rome ("The Assassination of Julius Caesar: A People's History of Ancient Rome"). I just picked up "History as Mystery" from the library...Catchy title and fascinating revolutionary mythbusting, especially if you're interested in class analysis of Christianity. Sorry to say, like probably many of us I've read Chomsky's "Manufacturing Consent" but have yet to read Parenti's "Inventing Reality." Definitely worth putting on the list too, though. It might be trite to say, but if the best historians make their work relevant to the present, then his books are the pinnacle of that.

  • @kapatidtomas

    @kapatidtomas

    Жыл бұрын

    I can't deny that he sometimes spits bars especially on the clip that he says in this video

  • @fargoflagrant7796
    @fargoflagrant7796 Жыл бұрын

    "Underdevelopment isn't a stage of development, but its consequence. Latin America's underdevelopment arises from external development, and continues to feed it." - Eduardo Galeano 🇺🇾

  • @guest_4416
    @guest_44163 ай бұрын

    This video is very well made and really expands on what I've learned in school about unequal exchange.

  • @Octoberfurst
    @Octoberfurst Жыл бұрын

    Great video! I get so tired of hearing my fellow Americans say that countries in the global south are poor because of "corruption" and "ineptitude". No, it's because of exploitation! Thanks for setting the record straight.

  • @sceptile57

    @sceptile57

    Жыл бұрын

    It's even worse when people over here in latin america believe those lies so hard that we're so convinced it's our fault. That we're lazy and we just need to "work as hard and be as smart" as those in the US. If only they understood the people over there are the same as us.

  • @iodopovidona7458

    @iodopovidona7458

    Жыл бұрын

    @@sceptile57 Yeah it's pretty sad when we fall for that shit and even more so when we generalize our entire region as poor because of socialism, inequality and corruption. Chile and Uruguay are less corrupt than the US and avobe Southern Europe in the Transparency Index, Uruguay is less unequal than the US in the GINI index, alongside Chile they are amongst the most stable economies in the americas, yet they are still developing economies, so there must be something else beside those bullshit excuses.

  • @guyfromtheplaceshown3690

    @guyfromtheplaceshown3690

    Жыл бұрын

    @@sceptile57 Mexico and Latin America exploited slaves and the Natives, they are settler colonies like the US and Canada

  • @zachb1706

    @zachb1706

    Жыл бұрын

    The problem is a lot of countries are now adopting the welfare state model. Poor countries which can't afford it are facilitating incredibly expensive welfare programs. Why? Because of democracy. Votes matter more than building a prosperous nation. When you see places like the Congo with59% tax rates, you start to understand why they don't grow

  • @MK_ULTRA420

    @MK_ULTRA420

    Жыл бұрын

    They're poor because their wealth comes from resource extraction instead of value added. Trading oil and minerals for t-shirts, fast food and video games is a bad long-term economic strategy. Resource extracting nations also tend to lean to Socialism since Socialism doesn't require a service industry. China and India know this which is why they tried to build their own middle class as fast as possible to allow for their own self-sustaining service industries, even if it meant that their workers had to suffer for a generation or two via State Capitalism. Mexico knows this too but they're dealing with the CIA treating them like their personal playground.

  • @vtndzn
    @vtndzn Жыл бұрын

    A few weeks ago I finished reading the open veins of Latin America, by Eduardo Galeano. It's an excellent read for any American (in the broad sense of the word). Definitely recommend it to everyone interested on the subject of exploitation of the so-called third world. As a Latin American, I can say it gets emotional many times

  • @kambuyiblack7462

    @kambuyiblack7462

    Жыл бұрын

    My brother I am from Africa, 'emotional' is an understatement and irrelevant now. We need a serious conversation on how we can work together and address our problems we both in the same situation but oceans apart

  • @kokorochacarero8003

    @kokorochacarero8003

    Жыл бұрын

    It's so heartwarming how so many african brothers came together to comment on this thread

  • @PrinceZakariyya

    @PrinceZakariyya

    Жыл бұрын

    @@kokorochacarero8003 LMFAOOOO

  • @sonkoro-sama4040
    @sonkoro-sama40402 ай бұрын

    as a western european, this video made me stop delaying the reading on politics, economy,etc. if the situation is really this unequal and my lifestyle is based on the misery of so many people to this extent, it feels selfish not starting developing an awareness to eventually take action right now.

  • @sousmerde2retardataire
    @sousmerde2retardataire Жыл бұрын

    « The racist theory that the black man was inferior led to the conclusion that he deserved lower wages ; and, interestingly enough, the light-skinned Arab and Berber populations of North Africa were treated as ‘blacks’ by the white racist French. (...) The Nigerian coalminer at Enugu earned one shilling per day for working underground and nine pence per day for jobs on the surface. Such a miserable wage would be beyond comprehension of a Scottish or German coalminer who could virtually earn in an hour what the Enugu miner was paid for a six-day week. The same disparity existed with port workers. The records of the large American shipping company, Farrell Lines, show that in 1955, of the total amount spent on loading and discharging cargo moving between Africa and America, five-sixths went to American workers and one-sixth to Africans. Yet, it was the same amount of cargo loaded and unloaded at both ends. » -- W.Rodney, "How Europe underdeveloped Africa" Oh how things have changed...

  • @matusmotlo3854

    @matusmotlo3854

    2 ай бұрын

    They do this to this day, even in Europe itself. Southern and Eastern Europeans get paid roughly a quarter of what the "Aryans" get paid, despite actually being more productive and working more hours in a year. And that's only speaking of those in the EU.

  • @sousmerde2retardataire

    @sousmerde2retardataire

    2 ай бұрын

    ​​@@matusmotlo3854 Yeah, and if our wages were divided by 10 and the prices of products we're consuming was also divided by 10, then we wouldn't be/feel poorer, but it would be so much easier for foreigners to buy our mines/enterprises/.. if protectionnism is forbidden(, the world bank, i.m.f., ..., will make sure of that by locking countries into debt, and making sure they're grateful to us exploiters for our "help" towards this debt). But that's only an aspect of neo-colonialism, and i was surprised to discover that the most basic/important feature a.f.a.i.k., the old "export of raw materials(, with 'high competition'/'low margins')" for the South, vs. "export of manufactured goods(, such as planes or computers, with 'low competition'/'high margins')" for the North, hasn't changed much compared to colonial times, we do have Nintendo, Samsung, Huawei, but these are the main three countries that really made it in our markets, let's not have a "melting pot" of human beings if we don't want to, but only if we have a melting pot on our markets(, and i mean by that an equal standard of living for all countries, some could be more protectionnist i.d.c.). Yet this opposition raw//manufactured is still far from enough to talk about neo-colonialism, i remember that we strangely subsidize our agriculture to the point of losing money apparently, and as a result the poor farmers(, sometimes without any engines), will produce a food more expensive than the western one, so these countries can't even develop their agricultural "primary sector". One of the most shocking things, after the different kind of dumpings/'negative externalities' that have direct consequences on (non-)humans, is that even if life is more expensive in the west, you can still buy much more things with an hour of work than in southern countries, you can work 50h/week in harsher conditions and you'll still be able to buy less stuff than a westerner working 35h/week, more things should be shocking i know, but the unfairness is so obvious. And if these countries adopted our exact same laws, then they would still be in the same situation 50 years later, it's not a problem of legislation, and isn't as simple as 'rejecting free markets'/'embracing protectionnism'(, wise/knowledgeable is the one who'd know how to escape this condition, France should help its ex-colonies, that could be some starting point but it obviously won't happen, no western "leader" would ever pull the full-strength of h.er.is country to help another one, that's a useless wish, at most a couple hundred millions, but not teams to share knowledge, and build for free training centers and industries while accompanying the processes with its own market in a devoted/disinterested way, there's a lot of things to do but that'd be better trillions spent than in wars, it'd be a very serious endeavor, the kind of sacrifice that would deeply reverse our growth, until they rejoin us. It's a little-known fact that gdp per capita is growing faster in the west than in the South, such countries can't let that continue, they can't let their leaders be treated in european hospitals and even let stupid/evil people insinuate that the problem is cultural or genetic, and they can't realistically hope for a miraculous help from the West(, or anyone else really, nobody will slow its growth, these are childish dreams, perhaps if we were christians in the way of "i'm an eternal repenting sinner in front of the Lord", but that would also be a naive hope, it's pointless to talk about such "solution" any longer. On the other side, we'd simply need a collective awakening&desire to such project, i.d.k., it's technically feasible and i could envision our citizens agreeing to it with the correct propaganda/"pedagogy", i shouldn't be too cynical in rejecting at least the possibility of a western "sacrifice", you'd better polish your plan B though). I'm currently working with different people, some of them black(, mostly from Mayotte), and i was surprised to discover the extent of their interest/knowledge towards what's happening in Mali, Burkina-Faso, Niger, ..., immensely more than french people, they identify themselves as "blacks" and are surrounded with white historical figures, well, i digress, was just surprised that they were so much more informed/interested in what's happening than the average french(wo)man. I probably forgot quite a few things about neo-colonialism, but i'm also certain that i'm ignoring way more than that, here're a few arguments then.

  • @matusmotlo3854

    @matusmotlo3854

    2 ай бұрын

    @@sousmerde2retardataire Yeah, great analysis. It is a problem. The bizzare thing is that the Westerners sell us the idea that we just have to work harder, despite them working shorter hours and being actually less productive. The myth of people outside of northwestern (e.g. Aryan) Europe being lazy is complete bullshit. People elsewhere work longer hours, and produce mor per hour, than their people do. And yet we get paid shit, while the products, in many other areas, like Eastern Europe, where I live, are more expensive. Seriously, we're more productive than Western Europeans and also work more hours, and yet the food here is more expensive than it is in Austria. Fucking ridiculous. We need to bring down this system.

  • @JuanReyes-ej6uq
    @JuanReyes-ej6uq Жыл бұрын

    Can you please provide me with the research documents for the video. In my environmental economics class ( Neo-Classical BS), the professor was advocating to use game theory to get the global south to reduce emissions. During class I made a model very similar to what you are referencing. I basically said that even though the GDP figures show up in the southern country, the profits and commodity goes to the north, while the emissions and pollution stay in the south.

  • @YaBoiHakim

    @YaBoiHakim

    Жыл бұрын

    Pinned comment habibi.

  • @bobgriffin2070

    @bobgriffin2070

    3 ай бұрын

    How did it go?

  • @blessedandbiwithahintofmagic
    @blessedandbiwithahintofmagic Жыл бұрын

    This color scheme for the thumbnail is ♡ The production quality of Hakim's work is getting better and better constantly - I appreciate his laboring work ♡

  • @kapatidtomas
    @kapatidtomas Жыл бұрын

    As a Filipino comrade (who just recently became a Marxist upon stumbling your channel around the time on when genocidal Queen Elizabeth II just died). I appreciate you so much for mentioning my country (the Philippines) for being so rich in natural resources, but despite being rich in natural resources. By being historically exploited by outside powers, especially by the United States and by the US supporting a fascist dictatorship from 1965-1986 here, we never got to nationalize those resources + the fact of never taking advantage of developing our country futther with those resources because of that horrendous dictatorship that also stole billions of government money and outside aid. Hope we get a revolution to change all of that here eventually since the country's situation is still dire. Long live the working classes, death to capitalism's cancers (including fascism/imperialism), and may the international proletarian revolution prevail & persist!

  • @herrkommandank675

    @herrkommandank675

    Жыл бұрын

    Found the NPA Account In all seriousness, the country is rich in natural resources AND IS NOW EXPLOITING TO A GREATER EFFECT, that's why we have been experiencing rapid economic growth for the past decade. Nationalizing all industries is problematic, as it stiffle productive expansion, as compared to private-based industries, because less capital is generated and re-invested. Ever since the economic liberalization starting from the Ramos Administration up until the Duterte Administration, with his Foreign Investment Act and PSA Ammendments, it has resulted our GDP being multiple 4.5x from what it was in 2001 (100 USD Billion to more than 400 USD Billion). Before you fight for "workers right," which isn't something wrong, make sure those workers aren't unemployed first, as protectionism and import-substitution limits the greater expansion of our industries. Workers right don't mean sh1t if they don't have work in the first place. Fortunately, our manufacturing and service industries have been expanding BECAUSE OF LIBERALIZATION OF THE ECONOMY. Fascism is defined and characterized by the fanaticism of some racial structure, which leads to forming some sort of ethno-state, what you've said isn't "Fascism."

  • @CommunistBot

    @CommunistBot

    11 ай бұрын

    ​@@herrkommandank675 GDP goes up, big deal. All that matters is real wages

  • @robdeskrd
    @robdeskrd11 ай бұрын

    You don't even have to explain it in this way, it's much more fundamental- Who sets exchange rates for currency? What COUNTRIES run the WORLD bank?

  • @abody499

    @abody499

    9 ай бұрын

    yeah the monetary system is the elephant in the room

  • @mrtesticles889

    @mrtesticles889

    7 ай бұрын

    Jews

  • @sinoroman
    @sinoroman Жыл бұрын

    hopefully southern countries can get better deals in the future. perhaps when the global system is broken down

  • @alexfrost2420

    @alexfrost2420

    Жыл бұрын

    IMHO, the issue is not the globalism itself. It might have been a force of good and for good with a fairer economic system.

  • @liasonlee1248

    @liasonlee1248

    Жыл бұрын

    Better deals? Southern countries should revolt and cut any dealings to the north, let the north suffer the same thing they have caused the south over the centuries.

  • @duncan.o-vic

    @duncan.o-vic

    Жыл бұрын

    Even in the northern countries the majority of people are being exploited, globalisation itself is not a bad thing, it's the capitalism

  • @aoeu256

    @aoeu256

    Жыл бұрын

    @@alexfrost2420 Actually, thanks to hegemonic competition from China Africa & Latin America & Indonesia have recently been improving a bit economically with their infrastructure & factories, thats why the West is trying to demonize China.

  • @manovrsb

    @manovrsb

    8 ай бұрын

    ​@alexfrost2420 problem with our southern economy is if we raise prices on resources and goods , it'll make the final product and machinery EXPENSIVE for locals to purchase thus leading us into a crisis. Or if the government chooses to increase wages for the people it would lead to a collapse of the economy. Cheap labour isn't only for foreigners to exploit , locals do it as well even pay less than expected.

  • @edgarma4037
    @edgarma4037 Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for uploading this! Your original video on unequal exchange was what initially turned me away from a reformist socdem position and convinced me of the need for revolution, and it’s great to see this topic covered in a new light.

  • @todotwt8732
    @todotwt8732 Жыл бұрын

    Perfect timing since were discussing africa in geography class rn thanks hakim

  • @stefandv1480

    @stefandv1480

    Жыл бұрын

  • @stefandv1480

    @stefandv1480

    Жыл бұрын

    ❤❤❤❤❤❤

  • @stefandv1480

    @stefandv1480

    Жыл бұрын

    ❤❤

  • @stefandv1480

    @stefandv1480

    Жыл бұрын

  • @MrSomeSkeptic
    @MrSomeSkeptic Жыл бұрын

    God I could listen to Parenti all day. Not only is his voice calming but the substance is so great.

  • @folke_hagall2946
    @folke_hagall2946 Жыл бұрын

    I HAVE WANTED THIS SEQUAL FOR SO LONG!!! i am currently reading unequal exchange and the prospects of socialism, and as a member of an organisation in the the first world I think it's SOOO important that more people learn about this Vital theoretical concept!

  • @chinobiii
    @chinobiii Жыл бұрын

    Comrade Hakim, your work is beyond necessary! Marxism is growing a lot here in Brazil and seeing your work makes even more hopeful about revolution in a global scale.

  • @TheRedReid
    @TheRedReid Жыл бұрын

    What an absolute banger of a video! I'll definitely be using this in the future

  • @YouHaveAnApeHead
    @YouHaveAnApeHead Жыл бұрын

    Congratulations on 200k Hakim. It is probably a few thousand smaller due to accounts that are inactive and alternative accounts, but hey, big number go up. No doubt that atleast one if them 200k have been radicalised due to your content.

  • @Jkjoannaki
    @Jkjoannaki Жыл бұрын

    "Not underdeveloped, overexploited " Exactly

  • @Jkjoannaki

    @Jkjoannaki

    Жыл бұрын

    I'm greek and Greeks are poor bc we are just a big nato base and nothing else. Also, good for tourism.

  • @jman4062
    @jman4062 Жыл бұрын

    Great video, especially detailing that imperialism isn't purely militaristic in nature, which should be common knowledge with the work of Lenin, but isn't. My nation of Haiti was terrorized by this process from our independence. From Dessalines killing the French colons to obtain trade the British or the same deal by Haiti not being a Republic. To Henry Christophe giving total trade monopoly to the British. The French under the threat of 2nd invasion larger invasion demanded crippling reparations for liberating ourselves from slavery, not only that they gained near total monopoly on Haitian trade which they used as a backdoor to overthrow any president or leader who wanted to end the debts. After decades of foreign terrorization, by the US blowing up our ships because we were pirates until they recognized our existence in the 1860s after 60 years of independence in a very similar and spiteful act mirroring our neighbors in Cuba to this day. Even then we fell into a 3 way governmental struggle between the puppets of France, Germany and The US. Leading the Americans occupying the country for 2 decades. Even afterwards the dictators they left open sold out goods purposely unequally, so the US can get out of the depression and the Marshall plan. 1946 a large scale proletariat revolution against the state occurred however disunity between the Communist and Socialist parties combined with a National Bourgeoisie of noiriste 'liberals' with the threat of a second US occupation ended the revolution however with the rise of socialists in Haiti in popular politics lead to the US supporting the Noiriste who consolidated under Françios Duvalier, who had tens of thousands publicly executed, many more disappeared, massacres of whole towns, concentration camps and the exodus of nearly a million people. With the Cold War ending the US laxed their support for the Duvaliers leading the resurgence of the Communist party and Fanmi Lavalas the US supported military strong men and VSN death squad members. Who overthrew Aristide and only reinstated him when the military were losing to socialist militias liberating the country. Aristide would be reelected in, renouncing IMF restructuring, refusing western aid, restructuring the government and economy weakening western monopolies and oligarchs, increased wages by double, emphasized trade with Latin America and Africa over the US or EU, creating an economic pact with Cuba, called out the French for the 120 years of debts demanded, the repatriation of communists who were forced into exile. In this a group of oligarchs aptly named Group 184 started a color revolution with the disbanded Haitian military, police and paramilitaries, known as the "Cannibal Army" funded and aided by the US, France and Canada, after overthrowing Aristides they called a UN occupation to maintain their power. This government would collapse the Haitian society until this day serving Western imperialism. There is a mild bit of hope with the rise of various socialist movements and militias however it is still quite bleak. However we stand as the harsh reminder of this process and goals of exploitation the global south

  • @AbstractTraitorHero

    @AbstractTraitorHero

    Жыл бұрын

    Haiti is genuinely one of the most tragic nations to ever exist

  • @TRD315

    @TRD315

    Жыл бұрын

    That exactly what the U.S and British did to my nation. Woaw.

  • @jman4062

    @jman4062

    Жыл бұрын

    @Souven Tudu Pride and care for you own country is second to the accumulation of capital. Foriengers provides capital thus they will exploit the rest of the country for them. If not you will be overthrown in a US coup.

  • @YTChannel344
    @YTChannel344 Жыл бұрын

    Imagine being so as evil as to ruin other nations with large populations, knowing full well it will lead to global chaos to erupt and might even lead to apocalyptic wars breaking out.

  • @kambuyiblack7462
    @kambuyiblack7462 Жыл бұрын

    I have been saying this all along to my African brothers we are in a game where the score is 100 to 1. We cannot continue like our situation and poverty is normal. If we want drastic change we must engage in drastic actions we really owe our Ancestor that. Our fathers fought and never accepted slavery today we are by far the happiest slaves. A disgrace to the nature of a man. DISGRACEFUL!

  • @Redrot272

    @Redrot272

    Жыл бұрын

    I would love to see you try and explain to an actual slave that capitalism under todays standers is slavery.

  • @kambuyiblack7462

    @kambuyiblack7462

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Redrot272 slavery was capitalisms. Slavery has nothing to do with being chained up it has everything to do with your mind being chained

  • @Redrot272

    @Redrot272

    Жыл бұрын

    @@kambuyiblack7462 Slavery existed long before the concept of capitalism and it existed in Africa long before any Europeans started interfering. Slavery is someone being someone else's property, that's not a thing in your mind, that's a matter of fact. If you don't show up to work I doubt you have people chasing you down, beating you up, whipping you or possibly killing you, all under the accepted norms and laws of your society. Like there is a difference of me saying that your mind is a prison, because you are following certain patterns that you are used to, and you ACTUALLY being in prison. I also find it strange that you are saying it's in your mind but you yourself would describe your people as "happiest slaves"? Wouldn't the first step of freeing your mind be not to view your self as a slave?

  • @kambuyiblack7462

    @kambuyiblack7462

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Redrot272 You have never read the book written by the first free slave in America right? He said to free yourself from slavery you must first identify yourself as a slave - you must acknowledge that I am trapped and need to free myself. The slavery I talk about is the commercial race-economics slavery of Europeans on peoples across the world. This slavery is different and is highly sophisticated than all previous slavery in Africa or across. If you do not pitch up at work you will be in trouble (some manager calling you or giving you a warning the next day - this is my experience you cannot deny me my experience). Capitalism has incorporated slavery in the constitution thus making it hard to distinguish the two from each other. Understanding that to be a successful slave master you need to enslave the mind of the people you own or else they can revolt against you and even kill you. Better yet the slaves can reject to work thus ruining your business if you not control them well. That is way the author of that book said some slaves did not want to leave the farm - they accepted the position of slavery and their minds were entrapped to not picture a life outside the system of slavery - how will they eat and survive? African leaders are happy slaves because they have accepted they position. Obviously happy slave is humoristic, it is another way of saying a slave who has accepted his position and the slave master is very pleased with that position.

  • @ell3121
    @ell3121 Жыл бұрын

    Great video as always

  • @Azazin187
    @Azazin18711 ай бұрын

    This explanation can only work if you take the concept of "unequal exchange" for granted. But many Marxists pointed, rightfully, out that this concept is build on ricardian and neoclassical (unrealistic) assumptions. Here is an interview in Jacobin from 2020: David Zachariah: "Let’s turn to some central issues of economic inequality and redistribution. Radical economists have typically explained persistent global inequalities in terms of unequal exchange, monopolistic capitalists, or extra-economic imperial coercion. By contrast, you have argued that the main causal force reproducing such inequalities is capitalist competition itself. Can you explain how your theory differs from the conventional accounts?" Anwar Shaikh: "When you’re in the Global South, you think of the Center as this entity that has some sort of plan. That’s true to some extent, as the record of imperial powers like Britain makes clear. But the nature of capitalism subjects imperial planners and capitalists themselves to persistent pressures - what Smith, Ricardo, and Marx called the “laws of political economy” - which are beyond their direct control. And the resulting patterns also impose themselves in the Center itself. That led me to think, what are these forces to which even capitalists and their representatives in the state system are subject? When you look at the history of capitalism you observe many patterns, such as the recurrence of economic depressions, which happen irrespective of anyone’s subjective intentions. Reading Marx gave me the sense that you could have a foundation to explain such things, and go on to explain regional and global inequalities from that base. That’s not to deny the heavy hand of imperialism, but I don’t believe that we need to explain it in terms of monopolization or unequal exchange in the traditional sense. I spent fifteen or twenty years teaching all three volumes of Marx’s Capital, trying to extract and develop his economic theory and apply it to the modern world. It seemed to me that the conventional account of “monopoly” was grounded in neoclassical theory. I used to be in contact with the Marxian economists Paul Sweezy and Harry Magdoff, who worked just two blocks away from the New School. I remember asking them what they meant by monopoly, and thus by competition? Their answer was basically that competition is what neoclassical economics says it is. It seemed incredible to me that they would reduce Marx’s notion of competition to that of Milton Friedman. They had relegated competition to some long-distant stage of capitalism - a view that was advanced by the highly influential Marxian economist Rudolf Hilferding at the beginning of the twentieth century. I believe that the same competitive forces that produce uneven development within national economies also produce regional or transnational inequalities. The difference is that within most advanced national economies, the state is under pressure to intervene in order to mitigate these imbalances, because they’re a threat to the whole system. In a world economy dominated by imperialism, powerful states can choose instead to suppress the struggles against inequality by force, for considerable periods of time." Basically what Shaikh is saying is, that not unequal exchange or "monopoly" were the source of inequality and poverty, but moreover competition.

  • @eb.e.1649
    @eb.e.1649 Жыл бұрын

    I live in an African country and this just misses the point. The reason why my country is poor is not because of western countries but poor economic policies that cripple our productivity and industries. Lack of property rights which makes us unable to take advantage of our own property for development. The governments here are too focused on centralising power instead of decentralising it and giving power to the common man and his local communities. It is what it is

  • @rickb3650

    @rickb3650

    Жыл бұрын

    Ask yourself where these "poor economic policies" come from. And for that matter, how did your country become a country in the first place? Empires don't just take the resources of the lands they conquer, they export their systems into the places they subjugate. You didn't say which country you live in, but since it is African the chances are good that it was created by a European power that dictated its borders and laws and forced multiple societies and cultures, some of whom had their own differences with each other, into this singular nation. This creates the foundations of internal conflict which they they can continue to exploit.

  • @MikeBNumba6

    @MikeBNumba6

    Жыл бұрын

    @@rickb3650 well said

  • @probablynotben6288
    @probablynotben6288 Жыл бұрын

    Why am I getting the feeling that he repeated what was said in the article word for word because he knows most of his viewers won’t bother to read it so he could save time on writing scripts

  • @strakhovandrri
    @strakhovandrri Жыл бұрын

    Dude, that's really a high-quality video. The only real minus here (aside from maybe accent for someone) is a lack of subtitles; though you speak clear and simple enough to not need them. I swear if it wasn't for the subject of video, your content would have hundreds of thousands of views. Probably millions. Then again, we all hope that more people could watch videos with content like this.

  • @thepeacefulenemy4026
    @thepeacefulenemy4026 Жыл бұрын

    Since I started reading/watching Paul Cockshotts’s material on your recommendation, I would sure love it if you could address his videos on this subject, especially where he uses the example of steel production in India vs the US, looking at their input/output data. But I know you’re a busy guy. As always, thanks so much for all you do.

  • @novinceinhosic3531

    @novinceinhosic3531

    Жыл бұрын

    He won't do because than cost-colonialists are going to cancel him and he will go broke.

  • @thepeacefulenemy4026

    @thepeacefulenemy4026

    Жыл бұрын

    @@novinceinhosic3531 apologies if I’m misunderstanding you, but you’d have a hard time convincing me that either Hakim or Cockshott would ever shy away from expressing controversial opinions. We are talking about nuanced differences within Marxist-Leninist thought after all. If they wanted safe and inoffensive, they could have just stuck with liberalism😂

  • @novinceinhosic3531

    @novinceinhosic3531

    Жыл бұрын

    @@thepeacefulenemy4026 On Cockshoot, yeah, he does not shy away, he makes stupid and uneducated claims in the most shameless manner, so I don't disagree with you on that. On Hakim.. I know the day since way before he got popular. Just aski him why he kept it a secret he's a muslim when he was in mostly hardline atheist circles. Also ask him why did he make his Holodomor videos private right about when he started to gain traction. Ask him why he went on Vaush's stream and never challenged him on anything and tried to look as agreeable as possible despite his comments both before and after the "debate". Let's be honest, Hakin just hit the jackpot and now all he cares about is money and popularity. He's just an online radlib prostitute for views and clickbaits together with his team, out of which Second Thought is the most deceiving and manipulative of all of them. It's quite easy with leftists: have a decent video quality and mic, do 0 research or if you reference something make sure the headlines say what you want to claim, don't bother to read the whole meta-analysis; spew the magical words and you gonna have close to a million of people eating from your hand.

  • @thepeacefulenemy4026

    @thepeacefulenemy4026

    Жыл бұрын

    @@novinceinhosic3531 🙄oh lord

  • @ehtresih9540

    @ehtresih9540

    Жыл бұрын

    @@thepeacefulenemy4026 what did he say?

  • @arabmarxenjoyer669
    @arabmarxenjoyer669 Жыл бұрын

    excellent video comrade, thanks for the research paper.

  • @nelsonvillanueva1
    @nelsonvillanueva1 Жыл бұрын

    I’m glad you put numbers to my thoughts. I thought it was mostly labor but it is clear that it is in way so many ways which includes labor.

  • @8is

    @8is

    Жыл бұрын

    The problem with the source and the entire concept is that it tries to measures value as cost of land, labour, resources, etc. But that's inaccurate since the true value of anything is the price other people will buy it for. If you measure by the true value of the products bought and sold between these groups of countries, the "unequel of exchange" would be 1:1 by definition. Just because the sum of all products from "the North" required less land, labour, resources, etc. than "the South's" products did, that doesn't mean that the North's products are less valuable. Natural resources are cheap, semiconductors are not. That's why poor countries will trade a lot of natural resources for a few semiconductors, because the semiconductors are a thousand times more useful and thusly valuable.

  • @piotrtchaikovski6674
    @piotrtchaikovski6674 Жыл бұрын

    Hakim when he remembers the 15 yo barista makes more in an hour than he makes in a day

  • @zachb1706

    @zachb1706

    Жыл бұрын

    Americans when they find out comparing income in other countries using dollar amounts is retarded

  • @h4Q6e
    @h4Q6e Жыл бұрын

    Yes! fantastic work! Besides researching unequal exchange and imperialism, Jason Hickel is also a major proponent of degrowth theory. I know from the podcast that you seem to not be a great fan of degrowth, but I would argue that it is absolutely necessary not only to tackle the structural differences in wealth created by imperialism, but also climate change, which is a byproduct of the need of capital to continuously grow. The ideology of growth is something that has persisted even in situations where capital had been defeated and arguably it is one of the reasons why often capitalism found a way of creeping back in. I would love in the future to see you tackle this topic. Thanks Hakim for your passion and your work.

  • @jacobdada

    @jacobdada

    Жыл бұрын

    The problem with degrowth is that it seems really obscene and impossible for most of the world. Not even talking about the 759 million people deprived of electricity, 800 million in malnutrition, there will be growth if the basic infrastructures are developed where they need to be. If someone from Tchad for instance say they need roads, power plants, public services, industries, local businesses, tourism... what can you argue? That beeing said yeah, gdp dollars are a messed up and nocive indicator for wealth.

  • @h4Q6e

    @h4Q6e

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jacobdada currently degrowth theory argues for the necessity of degrowth only in the Global North. Most countries in the Global South need to expand growth (as in production and consumption of materials, energy) to meet the necessity of their population. Also the majority of countries in the Global South do not exceed their share of planetary boundary. So in the North by reducing excess resources and energy use, and relying less on the exploitation of the South you would expect to also curb unequal exchange. It is quite a new idea, but I hope that it is going to gain traction in the future!

  • @jacobdada

    @jacobdada

    Жыл бұрын

    @@h4Q6e I doubt this idea can attract people outside of a limited social and geographic strata. Maybe for countries like the USA or Australia it would be economically viable, for some local communities it can be a way of life, but I don't get how it could play on a global or even national stage. Like a government would aim at negative growth? Also what you call share of planetary boundaries seems very vague, in terms of carbon emissions, under developed nations may not be so bad but when they start developing they are going to make huge contributions (India now makes up seven per cent of global carbon emissions...), the impact from development on biodiversity is still very much devastating... I really think degrowth is a bit outside the point, just mirroring the discourse of gdp growth when we mostly need to change the terms of the equation ie, the way we mesure wealth and evaluate a successful economy, which determines crucial loans and investments.

  • @Krgirk
    @Krgirk3 ай бұрын

    Voice from Kazakhstan. We have some "deals" from 90s with America and some european countries. Those "deals" focus on mineral resourses and oil. Only 2% of mined resourses are Kazakhstans profit. Now due to Ru-Ukraine war europe wants to build logistical infrastracture in Kazakhstan. Due you know what is a kicker in that one if it will be done? Companies that would build infrostracture - european. Companies that will controll it - european. Who will profit - european. And who will pay for that? People of Kazakhstan becouse all that logistical paradise will be financed by a credit from europe. So we will have a situation where we have 0 controll, 0 profit and we will have to pay that fcn loan. And the saddest thing is that our goverment enables it.

  • @richardcabanas1360
    @richardcabanas1360 Жыл бұрын

    This is great, I will literally use this video for research Projects, thank you Hakim

  • @f4b0
    @f4b0 Жыл бұрын

    maybe your best video. great stuff brother

  • @Th33Xx
    @Th33Xx Жыл бұрын

    If the world system is so static and unfair, how is it, that all these "core countries" are no longer "core countries": PT,ES, NL, FR, UK? Why did Japan, singapore, korea, rise to the top? Why is China, indonesia and India now taking over the West in total GDP?

  • @thanhvinhnguyento7069

    @thanhvinhnguyento7069

    Күн бұрын

    The answer is in the question. Think of it as trickle down economics, japan, china, korea, singapore lifting the whole region up by simply being close and favorable for trade. All these countries had great investment from the west

  • @MCDreng
    @MCDreng8 ай бұрын

    I was gonna say "Yellow Parenti" and then you actually showed the Yellow Parenti. True comrade

  • @slipknotboy555
    @slipknotboy555 Жыл бұрын

    Good stuff as always!

  • @drno87
    @drno87 Жыл бұрын

    Aid contributions are given in dollars and bestowed on larger organizations, so often the money is spent on imports instead of developing local economies (see Super-Imperialsm by Michael Hudson). Infrastructure aid usually goes to building roads and railways from the mines to the ports rather than trying to facilitate trade between different parts of the country. There's also strong interest to minimize social unrest. This can come in the form of propping up local strongmen, but there's also a systematic route. If social unrest is caused by social pressures, and economic changes lead to social and political changes, then it's in the interest of foreigners to minimize real economic reform.

  • @toomuchadam875
    @toomuchadam875 Жыл бұрын

    What a coincidence, I'm finishing The Divide by Jason Hickel, which is a deep dive into this very topic. I highly recommend everyone to read/listen to it.

  • @MaThyssen
    @MaThyssen Жыл бұрын

    Greatest Respect, Habibi, for another banger!

  • @CBleys
    @CBleys Жыл бұрын

    Great video as always,

  • @igotbeans2332
    @igotbeans2332 Жыл бұрын

    Daddy Hakim has blessed us once again 🙏

  • @fluoridestare3561
    @fluoridestare3561 Жыл бұрын

    I've been reading The Wealth of (Some) Nations by Zak Cope and struggling to understand it at times this video is a godsend!

  • @MrAsp11
    @MrAsp11 Жыл бұрын

    Another banger Hakim

  • @jazzyperson6797
    @jazzyperson6797 Жыл бұрын

    I totally found your youtube page based on the Deprogram and I can never decide witch of the 3 of you I love more!! keep up all the amazing work ^.^ Much love from and American Enby saving up to become a patron of the pod ^.^

  • @lewisrobinson3380
    @lewisrobinson33807 ай бұрын

    I haven't made it all the way through yet, but I hope that you touch on the fact that the vast majority of Global South banks have to pay interest on loans they get almost entirely from the Global North thus acting as an extra hidden Tax collected by and Large by the Nations they supposedly freed themselves from. This is a rather large issue for previous French colonies in West Africa for example who are virtually forced to get loans via French Banks. Which basically means at least a portion of whatever surplus value those African States might produce ends up going back France. I've also heard that China might be doing this to some extent but I haven't dug deeply into that yet.

  • @juliahenriques210
    @juliahenriques210 Жыл бұрын

    So weird to see many Latin American countries marked as "first world" in that starting map... GDP per capita would tell a different story, never mind GDP per capita excluding the top 5%.

  • @YaBoiHakim

    @YaBoiHakim

    Жыл бұрын

    See my comment on maps, it's right underneath the pinned comment.

  • @iodopovidona7458

    @iodopovidona7458

    Жыл бұрын

    Hakim's editor used a Cold War era map based on alignment rather than economy. Fun fact: Chile, Uruguay and Panama are the only Latin American countries in the High Income Economy group, that's solely due to their GNI* (Gross National Income) per capita being higher than world average (avobe 13000 US$), which means High Income doesn't necessary mean "rich" *GNI: It's like GDP but only accounts for the production that flows to or stays in the country.

  • @juliahenriques210

    @juliahenriques210

    Жыл бұрын

    @@YaBoiHakim Ok. No worries. Most of us who can spot such things know that you know better. ;)

  • @GarconTheGuy

    @GarconTheGuy

    Жыл бұрын

    @@iodopovidona7458 Correct

  • @dekippiesip

    @dekippiesip

    Жыл бұрын

    On the other hand it surprised me that Arab gulf states weren't included as first world.

  • @satirobarlettano
    @satirobarlettano Жыл бұрын

    great job as always!

  • @lochnessmunster1189

    @lochnessmunster1189

    Жыл бұрын

    Title of the video is incorrect. These countries are all richer than they used to be, a lot richer.

  • @ameridesign
    @ameridesign Жыл бұрын

    Starting my morning with a Hakim video! I've learned so much from you.

  • @cow1959
    @cow1959 Жыл бұрын

    Your channel is growing so fast

  • @rodjayoma7085
    @rodjayoma7085 Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for this video Hakim. As a Filipino, I always felt that the US has never been a good ally to the Philippines even after the end of the 2nd World War as it actively tried to undermine our economy through the Bell Trade Act and an unsustainable 2 peso per 1 dollar exchange rate that was imposed on us then later on through free trade agreements via the IMF and World Bank during and after the Marcos Regime. But apart from foreign actors, this type of exploitation is perpetuated by our capitalist and political elite alike who have turned our country into a right wing, small government(weak institutions), laissez-faire wet dream where power and money dictates everything. The gov't tries its best to spend the bare minimum amount for public investment in healthcare, education, infrastructure, etc. or if they do will fund it through foreign debt while handing the rest of the economy to a handful of oligarchs who heavily rely on rent-seeking and captured markets.

  • @ELVIR2

    @ELVIR2

    Жыл бұрын

    im a Filipino and you clear didn’t received proper education.

  • @matiasmendes8528
    @matiasmendes8528 Жыл бұрын

    It’s also interesting to see that the “ineptitude” that northern populations blame as the cause for southern world poverty is also due to political and cultural colonization, posing neoliberalism and the very participation of this unequal and unbalanced trade as the only way to develop a country, leading to skewed and virtually useless political debates on the third world. But also I would love an opinion on a way that this unbalanced trade could be used as a means to achieve national development and the acquisition of further capital/technology, even if it only possible through the exploitation of your workers, by a sovereign and sensible government, using china as an example. I wouldn’t call myself a through and through marxist or socialist, I have not read any theory whatsoever, but my interest in it is growing as a result of being completely alienated by my old political views as a citizen of the third world. I would love some help.

  • @tackyguy3095

    @tackyguy3095

    Жыл бұрын

    You need a strong state and be willing to sacrifice one or two generations for it to work. This is what happened to China. The results are there today but it was incredibly rough for most people back then. Simply put, the country is develops faster than it's citizens which means they work for fruits that they, most likely, won't be able to profit off. This worked in countries like China or SK thanks to socialists policies (yes SK had a lot of socialist policies even if it was anti-communist) but I believe the less individualist mindset also contributed to that. People were willing to sacrifice for the "better" good. But if you are not a socialist country, then to be truly successful in this system you will have to develop by exploiting countries of the Global South as well which is what these countries are doing. Maybe not on the same scale as Western capitalists powers but exploitation is exploitation. That's why Socialism, and eventually Communism, should always be the goal as exploitation is not a necessity anymore, you can afford to not participate in the Global Market and have strong local economical sectors. In such a country, you only a few (if not only one) company per industry so they don't need to compete against eachother. This allow the company to grow and have international weight. The profits are then reaped by the state which can then invest in another industry or in government initiatives which further develop the country.

  • @guyfromtheplaceshown3690

    @guyfromtheplaceshown3690

    Жыл бұрын

    Botswana vs. Zimbabwe. S.Korea vs. N.Korea United States vs. Russia (Including Soviet Union) How come the ones on the left in my previous message are better, more free and weathy... Because Socialism, bad economics and corruption rife in thr countries on the right. Yes the third world was affected by European colonialism, for better and for worse. And for some countries they definitely benefitted, does it make it right no, but Africa was no rich place before Europeans arrived [Aside from Muslim dominanated North Africa] (and fyi the Arabs were slowly colonising the continent since 700s, and doing slavery till the late 1800s which Britain stopped.) Also did you know American sweatshops in Bangladesh, Indonesia etc actually pay people more than the domestic equilivents, which means those workers get more money to spend and circulate the money around. I just want to clarify, Sweatshops are bad, I am not a neocon/neolib, those ideologies are so stupid and do not help people and neoliberalism and neoconservatism need to die but these are things that need to be said.

  • @es-yy2cm

    @es-yy2cm

    Жыл бұрын

    @@guyfromtheplaceshown3690 You just gave a Neoliberal argument while ignoring everything talked about in the video

  • @guyfromtheplaceshown3690

    @guyfromtheplaceshown3690

    Жыл бұрын

    @@es-yy2cm Fuck neoliberalism, I am describing reality.

  • @davidradtke160

    @davidradtke160

    Жыл бұрын

    @@es-yy2cm the video ignores a lot of the points being made here. It starts from a global north to a global south perspective. It Does not attempt to understand or explain differences in outcomes in the global north at all. North Korea and/or USSR are in that category. The framing of the argument and perspective ignores the points the above party is making.

  • @xabieretchepare3910
    @xabieretchepare3910 Жыл бұрын

    What a revelating and interesting video. A lot of important information. Keep it up!

  • @SuperTonyony
    @SuperTonyony11 ай бұрын

    Excellent presentation! 👍👍👍👍

  • @non-gmobuttplug6204
    @non-gmobuttplug6204 Жыл бұрын

    Yellow Parenti is majestic

  • @Spiritualmanlet
    @Spiritualmanlet Жыл бұрын

    Global south countries have two options: either reduce trade to the extreme minimum, like North Korea. Or trade with other countries which in most situations will produce unequal exchanges, including between nominally similar “global south” countries. This is the negative byproduct of the world not yet producing a viable alternative to a world economy depending on a market for labor, materials, and finished products.

  • @doctorinternet8695

    @doctorinternet8695

    Жыл бұрын

    north korea didn't reduce trade, it suffers from an economic blockade. Do you think the huge crisis they went through after the dissolution of the ussr, losing their major trade partner, was intentional? An interesting fact is that at the beginning of the 21st century, nk conducted trade with brazil in which they sold the higher value goods. nk sold microchips and musical instrument parts, while brazil sold commodities like soy.

  • @Spiritualmanlet

    @Spiritualmanlet

    Жыл бұрын

    @@doctorinternet8695 That is true, and the fact about Brazil-NK trade is interesting. Do you think there is any rational basis to the sanctions on NK? Is there any reason that the state regards the acquisition of nuclear weapons to be so important to override the what they would otherwise get through trade? Is that in the interest of the NK people?

  • @doctorinternet8695

    @doctorinternet8695

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Spiritualmanlet "Do you think there is any rational basis to the sanctions on NK?" Yes, the US and NK are enemies, the US views their system as deleterious to US interests, nk is at a strategic position against china, and the us doesn't depend on nk for anything. So it's only logical that they would install an economic blockade to destroy the country. "Is there any reason that the state regards the acquisition of nuclear weapons to be so important to override the what they would otherwise get through trade?" There is a reason. nk was under immediate threat by the us on several points after the war (and the war hasn't technically ended). It is known that there were plans for an invasion of the country, you can find them online. It is an obvious strategical move to have weapons that can challenge a much more powerful opponent which 1) has invaded you and destroyed you, 2) planned to do it again, 3) installs a blockade against you (I think the blockade already existed before the dissolution of the ussr), and 4) to this day performs military exercises near your border. "Is that in the interest of the NK people?" Well, it certainly deters conflict. While it caused the tightening of the blockade, it already existed before. As far as I know, nk is at a point where the blockade has become tolerable, since they were able to build a good industrial and agricultural base to support their society. The nuclear technology also isn't just for weapons, it works as a spearhead for the development of other areas, like energy production. I guess the population could derive benefits from a capitulationist government. But it's easy for us to make guesses of what would be better for a country. Libia was invaded after all, and that had catatrophic results. And cuba still suffers a blockade, and it is no theat to the US. Who's to say that even with deferal by nk, they wouldn't suffer anyway.

  • @Hsalf904
    @Hsalf904 Жыл бұрын

    Absolute BANGER

  • @Gray-dr2ri
    @Gray-dr2ri Жыл бұрын

    Love the vids! Also, I’m actually an econ major and no one uses critical thinking in that field bc technically speaking there’s a way to prove that a monopolistic socially planned economy is the most efficient way of economic organization (can further elaborate if desired) but people are too brainwashed to put two and two together.

  • @esoopthederp7672

    @esoopthederp7672

    Жыл бұрын

    Is the method ignoring the human factor? I have a feeling that a pure enough society and culture too allow that too happen would only lose less than a quarter efficiency in productivity in a capitalist state whereas any corruption would devestate the centralized state

  • @shepardice3775

    @shepardice3775

    Жыл бұрын

    @@esoopthederp7672 No, with well organized planning at its full capacity you don't need people to be any better than just regular people.

  • @sic5764

    @sic5764

    Жыл бұрын

    Please do further elaborate, it's not like a "monopolistic socially planned economy" hasn't ever been tried, so I am curious how you want to solve the many problems that historically came with such systems.

  • @randomsnow6510

    @randomsnow6510

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@sic5764 companys with verticly intergrated supply chains and automated logistic planning are allready themselves essentially miniture centrally planned economies, pretty much all companies that work with physical products end up like this because it is the most effcient way of getting stuff done they have allready solved the technical problems for us. it is not a question of is it possible to plan the entire economy in this way? it is a question of when it will happen.

  • @KalebOfAxum12

    @KalebOfAxum12

    Жыл бұрын

    I disagree, time and time again planned economies have been proven to be inefficient, ineffective, and corrupt. It’s not about brainwashing or some other tin foil hat conspiracy, the fact is planned economies don’t work, this is primarily due to the fact that they tend to be managed by people like yourself, who are more interested in achieving ideological goals rather than something that would be practical and effective. Look at Russia during the 1900’s it was a backwater at the beginning of the century during Tsarist rule, but it’s economy was growing rapidly, so much so that the Germans deemed it impossible to wage war with them by the end of the 1910’s. Its culture was prospering and Its population was growing rapidly as well. When the soviets took over however that all changed after moving to a planned economy things got incredibly worse people starved riots and revolts broke out. During the early 20’s Lenin even returned the state to a market economy because the situation was so bad. Stalins focus on ideology rather than practicality led to the killings of kulaks (who actually knew how to farm) and replaced them with inexperienced poor people, which led to a famine. His 5 year plans greatly industrialized the country, at the cost of millions of lives. Stalin also choose to persecute religion excessively, many Christian’s were dragged out of their church’s and killed, nuns were raped, Muslims, Buddhists, and Jews also suffered similar fates. Furthermore culture was destroyed in Russia and replaced with the sad and pathetic way of life that the Russians have today. Many of the problems modern Russia faces were caused solely by the soviets, severe population decline? Thank the soviets for killing so many people and encouraging women to be loose and use protection! Terrible economy dominated by oligarchs? Thank the soviets for their failed planned economy that prevented any meaningful competition or progress! Tyrannical government that silences opposition? Thank the soviets for destroying the first Russian Republic and ruining the only chance the Russians had at maintaining a functioning democracy! I could go on and on. Look I know communism offers all these great promises of equality and a society that is perfect in every way, but it’s just that, a promise. Market economies work because they promote a culture of competition, which leads to maximum efficiency because the companies that can’t keep up go out of business. It’s literally a system of survival of the fittest where only the best and most effective businesses can survive. Communism or a socialist planned economy however require unlimited resources to work, a completely uncorrupt and highly capable leadership, and a population who is completely loyal to the system, and working at maximum efficiency. In other words it won’t work because it can’t.

  • @devinB1917
    @devinB1917 Жыл бұрын

    Ah yes the yellow parenti video. Everyone here should watch it regularly to remind yourself of his best points

  • @theoheinrich529
    @theoheinrich529 Жыл бұрын

    love the concise choice of words here

  • @Turdfergusen382
    @Turdfergusen382 Жыл бұрын

    That opening clip was perfect

  • @Anemoia100
    @Anemoia100 Жыл бұрын

    Excellent report as usual🙌🏾💯

  • @vadimk3484
    @vadimk3484 Жыл бұрын

    Not to sound like a dick, but I think the whole "North vs South" concept is misleading. It's rather "Core vs Periphery" - yeah, sure, there's no doubt that African countries are getting the worst of it on a global scale, but, for example, core countries of the EU are using the same unequal exchange mechanism to pump value out of the EU periphery, like Eastern Europe for example. Russia is doing this to lesser countries of CIS. Heck, the whole Ukraine bloodbath is Russian and US/EU capital fighting over whose oligarchy is going to be robbing Russian periphery in the near future. It's also worth noting that most of the wealth that gets extracted via unequal exchange ends up in the hands of a bunch of super-wealthy parasites from the very top of the capitalist core. I'm sure Hakim is not a social-chauvinist and perfectly understands the class nature of unequal exchange, but I thought it was worth to point out that it's not the workers of the capitalist core robbing Africans, it's the megacorps and oligarchs. The working class of the core is only getting some leftovers from the bourgeois table - sometimes more, sometimes less, but it's still peanuts compared to what the real parasites are sucking out of the periphery.

  • @foreverskeptical1
    @foreverskeptical1 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for this

  • @deltadoobyd1621
    @deltadoobyd1621 Жыл бұрын

    Another banger by Hakim

  • @botchedmandala5197
    @botchedmandala5197 Жыл бұрын

    Jason Hickel's a boss! Could you touch on degrowth sometime, that's some of his best work :) thanks again for another video hakim

  • @danielrogers2026
    @danielrogers2026 Жыл бұрын

    Obviously the material is excellent. My humble note on form would be to make the pace of the video a little bit slower. I’m familiar with all the terms being discussed and if I was a normie the speed would make it harder to absorb these important concepts. Really appreciate the work you do.

  • @jacksonford3614
    @jacksonford3614 Жыл бұрын

    🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼 this is so helpful.

  • @TAP7a
    @TAP7a Жыл бұрын

    Incredibly strong start using the Yellow Parenti lecture

  • @MrAngryman69
    @MrAngryman69 Жыл бұрын

    Hey Econoboi made a video trying to debunk this video. You should do a response video to counter his arguments. Should be fun

  • @Numbers-gStands

    @Numbers-gStands

    Жыл бұрын

    Big agree

  • @elinamanansi5508
    @elinamanansi5508 Жыл бұрын

    thus why the eu freaked out and sued Indonesia in WTO due to Indonesia restrictions on raw material (nickel).

  • @Bell_plejdo568p

    @Bell_plejdo568p

    Жыл бұрын

    exactly

  • @ameridesign

    @ameridesign

    Жыл бұрын

    Fuck the EU

  • @martensamulowitz347
    @martensamulowitz347 Жыл бұрын

    well done!

  • @Yes-me4pk
    @Yes-me4pk Жыл бұрын

    this is such an eye-opening video. Hopefully it does well

  • @Musterprolet
    @Musterprolet Жыл бұрын

    Great video comrade, keep going!!

  • @lochnessmunster1189

    @lochnessmunster1189

    Жыл бұрын

    Why the hammer and sickle? Do you actually think Marx was correct about everything?

  • @Musterprolet

    @Musterprolet

    Жыл бұрын

    @@lochnessmunster1189 1.) It stands for the revolutionary workers' movement, to which I count myself. 2) It stands for the solidarity of the whole united working class. 3) It stands for the equality of the sexes in the proletarian women's movement. 4) It expresses my personal solidarity with the former socialist states.

  • @Musterprolet

    @Musterprolet

    Жыл бұрын

    @@lochnessmunster1189 Marx and Engels wrote 42 volumes of writings and articles. I consider most of the theories they put forth to be correct, as they specifically worked on abstractions of the system we still live in today.

  • @lochnessmunster1189

    @lochnessmunster1189

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Musterprolet Ok, cheers, but is it actually true that profit is made by underpaying labor?

  • @naberville3305
    @naberville3305 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for the birthday present comrade

  • @ANTH0NY.VII.

    @ANTH0NY.VII.

    Жыл бұрын

    Happy birthday 🎂

  • @ricopena2053

    @ricopena2053

    Жыл бұрын

    Happy Birthday

  • @GarconTheGuy

    @GarconTheGuy

    Жыл бұрын

    Happy birthday, birthday twin!

  • @naberville3305

    @naberville3305

    Жыл бұрын

    @@GarconTheGuy aye happy birthday!

  • @suslarry7
    @suslarry7Ай бұрын

    Im african and i believe corruption is a major factor as well but sometimes i get so frustrated because there are certain things that dont even beed that much funding but the government still wont do and i start feeling like theres some secret agenda (among ppl in the government or outside influence idk) to keep people in abject poverty in poor countries cause WTH 🤦 things like building better schools in remote areas and keeping certain places in the city clean and taking care of infrastructure. Brain drain is a major problem as well, when people leave for developed countries they hardly ever come back to make improvements in their communities which would really help the countrysides because the few diaspora who return always make significant improvements in their local places they grew up in outside the cities

  • @12oradsrgobry
    @12oradsrgobry Жыл бұрын

    Boosting comment. Great work!

  • @andrewzhou4228
    @andrewzhou4228 Жыл бұрын

    The anti-imperialist strategy is to form an alternate supply chain outside of the monopoly capitalism.

  • @lochnessmunster1189

    @lochnessmunster1189

    Жыл бұрын

    What's 'monopoly capitalism'?

  • @napoleon848
    @napoleon848 Жыл бұрын

    as always great video

  • @user-ze1ej5zb6z
    @user-ze1ej5zb6z Жыл бұрын

    I love that Parenti speech in the backrooms.

  • @austinpage9463
    @austinpage9463 Жыл бұрын

    13:05 #5 I never considered that. Awesome video as normal Hakim.

  • @hugoenzo2444
    @hugoenzo2444 Жыл бұрын

    Hakim with a banger to make the world a better place again

  • @oscarodonnagain
    @oscarodonnagain Жыл бұрын

    Banger as usual Hakim, great analysis. That Parenti video gives me goosebumps it's so on point lol.

  • @mrsupremegascon

    @mrsupremegascon

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah, but those theories are just based on nothing. You can make numbers tell everything you want. If you want to real concrete reason why Asia and Africa has issues to develop. Go here and see for yourself. You will not find white or japanese people, go around stealing money or ressources as this scholar said. What you will find, is widespread corruption, cast systems, ethnic conflicts that predate colonisation, nepotism, women discrimination, etc.. You can give all the fair trade or money to Africa or Asia you want. But you can't build a successful economy when your country is plagued with those diseases.