Book Review: How Europe Underdeveloped Africa by Walter Rodney
Walter Rodney’s How Europe Underdeveloped Africa (1972) is a seminal work that dismantles the myth of European benevolence in Africa and exposes how colonialism deliberately stifled the continent’s progress. A Guyanese historian and Pan-Africanist, Rodney presents a meticulously researched argument that Europe’s development was directly tied to Africa’s exploitation—a legacy that persists today.
The Core Thesis
Rodney’s central argument is that Africa was not "backward" before European contact but was actively underdeveloped through slavery, colonialism, and economic plunder.
He traces how the following:
- Pre-colonial Africa had thriving trade networks, political systems, and technological innovations.
- The Transatlantic Slave Trade drained millions of people, destabilizing societies and economies.
- Colonialism forced Africa into a role as a supplier of raw materials while suppressing local industries.
- Post-independence neocolonialism maintained economic dependency through foreign corporations, debt, and unequal trade.
Key Strengths
- A Radical, African-Centered Perspective– Unlike Eurocentric histories, Rodney centers Africa’s experience, showing how exploitation was systemic, not incidental.
- Strong Historical Evidence – He uses economic data, colonial records, and comparative analysis to prove exploitation was intentional.
- Relevance Today – The book helps explain modern inequality, foreign debt crises, and why many African nations still struggle with poverty despite resource wealth.
Criticisms & Debates
Some scholars argue Rodney’s Marxist lens oversimplifies pre-colonial societies as uniformly advanced. Others contend that internal factors (like governance issues) also played a role in Africa’s challenges. However, his core argument—that Europe’s wealth was built on African exploitation—remains widely supported.
Why This Book Matters
How Europe Underdeveloped Africa is more than a history book—it’s a call to rethink global power structures. It’s essential reading for:
- Students of African history and postcolonial studies.
- Activists advocating for reparations and economic justice.
- Anyone questioning why "developed" and "underdeveloped" nations exist.
A powerful, eye-opening work that remains urgent decades later.