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For a few decades, Nauru looked like a dream country with luxury cars, free money, and overseas holidays. Then reality hit hard.

News18
In the middle of the Pacific Ocean sits Nauru, one of the smallest countries on the planet. You could circle the entire island in less than an hour. Today, around 11,000 people live there, but decades ago this tiny place was known for something unbelievable. It became extremely rich because of bird droppings.
It sounds ridiculous, but it is true.
Long before people settled on the island, seabirds covered the land for thousands of years. Their droppings slowly turned into phosphate, a mineral used to make agricultural fertilizer. When large phosphate deposits were discovered, foreign powers quickly moved in to mine them. First came the Germans in the early 1900s, followed later by Australia, Britain, and New Zealand after World War One.
By the time Nauru became independent in 1968, the island had already been heavily damaged by mining. But independence also meant the country could finally control its own phosphate industry. Money started pouring in at a shocking rate.
During the 1970s, Nauru became one of the wealthiest nations per person anywhere in the world. Citizens paid no income tax. Education and healthcare were free. Imported luxury cars filled the roads, and many families built oversized homes. The government even launched its own airline despite the country having only a few thousand residents.
Officials regularly flew overseas for shopping trips and holidays. Flights often operated nearly empty, but money did not seem to matter at the time. People believed the phosphate wealth would last forever.
It did not.
Years of aggressive mining destroyed most of the island’s interior. Huge areas became rocky wasteland where almost nothing could grow. At the same time, government investments overseas turned into disasters. Millions were wasted on failed business projects, expensive real estate deals, and luxury spending.
When phosphate reserves began running low in the 1990s, the economy collapsed fast. Debt grew out of control, foreign assets were seized, and the country became desperate for income.
Today, Nauru still struggles with the consequences of that era. Much of the land remains damaged, food imports dominate daily life, and obesity and diabetes rates are among the highest in the world. The island now relies heavily on outside support, including agreements with Australia to host migrant detention facilities.
For many economists, Nauru remains one of the clearest examples of how sudden wealth can disappear when a country depends too heavily on a single resource.
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