Chapter 1032 The world’s largest closed country
City of Luanda.
In a teahouse in Luanda, several Germans were discussing the changes in East Africa in recent years. The most common foreigners in Luanda are Germans, French and Portuguese, but they each have their own circles.
“Through the First Five-Year Plan, the level of urban construction in East Africa has been significantly improved. When I first went to Luanda to invest, the south of the factory was still a wasteland. In just five years, a large number of factories and buildings of various types have been built. Rising from the ground.”
“East Africa is undergoing rapid changes now. I have also visited some cities on the west coast and east coast. These cities are as vibrant as Luanda.”
"The population of these cities is expanding rapidly like cities in Europe, but it is not like the disorderly growth of cities in European society. The transfer of a large number of cheap workers from rural areas to cities will cause many social problems, which is very common in European cities. ”
“However, the quality of the urban population in East Africa is obviously relatively high, which has benefited from the implementation of compulsory education, but education cannot solve fundamental problems, especially employment and urban management.”
"A commanding country like East Africa has avoided the problem of unemployment through administrative means. In Luanda, the largest city in western Africa, there is not a single unemployed person. The vast majority of people's jobs are allocated, and the East African government hopes that Eliminate discrimination caused by work differences through public opinion means.”
“Including improving the status of workers, raising the benefits of some professions, and praising some professions that are generally discriminated against in European society through newspapers and other media.”
"However, I am not optimistic about this behavior of the East African government. It is not conducive to social competition and progress. However, the East African government does not need to consider these issues at the moment. As a backward country, the main job of the East African government at the moment is to catch up with other countries. So I won’t encounter this kind of trouble frequently.”
As a German businessman, Clovis witnessed the rapid development of Luanda during the First Five-Year Plan and also made a lot of money. Under such rapid development, opportunities are indispensable, especially for people like Clovis who are engaged in Business people.
There are many foreign-funded enterprises in East Africa, but in addition to investing in mid-to-high-end industries and obtaining East African government subsidies and policy preferences, only second-tier dealers like Clovis have made huge profits.
Of course, Clovis's national policy towards East Africa is mixed. East Africa is undoubtedly a big market, but this market is not as free as Europe, so East Africa limits the performance of businessmen like Clovis, but because East Africa and Germany's connections allowed businessmen like Clovis to have the opportunity to profit from East Africa.
However, this situation was about to change. On June 12, 1905, the East African government further expanded the issue of "openness".
We welcome business groups or individuals from European countries including the United Kingdom, Portugal, Spain and other countries to conduct trade activities in East Africa. At the same time, East Africa will further open port cities as trading locations, lift tariff barriers on a number of commodities, and increase trade with countries around the world.
It seems that East Africa is actively embracing the international market. In fact, after the First Five-Year Plan, East Africa can produce many industrial products on its own and has high market competitiveness. Therefore, the East African government will allow some goods to enter East Africa and cooperate with relevant state-owned enterprises in East Africa. compete.
Therefore, the fundamental reason for this change is the improvement of industrialization in East Africa. The current urbanization level in East Africa is obviously much lower than that in Europe. However, through the industrial construction in the 1990s and the First Five-Year Plan, East Africa’s industrial volume is no less than that of the vast majority of the world. Industrial power.
In 1904, the urbanization rate in East Africa was about 20%. Before the First Five-Year Plan, it had reached 23%. After the First Five-Year Plan, this figure will obviously not be lower than 20%. three.
The East African government's estimate is about 25% or 27%. Although it only increases by a few percentage points, according to the current population data of East Africa, it can increase the industrial population by at least one million. The figures from the East African government are about three million or more. This represents the brilliant achievements of East Africa's First Five-Year Plan. Although not as exaggerated as the former Soviet Union's First Five-Year Plan, it was unparalleled in the world at that time.
During the First Five-Year Plan of the Soviet Union, at least more than 10 million people moved into cities. The current population of East Africa may be much smaller than that of the Soviet Union, but it should not be far different.
The main reason is that there is currently no relevant census of population data in East Africa. According to the census practice in East Africa, a national census is now conducted every ten years, so the population data of East Africa should not be updated until around 1910.
However, even without accurate data, it can be seen with the naked eye that the changes in East African society are huge. Businessmen like Clovis may have a deep feeling for the changes in the coastal cities of East Africa, but it is the changes in the vast inland areas of East Africa that have is even more amazing.
Under the politics of keeping a low profile in East Africa, East Africa’s economy also likes to be secretive, including defense industry, automobile manufacturing, power industry and other important industries, most of which are located in inland areas.
Only diplomats from various countries may have a glimpse of the development of East Africa through the central railway, and the scope of business activities of businessmen like Clovis was limited to the coastal cities of East Africa.
At present, there are nearly 600 cities in East Africa, and the total number of open port cities along the coast is only more than 20. Therefore, it is obviously impossible to analyze the real strength of East Africa through the coast.
Taking the east as an example, although cities such as Dar es Salaam and Mombasa are among the best, the total number of cities along the eastern coast is only a dozen, and the economic development levels of these coastal cities vary greatly.
These cities are only about twenty points on the map of East Africa. Excluding these twenty points, they all belong to the inland area of East Africa. The division of this area is not entirely based on the coastline, but on the degree of openness. .
In this way, the proportion of the inland economy in East Africa far exceeds that of the coastal cities. Take the central region of East Africa, which is the most industrially developed, and the proportion of heavy industry in the country has reached more than 70% (including western Tanzania, Zambia, Zimbabwe, southern Congo and eastern, vast area of western Mozambique).
Although coastal areas have unusual advantages, they are not as exaggerated as those of many countries in previous generations. During the first and second industrial revolutions, industry mainly focused on resource-rich areas, while East Africa’s industrial development resources were mainly concentrated in Central China. In the southern region, this also makes the proportion of industry in central East Africa far greater than that of the coast.
This situation is not unique to East Africa in this era. For example, Germany's industrial areas are also inland, and the Austro-Hungarian Empire's industry is concentrated in Bohemia (Czech and Slovakia).
It is very difficult for other countries to get a glimpse of the development of the interior of East Africa. The first is the issue of identity. That is, after the capital of East Africa was moved, the location of the Rhine City was deep inland, which gave diplomats from other countries the opportunity to penetrate into the hinterland of East Africa. , when the first town was the capital, the furthest foreigners could reach the first town was the first town, which was only about 70 kilometers away from the coastline. Basically, it was not much different from the coastal cities.
Even after East Africa moved its capital to the Rhine City, the scope of activities of diplomats from various countries was limited to the Rhine City. Preventing the penetration of foreign forces into East Africa has always been an important task in East Africa.
So in fact, East Africa is like a certain peninsular country in East Asia in the previous life, and it belongs to North Korea. However, East Africa does not have the harsh diplomatic environment of North Korea, nor does it have a powerful country like the United States to blockade East Africa.
Although Britain is the world hegemon at this time, its control over the world is far from the exaggerated effect of the United States in its previous life.
(End of this chapter)