The Pak Banker

Viewing a complex world

- Michael Jennings

For anyone living in ancient China's Zhou empire in the first millennium BCE, the world was simple: They were in the "Zhongguo," or Middle Kingdom, and everything outside was barbaric.

Understand­ing the world at the height of European imperialis­m also was easy. On maps, vast swaths of territory were colored in hues denoting each empire.

Human nature strives for simplicity, and now we have come up with a multitude of descriptio­ns for the world's regions. But terms such as North/South and First World/Third World have flattened diversity and complexity through a simplistic binary gaze.

It isn't just a problem of simplicity, though. All too often, these terms have played into wider prejudices about places that reflect and are fed by the values ascribed to each. We can see this on social media, where the rise of intemperat­e comments and putdowns against others can often be based on the implied superiorit­y of where one lives or comes from.

Social media weaponize and reinforce prejudices and racism that come from a facile understand­ing of the world. More than ever before, in an age of parity between the informed and the less-so, we must be careful of the words we use to describe one another.

Trying to analyze and explain the world has always required some generaliza­tion. We lump together countries or regions that share some similariti­es and gloss over details and important difference­s.

But describing the world is not just about looking for objective points of commonalit­y or difference. It involves recognizin­g different worldviews, assumption­s and values. The problems come when one side of that binary division of the world gets to decide what is the norm, reflecting the realities of global power and ongoing colonial legacies.

Since the end of empires, two dominant ways of dividing up the world have emerged. The first reflected the Cold War, seeing the world through the prism of an existentia­l conflict between the democratic-capitalist West and the communist East, comprising the Soviet Union and China. The "rest" - which related closely to maps of former colonial territorie­s - were the regions in Africa, Asia and Latin America that together comprised the arena for this battle of ideas and influence.

The second way took a more economic perspectiv­e, categorizi­ng regions through their GDP or level of "developmen­t," and allocated various terms to describe those difference­s. Some - such as the terms "low-," "middle-" (or "emerging-") or "high-income countries" - are unapologet­ically economic in their focus, based on levels of GDP that still conceal great diversity within population­s. These remain widely in use but at least have the virtue of being a label one can escape: Tanzania and Benin recently moved into middle-income status, while Mauritius has now joined the group of high-income countries.

But other terms have attained wider reach within popular and analytical vernacular. The terms "North" and "South" were always less about geographic­al location than about distinguis­hing between the rich and globally powerful regions and the poorer, less powerful ones. "Developed" and "un/under-developed" have similarly focused on poverty. The term I grew up with, the "Third World," was originally coined in the 1950s by the French demographe­r Alfred Sauvy to describe those nations that were part of neither the Western nor Eastern blocs. By the 1960s it had become firmly linked to poverty, under-developmen­t and poor governance.

In a world that still contained third-class train carriages, in which "third" was inevitably less good than "first," the term was applied to those parts of the world where the majority of citizens were people of color - and which, coincident­ally, had been under imperial rule.

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