Refreshingly simple in structure. Nine places, all of which are extreme in some sense economically, were studied by Davies, who travelled there and interviewed people. The idea for the book is that the extreme situations have something to tell about the economy, which cannot be observed in the normal state.
The book is seemingly without an ideological agenda and just seems to want to describe what everyone of these economies illustrates.
The examples are:
Aceh in Indonesia, the Tsunami of 2004 overruns the shore, and tears up all of a town, killing half the population. The great destruction of capital (everything is gone) matters little. The rebuilding sees an economic boom of great proportions. Interestingly, Jackie Chan town, built by the Chinese in the mountains (safer than the coast), is very unsuccessful, despite better buildings quality. The human capital dictates where activity is.
Zaatari refugee camp in Jordan. Because of a rapid inflow of refugees, the UN loses control, and is forced to rely on refugees. In Zaatari, close to the border of Jordan and Syria, people manage to break lose from the control economy the UN tries to enforce. They get a pre-paid card which is charged with credit in 5 categories every month, trying to control their spending. They do not want milk powder an mattresses though, they want cigarettes and fashion. They buy stuff in the UN store, and sell it to kids, who smuggle it away. This gives them cash. The economy is vital, 66% are employed, there is a Champs Elysees on the camp. Futher inland lies Azraq (blue). Here, everything is higher quality, well organised white buildings in perfect patterns, UN has complete control, no smuggling. Leads to only 8% employment, extreme depressions, violence danger. People have no purpose in life, no ability to realise themselves.
"Angola" prison in Lousiana. Used to be a plantation where slaves planted cotton. Now the majority black prison population is forced to work, planting cotton. They own 4 cents an hour - a rate not raised since 1970. However, can rise to 20 cents if good behavior for 10 years. Risk losing it all if get into one argument. Prison store prices are high though, like a few dollars for a snack, a deodorant etc. There is a prison economy. Cash is banned, so are easy to use currency objects like stamps which could easily be used. Pre-paid dots are used.
Darien Gap, a crazy colonial adventure where Scotland wanted to capture the strategic area between the two Americas. After gathering almost 25% of all capital in Scotland, 2,500 men were sent in a few ships, all equipped with prime Scottish trade goods such as combs and whigs. Nobody wanted them in the Americas, the colony could not supply itself, starved, was attacked by the Spanish. Today it is an economic failure. Security does not exist, infrastructure is bad, and logging destroys nature, with protective laws making it worse. Because of extraction limits in weight, most of trees are thrown away, and only the most valuable parts kept. Davies was in Yaviza, the old capital, and where plantains come from. They are sold at ridiculously low prices (4 cents a fruit), and 10s of middle men take their part on way out. Same with wood - very little value added happens here.
Kinshasa - problem of too much taxation by everyone
Glasgow, social capital
Akita, aging.
Tallinn, technology
Santiago, inequality