| Technology
Widens Rich-Poor Gap by
Philip Emeagwali, emeagwali.com
Oil has made us billions and fuelled our economic stability, but oil has also become the bane of our existence. For some, it is a curse that has caused poverty and corruption, but for others it is an essential source of untold wealth and power. But as the gap between rich and poor countries continues to expand, it is clear that intellectual capital and technology rule the world, and that natural resources such as oil, gold, and diamonds are no longer the primary determinants of wealth.
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In reality, it is not money but intellectual capital that drives prosperity. More important, perhaps, is the reality that poverty is driven and sustained by a lack of intellectual capital. The intimate relationship between intellectual capital and economic growth is as old as humanity itself, and is well illustrated by this parable from ancient Babylon (modern-day Iraq). A man asked his children: If you had a choice between the clay of wisdom or a bag of gold, which would you choose? The bag of gold, the bag of gold the naïve children cried, not realizing that wisdom had the potential to earn them many more bags of gold in the future. Seven thousand years later, Iraq the cradle of civilization has its own private bag of gold as it sits perched atop the worlds third largest oil reserves. Meanwhile, Israel, tucked away in the hostile terrain of a barren desert, has the clay of wisdom the weightless wealth of intellectual capital embodied in the collective mind of its people.
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For instance, Nigeria pays a 40-percent royalty tax on its petroleum revenues to foreign oil companies that are ripping out its family jewels the huge store of wealth in its oilfields. These oilfields started forming when prehistoric, dog-sized humans our common ancestor with the apes walked African grasslands on four legs. Its a shocking reality, but the deep oil reserves laid down by Mother Nature millions of years ago and nurtured through the millennia in Africa have been whittled away within decades. And, for the dubious privilege of surrendering its natural resources forever, Nigeria is required to pay half its petroleum revenue in the form of royalties to the rich kids on the global block, the United States and the Netherlands. That oilfield has been exchanged for a bowl of porridge, and the black gold that should serve the underserved in Nigeria is helping wealthy Westerners get wealthier.
Britain undoubtedly established itself as the worlds first superpower through its rapid and ruthless colonial expansion program. The British raised the Union Jack over Canada and Australia, India and Hong Kong, Egypt and Kenya, and countless other countries even the United States. The Union Jack cast its shadow in every global time zone, giving rise to the saying, The sun never sets on the British Empire, a fact that was cold comfort to the colonized nations.
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