My good friend (and my editor at WorldChanging) Alex Steffen just posted a powerful graphic to WorldChanging, under the title “The African Cliff”. (He found the graph via Dave Robert’s blog, who found it at Marginal Revolution, who found it via Ben Muse, who found it in the 2005 Economic Report of the (US) President. The graphic shows the change in life expectancy in five African nations from 1958 – 2003. In the nations featured, life expectancy has dropped over that period of time.
It’s a powerful image, but I worry that it’s also a deceptive one. I took some time to do a little research and complicate the conclusions of the graph in question. Here’s the comment I posted on WorldChanging in response to Alex’s post.
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That’s a powerful graph, Alex, and an important reminder of the tragic impact of AIDS on the African continent. But it’s misleading to title the image “The African Cliff”. (I realize it wasn’t your choice of title, but as a fellow contributor to WC, I’m going to debunk in this space, rather than on a blog I know less well.)
The five nations pictured in the graph above are five of the nations most powerfully impacted by HIV/AIDS. The impact of AIDS on the entire continent is not evenly distributed. While many southern African nations are experiencing adult infection rates of 25% or greater, many nations further north have been able to keep infection rates below 10%. While this still has a devestating impact on local populations, it means that life expectancy in those nations has increased, not declined, over the past few decades.
Using UNDP’s online Human Development Report research tools, which draw data from the UN’s World Population Prospects data set, I was able to compare life expectancies in sub-Saharan African nations between 1970-5 and 2000-5. Across that region, from 1970-75, life expectancy was 45.2 years; at present (2000-05), it’s 46.1. While that increase is unimpressive and frustrating, it’s actually slightly better than the increase seen in Central and Eastern Europe and the former Soviet states (from 69.2 to 69.6).
Looking individually at 44 nations in sub-Saharan Africa between these two time periods, 24 (55%) saw increases in life expectancy, while 20 saw decreases. Of the nations reporting declines in life expectancy, all but three nations (Liberia, Sierra Leone and Cote d’Ivoire) are contiguous, forming a block that extends from Kenya, Uganda and the Central African Republic in the north down to South Africa.
These nations have been powerfully impacted by HIV, but have also wrestled with the enormous economic and social upheavals caused by the post-colonial exodus of (predominantly white) merchants and landowners who had controlled most of the local economy. Two of the nations on the graph – Zimbabwe and Kenya – have suffered through some of the worst corruption and kleptocracy imaginable during the period from 1970 to the present. The three West African nations where life expectancy has decreased are all countries that have hosted – or currently host – civil wars.
Of the 24 nations where life expectancy has improved are Nigeria and Ethiopia, the most populous nations in sub-Saharan Africa. Also included are nations where seemingly intractible conflicts have given way to peace – Angola, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Guinea-Bissau.
So here’s my graph, which I invite you to hang next to “The African Cliff” in as many offices as you can gain access to.
Why is this important? (Why would I take time to critique a graph whose message and importance I agree with?) There’s a terrible tendency for Westerners to encounter some of the hard facts about life in Africa and throw their hands up in despair. While I know that your reaction to a graph like this, Alex, is to redouble your efforts for social justice around the world, the reaction of many people is to dismiss Africa as hopeless.
Africa is an incredible mix of hope and hopelessness, regression and progress, challenges and victories. It’s important to celebrate the victories while we mourn the failures.