Saturday, May 14, 2005

Africa Unchained, George Ayittey

'Africa Unchained' is George Ayittey's latest constructive unflinching analysis of Africa's developmental options.
Dave Fick writes that "Ayittey takes a new fresh look at Africa's future and makes a number of daring suggestions.First, he says economic development requires investment, both foreign and domestic. Investment, however, does not take place in a swamp or vacuum but in an "enabling environment," which must have, among others, the following features: security of persons and property; rule of law; and basic functioning infrastructure.This environment does not exist in many parts of Africa because of the absence of a few key critical institutions: an independent media, an independent central bank, and an independent judiciary. These institutions are established by civil society or parliament, not by corrupt leaders since they are fundamentally opposed to the establishment of institutions that will check their arbitrary use of power.Second, looking at how Africa can modernize, build, and improve their indigenous institutions, which have been castigated by African leaders as "backward and primitive," Ayittey argues that Africa should build and expand upon these traditions of free markets and free trade. Asking why the poorest Africans haven't been able to prosper in the 21st century, Ayittey makes the answer obvious: their economic freedom was snatched from them.War and conflict replaced peace and the infrastructure crumbled. In a book that will be pondered over and argued about as much as his previous volumes, Ayittey looks at the possibilities for indigenous structures to revive a troubled continent..."
Peter Pham adds "...For too long written off as irrelevant to international affairs except as the stage for proxy conflicts during the Cold War or the recipient for the world's charity, Africa is nonetheless poised to play an increasingly important role in the global community of the 21st century. Within the decade, West Africa alone will provide more than one-fourth of North America's petroleum imports, surpassing the entire Middle East. The continent also boasts the world's fastest population growth: by 2020, there will be an estimated 1.2 billion Africans-more than the combined populations of Europe and North America. Yet despite the dynamic potential implicit in these natural and human resources data, Africa remains the world's economic basket case: per capita GDP is barely $575 while thirty-two of the thirty-six countries classified by the United Nations Development Program are to be found in Africa.Why this apparent contradiction? Defying the conventional wisdom that has long infantilized Africans by blaming colonial exploitation, superpower rivalries, intergovernmental aid agencies, impersonal market forces-anyone and everyone external to the continent-Dr. George B.N. Ayittey, himself a son of Africa, points his finger at the causes closer to home: the "vampire states" and "coconut republics" whose undemocratic and illegitimate rulers have done more harm to their own people than any external agents. In short, Africa Unchained is an unusually frank truth speaking to power-or rather, a dose of tough love for the tough challenges faced by the nations and peoples of the continent.Unlike many works on Africa, however, Dr. Ayittey's does not end on a pessimistic note. Rather, he points the way forward by looking back at the continent's own rich history of freedom: free enterprise, free markets, and free trade, by free people organized in free societies. The road ahead, he correctly points out, lies through the past-recovering the authentic, acknowledging the baleful. A provocative thesis, to be sure; but it is one which deserves to be considered by scholars and policymakers..."

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

Emeka --

I am currently reading this book and very pleased with what I am reading. I will comment further when I finish.

A great Blog!

Todd

KP said...

I'm also reading his book. I think, through e-mail, I may have given the impulse for Ayittey to write it.

Anyway, as I also e-mailed him, he is on the right track, but his flaming emotion/selfhatred is as always a bit off putting. As a Black person, you always have to keep thinking and being self aware when you read his stuff.

Having said that, he is finally getting to the heart of the matter - that 80% of Africa's problems lie within Africa, and are solvable by Africans. There has to be decentralization, more empowerment for local government, less legislation for *AFRICAN* businesses and entrepreneurs. Agriculture has to be stimulated, mainly by giving farmers more land, but also by enabling them with grants and loans, an infrastructure for machinery, etc. Whether that happens through the state, the private sector, or first the state and then the private sector, is not really important. What is important is that it works.

I agree with dr. Ayittey, that it is the individual citizen who has been neglected for over a century. Whether it was under colonial rule, well intentioned socialism to a lesser degree, or outright kleptocracy, the interest of the ordinary citizen always came last.

What we have to see, is decentralisation of government and greater emphasis on empowering local government, lots of economic opportunities for African entrepreneurs and Small and Medium-sized Enterprises (SMEs), which are the backbone of all healthy economies because they employ more people gainfully than any other sector of the economy, let alone any number of corporations... and we need smaller government.

However, what is needed most of all, is that the bleeding of Africa has to stop - every day, western corporations take BILLIONS of dollars out of the continent. Governments treat their national resources like this is 1905, not 2005. They must stop selling concessions and simply hire private sector companies to mine their resources, but they *must keep control and ownership* of those resources, right up to the point where they are sold to the end user.

In contrast, the way BP and Shell and Anglo American and all those corporations are allowed to do business, is that concessions to pieces of land are sold for a fraction of the value of the resources that are on the land. Small "incentives" go to government individuals, and all the profits go to the West.

THAT is why there is so much unemployment, and so little money around. This is also why "Privatization" as part of "Structural Adjustment" is so hateful. Under this World Bank / IMF program, national resources were sold off wholesale for cents on the dollar. Often to rival Western companies.

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Anonymous said...

Early this morning, I watched Dr. Ayittey, expressing his feeling for Mother Africa on the UNC TV. I am impressed with what I heard from him. He is a great person, we need Africans like him to come together and help in the struggle to free that continent from those tyrant leaders, whose agenda is to destroy the powerless. I am going to read his book.
Dominique.

Anonymous said...

After all is said and done, I think it is still simplistic to look at Africa as a monolithic country. The power brokers have dictated this view for centuries. I hope we appreciate the diversity of historical and political experiences of African countries. For too long now, responsible culprits for Africa's dilema have been blaming the victim. And it is beginning to work, and I am afraid we are finally playing to their tune.It is enviable to start taking personal responsibility,but the real culprits should accept theirs and not be allowed to get away with it. Who financed and supported the so called corrupt regime? Has anyone ever admitted to that? At one time it was a political convinience not to have democratic instituions in Africa. Look at what Exxon/Mobil is dong in Equatorial Guinea as we speak.
This is analogous to the slavery debate in this country, racist laws and institutions are blameless and victims are responsible for their plight..
JM.

Anonymous said...

After all is said and done, I think it is still simplistic to look at Africa as a monolithic country. The power brokers have dictated this view for centuries. I hope we appreciate the diversity of historical and political experiences of African countries. For too long now, responsible culprits for Africa's dilema have been blaming the victim. And it is beginning to work, and I am afraid we are finally playing to their tune.It is enviable to start taking personal responsibility,but the real culprits should accept theirs and not be allowed to get away with it. Who financed and supported the so called corrupt regime? Has anyone ever admitted to that? At one time it was a political convinience not to have democratic instituions in Africa. Look at what Exxon/Mobil is dong in Equatorial Guinea as we speak.
This is analogous to the slavery debate in this country, racist laws and institutions are blameless and victims are responsible for their plight..
JM.

Kizzie said...

I'm currently reading this book. I really like it.