Tomas Pueyo Profile picture
Feb 19 24 tweets 9 min read Read on X
Germany just became the 3rd largest economy
But why is it so rich?
Work ethic?
Here's a huge factor: Geography 🧵
If there was something special about 🇩🇪, we should be able to tell it in the regional GDP numbers: It should stand out. But no: regions of neighboring Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg, England, and Northern Italy are as rich or richer Image
Why are Denmark and the Netherlands richer than Germany in terms of GDP per capita if Germany is so well run? Image
If the country's productivity was exceptional, we should see it on satellite maps of nightlights—strong proxies for wealth. But see how Germany compares to Haiti/Dominican Rep or North/South Korea:
Can't tell the border in 🇩🇪, it's obvious in the others!

Image
Image
Image
It's not 🇩🇪, it's the region. Something is making it rich. What might it be?
Let's look at a map: What do these regions have in common?

Flat
➡️Cheaper infrastructure
➡️Easier to irrigate & produce food
➡️More ppl
➡️More wealth

But Poland & France are also flat but poorer. Why?
There is something else: navigable rivers.

The region of northwest🇩🇪/🇳🇱/🇧🇪 has the highest density of inland navigable waterways in the world. And also the highest density of wealth in the world. Is it a coincidence? Image
Lots of these waterways today are artificial canals, but the region also has the highest density of naturally navigable rivers
➡️irrigation
➡️sediments (more fertile land)
➡️Cheap transportation
➡️Trade
➡️Wealth
➡️Infrastructure
➡️Cheaper transport
... Image
The importance of inland waterways was known a long time ago. Eg, the Emperor Charlemagne built the 1st canal in the region... in 800 AC! (Fossa Carolina, pictured below)

It connected the Rhine basin with the Danube basin
Image
Image
But why are there so many navigable rivers in this corner of the world?

The Earth's rotation create, warm currents ("Gulf Stream") from the Caribbean toward Northern Europe, warming it up
The Earth's rotation also pushes warm winds in the same direction
Warm ocnea + warm winds➡️They load up on moisture, which falls as rain on Europe. That's why this region has so much rain and so little sunlight

Red: no rain
Blue: rain
Purple: lots of rain
🇫🇷🇧🇪🇳🇱🇩🇪 get lots of rain
More rain➡️More farming productivity➡️More wealth Image
But notice where most of the rain falls?
On the many mountain ranges—especially the huge Alps
They stop the winds and catch their moisture, which falls as rain or snow, stored in snowpacks

The snowpacks slowly release the water through the year, stabilizing the rivers Image
And why are there so many mountains there? Because of plate tectonics: The African Plate hits on the Eurasian Plate Image
Southern Europe has more mountains & less flatlands ➡️It's poorer
It's not work ethic (northerners work less, as you can see)
It's geography Image
And why is the north so flat? Because it's very old terrain, flattened over eons—especially in the last few ice ages Image
Flat lands with rain
Rivers bringing sediments and water
Perfect conditions for an amazingly fertile land
Germany has among the most productive fields in Europe!

The tech revolution of the Middle Ages improved its productivity with the heavy plow, horseshoe, & horse collar Image
Flat also means it's much cheaper to build infrastructure: roads, railroads, housing... So ppl can build faster and cheaper, accelerating growth Image
So:
🌍Rotation of Earth➡️Rain🌧️
🌋Plate Tectonics➡️Capture rain & store in snowpacks
❄️Ice Ages➡️Flat northern plain
➡️Navigable rivers+Cheap infrastructure➡️ Trade ➡️ Wealth💰
➡️Easy irrigation & sediments➡️Food surplus➡️Population🧑‍🤝‍🧑
Population + Wealth➡️Huge economy
And that's not it! See the Ruhr region here, one of the wealthiest in the world?
It has one of the best coal mines in the world

So when the Industrial Revolution arrived to 🇩🇪, it had the coal, the workers to mine it, and the rivers to transport it
Image
Image
And it's not just the Ruhr's coal! Germany has had great mines throughout history, because the same mountains that gave it water also gave it mining resources
Image
Image
Many of these assets are shared by 🇳🇱🇧🇪🇫🇷, and hence why they're also very rich (and even richer than 🇩🇪)
It's also not a coincidence that Poland, just to the east, is growing the fastest in Europe, now that it's unshackled from bad mgmt & occupations
So why is Germany so rich? Many factors, but the huge one that few mention is that it got lucky with its geography

Enjoyed this? Follow for more! Soon Poland, France, Mexico & more!

Much more detail & sources soon on my site. Subscribe for free:
unchartedterritories.tomaspueyo.com/subscribe
If you’re going to write “no it’s because Japan went down”, do a favor to yourself and pause for a second to think a few steps ahead

Why was 🇩🇪 4th to begin with?
Why so resilient in the longer term?
Think for than months. Think centuries.
Also: No, geography is not the ONLY factor
It's the most UNDERRATED factor
If I thought it was the only factor, I wouldn't have made this gif last week, showing how different political mgmt can have heavy consequences:

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More from @tomaspueyo

Feb 16
Why is Berlin the capital of Germany? It's much less straightforward than you might expect!

The story involves kings, emperors, imperial roads, rivers, seas, plains, trade, and a crucial 200 m hill

Here it is: thread
First, Berlin is not central. Most capitals try to be, but Berlin is in the northeastern corner of the country Image
Also, most European capitals are on the biggest regional river:
London➡️Thames
Paris➡️Seine
Rome➡️Tiber
Vienna/Budapest/Belgrade➡️Danube
Warsaw➡️Vistula
Kiev➡️Dnieper

Not Berlin! Image
Read 20 tweets
Feb 14
East/West Germany's phantom borders
More below
Slower now, to give you time to capture the details:
I'm gearing up for a huge series on Germany, with this and much more: Why it's so rich, what are its main priorities, why it's so federal, what's special about each region...

Subscribe for free here:
unchartedterritories.tomaspueyo.com/subscribe
Read 6 tweets
Feb 12
Governments should be freaking out about the fertility crisis. Eg:
🇫🇷France initially lost WW1 & WW2 because of fertility
🇺🇸The US' power comes more from population than economy
🇰🇷South Korea might disappear this century
🇮🇱Israel actively fights this
Thread 🧵:
1. FRANCE
It used to be the most populous & powerful country in Europe

Just as Germany became more populous than 🇫🇷 (1870), it won its 1st war against it Image
That was the Franco-Prussian War
Then came the world wars as Germany's population kept growing and growing

🇫🇷 was not poorer than 🇩🇪. In fact 🇫🇷and🇩🇪 had nearly the same GDP/capita for centuries until the early 2000s! Image
Read 26 tweets
Feb 6
German used to be spoken very widely across Europe, but within years of WWII, it collapsed

What happened to the ppl who spoke it?
How did German get to be spoken so widely to begin with?
How does this help understand WWII?
For most languages, you have first a conquest, and then little by little the locals start adopting the official language of the conquerors. Happened with Greek, Roman, Arabic, English, now Mandarin...

But not German. The language predates Germany!
Why?
"German" is pretty recent. Go back a few hundred years and there were dozens of German languages

It comes from a group of Indo-European languages (like Latin, Greek, Arabic, Russian, Persian, or Hindi)

As ppl spread, their languages diverged Image
Read 23 tweets
Jan 31
Why is Madrid the capital of Spain?

Madrid is quite unique:
• No river
• Very recent
• Tiny when it became a capital
So why? Image
These are the rivers of other big European cities & capitals: huge and calm. Why?

Because rivers allowed:
• Drinking
• Irrigation ➡️ food ➡️ population
• Trade: Transport is much cheaper than on roads, so much more trade and wealth Image
You can see the importance of rivers by the population density in France: it follows the course of rivers! You can tell the confluence of big rivers because they host the biggest population centers—natural markets to trade across the meeting rivers
Read 23 tweets
Jan 12
Nuclear is the best energy there is today:
• Best safety
• Best for the environment
• Most reliable
• Most sustainable
• Politically ideal
• Can be best economically

This thread will explain why, with details: Image
1. SAFETY
Nuclear kills the least per TWh of electricity generated

Why?
• Burning stuff creates pollution that kills (coal, oil, gas, biomass)
• Plenty of accidents in most other sources of energy (coal, hydro...)
• Nuclear accidents barely kill. Uh? Image
63 energy accidents have killed more ppl than Chernobyl, where <400ppl died

Most deaths were because of mismanagement—kids weren't evacuated fast enough

1 person died in Fukushima
50 in the poor & unnecessary evacuation
2k over years as ppl were prevented from returning home
Read 33 tweets

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