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Innovation is the antidote to corruption

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    So in 2011,
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    someone broke into my sister's office
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    at the university
    where she teaches in Nigeria.
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    Now thankfully, the person was caught,
    arrested and charged to court.
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    When I get into court,
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    the clerks who were assigned
    to my sister's case informed her
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    that they wouldn't be able
    to process the paperwork
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    unless she paid a bribe.
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    Now, at first she thought
    it was part of a practical joke.
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    But then she realized they were serious.
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    And then she became furious.
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    I mean, think about it: here she was,
    the recent victim of a crime,
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    with the very people
    who were supposed to help her,
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    and they were demanding a bribe from her.
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    That's just one of the many ways
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    that corruption impacts
    millions of people in my country.
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    You know, growing up in Nigeria,
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    corruption permeated
    virtually every element of the society.
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    Reports of politicians embezzling
    millions of dollars were common.
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    Police officers stealing money
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    or extorting money
    from everyday hardworking citizens
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    was routine practice.
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    I felt that development
    could never actually happen,
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    so long as corruption persisted.
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    But over the past several years,
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    in my research on
    innovation and prosperity,
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    I've learned that corruption is actually
    not the problem hindering our development.
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    In fact,
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    conventional thinking on corruption
    and its relationship to development
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    is not only wrong, but it's holding
    many poor countries backwards.
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    So, the thinking goes like this:
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    in a society that's poor and corrupt,
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    our best shot at reducing corruption
    is to create good laws,
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    enforce them well,
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    and this will make way for development
    and innovation to flourish.
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    Now, it makes sense on paper,
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    which is why many governments
    and development organizations
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    invest billions of dollars annually
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    on institutional reform
    and anti-corruption programs.
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    But many of these programs
    fail to reduce corruption,
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    because we have the equation backwards.
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    You see, societies don't develop
    because they've reduced corruption.
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    They're able to reduce corruption
    because they've developed.
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    And societies develop
    through investments in innovation.
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    Now, at first, I thought
    this was impossible.
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    Why would anyone in their right mind
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    invest in a society where,
    at least on the surface,
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    it seems a terrible place to do business?
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    You know, a society where
    politicians are corrupt
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    and consumers are poor?
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    But then, the more I learned about
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    the relationship
    between innovation and corruption,
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    the more I started
    to see things differently.
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    Here's how this played out
    in sub-Saharan Africa
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    as the region developed
    its telecommunications industry.
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    In the late 1990s,
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    fewer than five percent of people
    in sub-Saharan Africa had phones.
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    In Nigeria, for example, the country
    had more than 110 million people
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    but fewer than half a million phones
    in the whole nation.
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    Now, this scarcity fueled
    widespread corruption in the industry.
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    I mean, public officials who worked
    for the state-owned phone companies
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    demanded bribes from people
    who wanted phones.
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    And because most people
    couldn't afford to pay the bribes,
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    phones were only available
    to those who were wealthy.
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    Then an entrepreneur named Mo Ibrahim
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    decided that he would set up
    a telecommunications company
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    on the continent.
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    Now, when he told his colleagues
    about his idea, they just laughed at him.
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    But Mo Ibrahim was undeterred.
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    And so in 1998, he set up Celtel.
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    The company provided affordable
    mobile phones and cell service
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    to millions of Africans,
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    in some of the poorest and most corrupt
    countries in the region --
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    I mean countries such as Congo, Malawi,
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    Sierra Leone and Uganda.
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    You see, in our research,
    we call what Mo Ibrahim built
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    a "market-creating innovation."
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    Market-creating innovations transform
    complicated and expensive products
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    into products that
    are simple and affordable,
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    so that many more people in society
    could access them.
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    Now in this case, phones were expensive
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    before Celtel made them
    much more affordable.
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    As other investors --
    some of his colleagues, actually --
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    saw that it was possible to create
    a successful mobile phone company
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    on the continent,
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    they flooded in with billions
    of dollars of investments.
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    And this led to significant
    growth in the industry.
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    From barely nothing in 2000,
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    today, virtually every
    African country now has
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    a vibrant mobile
    telecommunications industry.
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    The sector now supports
    close to one billion phone connections,
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    it has created nearly four million jobs
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    and generates billions of dollars
    in taxes every year.
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    These are taxes that governments
    can now reinvest into the economy
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    to build their institutions.
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    And here's the thing:
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    because most people no longer
    have to bribe public officials
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    just to get a phone,
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    corruption -- at least within
    this industry -- has reduced.
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    Now, if Mo Ibrahim had waited
    for corruption to be fixed
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    in all of sub-Saharan Africa
    before he invested,
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    he would still be waiting today.
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    You know, most people who engage
    in corruption know they shouldn't.
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    I mean, the public officials
    who were demanding bribes from people
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    to get phones
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    and the people
    who were paying the bribes --
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    they knew they were breaking the law.
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    But they did it anyways.
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    The question is: Why?
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    The answer?
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    Scarcity.
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    See, whenever people would benefit
    from gaining access
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    to something that scarce,
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    this makes corruption attractive.
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    You know, in poor countries, we complain
    a lot about corrupt politicians
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    who embezzle state funds.
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    But in many of those countries,
    economic opportunity is scarce,
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    and so corruption becomes
    an attractive way to gain wealth.
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    We also complain about
    civil servants like police officers,
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    who extort money from everyday
    hardworking citizens.
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    But most civil servants
    are grossly underpaid
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    and are leading desperate lives.
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    And so for them, extortion or corruption
    is a good way to make a living.
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    You know, this phenomenon also plays
    itself out in wealthy countries as well.
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    When rich parents
    bribe university officials --
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    (Laughter)
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    When rich parents
    bribe university officials
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    so their children can gain admission
    into elite colleges,
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    the circumstance is different,
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    but the principle is the same.
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    I mean, admission
    into elite colleges is scarce,
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    and so bribery becomes attractive.
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    The thing is,
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    I'm not trying to say there shouldn't
    be things that are scarce in society
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    or things that are selective.
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    What I'm just trying to explain
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    is this relationship
    between corruption and scarcity.
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    And in most poor countries,
    way too many basic things are scarce.
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    I mean things like food,
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    education,
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    health care,
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    economic opportunity,
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    jobs.
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    This creates the perfect breeding ground
    for corruption to thrive.
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    Now, in no way does this
    excuse corrupt behavior.
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    It just helps us
    understand it a bit better.
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    Investing in businesses
    that make things affordable
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    and accessible to so many more people
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    attacks this scarcity
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    and creates the revenues for governments
    to reinvest in their economies.
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    Now, when this happens
    on a countrywide level,
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    it can revolutionize nations.
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    Consider the impact in South Korea.
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    Now, in the 1950s,
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    South Korea was
    a desperately poor country,
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    and it was very corrupt.
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    The country was ruled
    by an authoritarian government
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    and engaged in bribery and embezzlement.
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    In fact, economists at the time
    said South Korea was trapped in poverty,
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    and they referred to it
    as "an economic basket case."
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    When you looked
    at South Korea's institutions,
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    even as late as the 1980s,
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    they were on par with some of the poorest
    and most corrupt African countries
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    at the time.
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    But as companies like
    Samsung, Kia, Hyundai
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    invested in innovations
    that made things much more affordable
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    for so many more people,
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    South Korea ultimately became prosperous.
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    As the country grew prosperous,
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    it was able to transition
    from an authoritarian government
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    to a democratic government
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    and has been able to reinvest
    in building its institutions.
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    And this has paid off tremendously.
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    For instance, in 2018,
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    South Korea's president
    was sentenced to 25 years in prison
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    on corruption-related charges.
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    This could never have happened decades ago
    when the country was poor
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    and ruled by an authoritarian government.
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    In fact, as we looked at most prosperous
    countries today, what we found was,
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    they were able to reduce corruption
    as they became prosperous --
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    not before.
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    And so where does that leave us?
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    I know it may sound like I'm saying
    we should just ignore corruption.
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    That's not what I'm saying at all.
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    What I'm suggesting, though,
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    is that corruption, especially
    for most people in poor countries,
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    is a work-around.
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    It's a utility
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    in a place where there are fewer
    better options to solve a problem.
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    Investing in innovations that make
    products much more affordable
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    for many people
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    not only attacks this scarcity
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    but it creates a sustainable
    source of revenue
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    for governments to reinvest
    into the economies
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    to strengthen their institutions.
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    This is the critical missing piece
    in the economic development puzzle
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    that will ultimately
    help us reduce corruption.
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    You know, I lost hope
    in Nigeria when I was 16.
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    And in some ways, the country
    has actually gotten worse.
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    In addition to widespread poverty
    and endemic corruption,
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    Nigeria now actually deals
    with terrorist organizations
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    like Boko Haram.
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    But somehow, I am more hopeful
    about Nigeria today
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    than I have ever been before.
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    When I see organizations
    investing in innovations
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    that are creating jobs for people
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    and making things affordable --
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    I mean organizations
    like Lifestores Pharmacy,
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    making drugs and pharmaceuticals
    more affordable for people;
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    or Metro Africa Xpress,
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    tackling the scarcity of distribution
    and logistics for many small businesses;
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    or Andela, creating economic opportunity
    for software developers --
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    I am optimistic about the future.
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    I hope you will be, too.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
Innovation is the antidote to corruption
Speaker:
Efosa Ojomo
Description:

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
11:45

English subtitles

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