All Commentary
Monday, May 7, 2007

African Poor Benefiting from Imports


The poor in rural Africa have for years cooked their meals of stew and cornmeal porridge over open wood fires in three-legged cast-iron pots that are made in South Africa and sell for about $55. Recently, however, a foundry in Shanghai has begun shipping its version of the pots to Africa, where even after shipping and import duties, they can be purchased for as little as $15. The trend — repeated on product after product and in country after country across Africa — has been a huge boon for the continent's poor, many of whom are now able to afford consumer products that previously were beyond their reach. But it has delivered a body blow to an already weak manufacturing sector, eliminating jobs and forcing companies like one Johannesburg cooking-pot maker to consider making its products abroad. (Washington Times, Monday)

Wants are unlimited. Labor and resources are scarce.

FEE Timely Classic
The Most Elusive Proposition by Manuel F. Ayau