The writing is on the wall: Saudi Arabia’s collapse is imminent

00:04:31
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q5SO7DEu9rE

Résumé

TLDRThe discussion emphasizes the importance of human capital over material wealth in achieving economic prosperity. It argues that welfare state policies, which focus on redistributing wealth, can diminish people's incentives to develop their own skills and knowledge. Historical examples are used to illustrate this point, such as the economic collapse in Uganda post-Gujarati expulsion and Spain's decline after relying on colonial riches instead of domestic talent. Similarly, Saudi Arabia risks economic stagnation due to over-reliance on oil wealth that discourages human capital development. The discourse suggests that true wealth lies in nurturing human skills, which is essential for sustainable economic growth.

A retenir

  • 💡 Human capital is key to wealth creation, not just material resources.
  • 📉 Welfare state policies may reduce incentives to build personal skills.
  • 📜 History shows nations need human capital for lasting prosperity.
  • 🚫 Uganda's economy suffered after losing Gujarati human capital.
  • 🇪🇸 Spain collapsed economically when colonial wealth ran out.
  • 🛢️ Saudi Arabia risks failing to grow due to oil dependency.
  • 📚 The Middle East once thrived on human capital before oil.
  • 👷 Foreigners heavily populate Saudi Arabia's workforce.
  • 🏗️ Nations recover post-war due to surviving human capital.
  • 🔄 Redistributing wealth doesn't substitute skill development.

Chronologie

  • 00:00:00 - 00:04:31

    The discussion revolves around inequality and the role of the welfare state, arguing that redistributing wealth from the rich to the poor reduces incentives to develop human capital. Human capital is defined as the ability to create material wealth. Historical examples, such as post-WWII Europe and Uganda in the 1970s, illustrate that material wealth can be rebuilt or lost, but human capital drives true economic recovery and development. The welfare state, by providing for people's needs without requiring them to work, diminishes the incentive for individuals to develop their own skills and abilities. This is contrasted with nations like Spain during its golden age, which relied on wealth from its colonies without developing its own human capital, leading to long-term economic decline. Similarly, Saudi Arabia, wealthy due to oil, relies heavily on foreign workers and subsidies, reducing the need to cultivate domestic human capital. Historically, the Middle East excelled when it had to rely on its own resourcefulness and work ethic, not on natural resource wealth.

Carte mentale

Mind Map

Questions fréquemment posées

  • What is human capital?

    Human capital is the ability to create material wealth and manage resources effectively, which is fundamental to economic prosperity.

  • Why does the welfare state suppress the incentives to develop human capital?

    The welfare state can suppress the development of human capital by providing resources without requiring personal development or contribution, diminishing the need for individuals to improve their skills or education.

  • How does the example of Western Europe after World War II illustrate the concept of human capital?

    Despite the destruction of material wealth during the war, Western Europe quickly restored its economy due to the existing human capital: skilled individuals who could rebuild and innovate.

  • What historical example shows the effects of undervaluing human capital?

    In the 1970s, Uganda expelled the Gujarati community, leading to economic collapse because they lost the human capital needed for economic production.

  • What is the connection between Spain's historical wealth and human capital?

    Spain relied heavily on gold and silver from colonies and didn't develop its human capital, leading to economic decline once those resources were gone.

  • How does Saudi Arabia's current situation relate to human capital?

    Saudi Arabia's economy relies on oil wealth, which diminishes incentives to develop human capital, creating a workforce largely composed of foreigners.

  • What does the history of the Middle East show about human capital development?

    Before discovering oil, the Middle East developed significant human capital, contributing to great advances in scholarship and technology.

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  • 00:00:00
    staying with inequality for just a
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    moment because it's such a big theme in
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    the current electoral
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    cycle once again wealth poverty and
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    politics quote the welfare state which
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    by the way is the recourse of virtually
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    everybody who's concerned about
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    inequality let's redistribute from the
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    rich to the fine so we expand the
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    welfare state and you argue quote the
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    welfare state reduces the incentives to
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    develop human capital and receiving the
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    products of other people's human capital
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    Capital that is getting money from the
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    rich if you're poor is by no means as
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    fundamental as developing one's own
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    human capital close quote what is human
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    capital and why does the welfare state
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    suppress the incentives to develop it
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    well human capital is the ability to
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    create the material things that
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    constitute
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    wealth uh people have been puzzled by
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    the fact for a long time that after a
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    major war with huge
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    destruction once peace is restored uh
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    the economy gets restored often in in a
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    in a very few years I think Western
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    Europe after World War II you know
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    everything that was that was there was
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    was bombed uh and they wonder why how
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    how can that
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    be uh and John Stewart Mill explained
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    this back in the middle of the 19th
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    century that uh the material things are
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    going to be used up and wear out uh
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    whether there's a war or not and so it's
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    really the ability to reproduce to to
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    operate those things to maintain them uh
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    and then reproduce them was necessary
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    that's the real wealth and so when you
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    destroy the physical wealth uh you you
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    really haven't done as much as if you
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    destroyed the the uh the human capital A
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    Classic example uh in the 1970s Uganda
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    decided that the uh gujaratis from India
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    uh were just too wealthy and contr trou
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    too much to the economy they they they s
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    them out and they wouldn't let them take
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    their wealth with them and so the good
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    Jadis ared mostly in England uh
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    destitute and the Uganda government is
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    taking over all this material stuff uh
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    you know over a period of a relatively
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    few years the gujaratis were prosperous
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    in England and the Ugandan economy
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    collapsed because they didn't have
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    people who could do what the gujaratis
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    were doing and so they they no longer
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    had the same production it's also one of
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    the problems with trying to uh finance
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    things by confiscating the wealth of the
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    wealthy all you can confiscate are the
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    is the material wealth you cannot
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    confiscate the human capital so the true
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    wealth the enduring wealth the wealth
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    that leads to wealth in the material
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    world is between people's years
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    absolutely and why does the welfare
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    state why does the welfare state
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    suppress incentives for poor people to
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    develop their you you you you don't you
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    can you can live off what other people
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    have produced it's not just the welfare
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    state it's true among nations Spain for
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    example during its uh Heyday in the 16th
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    17th century uh it received gold and
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    silver literally by the ton something
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    like 200 tons of gold if you can imagine
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    gold is normally measured in ounces so
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    they get 200 tons of it from the Western
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    Hemisphere Colony they get I think some
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    18 18800 or something thousand T ounces
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    of silver uh and so Spain didn't have to
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    develop its human capital and it didn't
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    it bought whatever it want because it
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    had all of this but when all of that
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    money was spent and the the colonies
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    Broke Free and so on Spain had nothing
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    and so Spain is today one of the poorest
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    countries in Western Europe and that's
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    just what the Saudis are afraid of right
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    now and that's happening in Saudi Arab
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    it's already happening in Saudi Arabia
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    here Nature has given out to Saudi
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    Arabia all this all this wealth great uh
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    the elite don't have to work they live
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    in FA fabulous wealth the ordinary Sai
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    doesn't have to do very much because the
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    government subsidizes his uh housing it
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    subsidizes all kinds of things and so
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    over half the people in Saudi Arabia are
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    people are foreigners who in the in the
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    Saudi uh Workforce and so they don't
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    have to develop any any human capital if
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    you go back some centuries earlier when
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    the Middle East was really uh one of the
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    most advanced part parts of the world
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    they hadn't yet discovered uses for
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    petroleum and so they had to work for
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    everything and they work for it and and
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    and they and that was the period where
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    we get the great scholarship that's
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    right that's right because they they
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    okay all right
Tags
  • inequality
  • human capital
  • welfare state
  • economic prosperity
  • wealth redistribution
  • historical examples
  • development incentives
  • material wealth