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Aug 6, 2021 12 tweets 3 min read Read on X
This is a thread on Black African Immigration to the United States. Quite some things don't play out as you'd expect in terms of the overall data, some are extremely surprising.

Let's start with total numbers, as of 2018 there are 2 Mill+ Black African immigrants in the US. /1
81 % of all Black African immigrants come from West or East Africa, I'm stunned by the Kenyan numbers, more Kenyans than Somalis? where are the Kenyan immigrants hiding? This data doesn't capture undocumented migration + children born so bear that in mind. /2
In terms of where Black Africans live, NYC still stands as the most populated region, but it pales in terms of percentage representation to DC/Minneapolis. /3
This map also does well to establish the population distribution of Black Africans, we are not a very Western states oriented population group. /4
5/ Examining the age distribution of the group, Africans are exceptionally young even by immigrant standards, only 7 % of the group is 65+, I wonder if this is down to older Africans often retiring home? Lower life expectancies? Just a more recent immigration trend?
6/ In terms of when Africans arrived to the States, the trend is very recent, 70 % only arriving post 2000, this is in contrast to most other immigrant groups believe it or not.
7/ In terms of how Africans even come to the US, the vast majority come in through Immediate Family reunification + Refugee streams + Diversity Lottery process. I wouldn't be surprised if the DV lottery process played a huge role in downstream family reunification apps.
8/ Now time to dive into certain income/employment related statistics
- In 2017, 40 % of Africans held a bachelor’s degree+, compared to 31% of the total foreign-born population and 32 % of the U.S.-born population.
9/ Africans also work at a higher rate. About 75 % of Africans immigrants were in the civilian labor force, compared to 66 % of foreign-born and 62 % of born Americans.

- About 19 % of Africans lived in poverty, compared to 15 % of immigrants and 13 percent of the U.S. born.
10/ Now looking at average household income of some of the largest African nationality groups in the country

Average American household - $63,179
Average Black American - $43,862

South African American - $98,212
Ghanaian American - $69,021
Nigerian American - 68,658
11/ Incomes continued

Tanzanian American - $67,327
Egyptian American - 67,187
Kenyan American - $61,000
Ethiopian American - $36,000
Somali American - $29,200
12/ I may do a Africans in the UK data snapshot eventually, good idea?

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More from @okaythenfuture

Jul 18, 2024
This is one of the most important graphs this century.

Europe in twenty years has gone from 35 % of Global GDP and 30 % of market capitalization to 25 % and 15 %.

Asia is now 45 % of Global GDP and 30 % of market capitalization.

The Asian Century. Image
Nothing ever happens in the day to day,

BUT A LOT HAPPENS on a generational timescale.

In 2000, Europe taking up massive headspace in the minds of Africans and Asians made sense, in 2025 it no longer does.

Imagine by 2025? Europe will probably be 10 % of Global GDP and less than that in market capitalization.
Again Nothing ever happens in the day to day,

BUT A LOT HAPPENS on a generational timescale.
Read 4 tweets
Feb 20, 2024
This is my ranking of Asian countries in terms of their global influence and historical contribution. Image
We start with SSS,

China and India are planetary civilizations unto themselves, that influenced not only their homelands, but all of SE Asia, Central Asia, and the entire world.

Saudi Arabia birthed Islam, it is the lone country in SS as a result. Islam has shaken our world since it was born in the Arabian desert,

Modern Saudi Arabia is also in the midst of a modern renaissance.Image
In S, we have two giants in Japan and Russia that shook Asia tremendously in the 19th and 20th century.

They fail to reach SSS and SS mainly because their influence was not as dominant pre 19th century.

But what cultural giants they are. Image
Read 9 tweets
Aug 9, 2023
China and Southeast Asian Countries are currently in the process of building the World's Greatest Rail Network,

An extended network of High Speed Rail routes that will transform Asian Geopolitics and Business is being built.

This is a 🧵 on this generational project, Image
If you don't want to read,

I just dropped a video on this exact same topic,

Watch and Subscribe!

In the mid to late 2000s China decided to move ahead with creating a nationwide High Speed Rail network,

Since the mid 2000s they have created a 23,000 Kilometer network, the world's largest national network,

It has revolutionized Chinese transport and business. Image
Read 23 tweets
Jul 20, 2023
Outdated perceptions that the mainstream won't get until like 2040,

- Asia is to the current world what Europe was to it in 1900, the center of global progress.
- France is now the world's best footballing country, not Brazil.
- All Anglo healthcare systems are terrible. Image
- Singapore and Dubai are the new actual Switzerland, Switzerland is over.
- Ethnic groups who spend all the time debating gender wars will lag behind other ethnic groups who don't.
- American presidential elections largely are just kayfabe. Image
- Afrobeats is likely past its creative peak, it'll continue having hits but it's entering its overbloated commercial era, kinda like where Rap was around 2001/2002.
- No one under 30 in Africa seriously regards either Nigeria or South Africa as continental powers/giants. Image
Read 7 tweets
Jun 8, 2023
Sadly Kofi Annan’s dreams are nowhere close towards being fulfilled.

African leaders, organizations, and activists blame colonialism more now in 2023 than they did in 1998.

It will be 2060 soon, colonialism will still be an excuse peddled.

nytimes.com/1998/04/17/wor…
This statement would still be seen as radical even in 2023.

/2 Image
Wow Congo is a mess under a Kabila, and it looks set to elect a Kabila again next year.

By the way the UN mission is still in Congo nearly thirty years later

The more things change…

/3 Image
Read 5 tweets
Jun 8, 2023
In Africa its very easy as a young person to go "it'll get better in a year", "let me wait until after the next election", "let's see in a few years if the business atmosphere improves."

Before you know it, fifteen years have passed, you're 37, and your entire youth has passed.
You always have to go after your best interest, working careers and the prime of our lives are so very short.

Don't waste it in an environment that's not maximizing your potential.

You don't have to be the sacrificial goat for a state that doesn't deserve you.

/2
Even for Africa's better built countries like South Africa, the rationale went like this

22 in SA 2015 - "Zuma will surely be gone soon, things will improve."

25 in SA 2018 - "Cyril will fix things, he's a business reformer."

28 in SA 2021 - "Riots and more grid blackouts!!"??
Read 5 tweets

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