Development in Africa
Assessing China’s role in Africa: a search for a new perspective
China’s involvement in Africa has three main dimensions: foreign direct investment, aid and trade. In each of these dimensions China’s engagement is dwarfed by those of US and European countries, and often smaller than those of other Asian economies. February 2008.[see more]
 
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Africa has the highest concentration of low-income countries of the world. It is the least developed region, the most affected by the scourge of HIV/Aids and disease, hunger and famine, among other key challenges. UN reports have systematically revealead the devastating result of Western policies towards the world's poorest countries over the last decade.

The approaches followed by the IMF, World Bank and Western governments in African countries have proved flawed in several crucial respects and civil society observers are skeptical about their latest initiatives. Enhanced and additional financial resources, trade and economic reform and the transfer of environmentally sound technology are among a range of necessary enabling tools for African countries to make significant progress towards sustainable development. Unfortunately, it doesn't appear that they will be within reach in the near future.

"Africa is presented as a continent with insufficient resources to feed itself, to treat itself, to exchange abroad and to pay its debt. This is true. But did you know that over the past 30 years Africa has been a net capital exporter, a creditor — transferring more capital abroad than it received in aid loans and foreign direct investment?

Some estimates suggest that Africa’s accumulated stock of capital transferred abroad between 1970 and 2000 amounted to over $280 billion through balance of payment financing, debt servicing, official reserves held abroad and trade mis-invoicing. Debt, a phenomenon of the 1980s, brought about by the International Monetary Fund (IMF), World Bank and rich countries imposing structural adjustment programmes, was particularly debilitating.

Some estimates suggest that of every $1 received in loans, 80 cents went right back out the same year in debt servicing. The remaining 20 cents will induce outflows equivalent to about a further 40 cents. Debt became a means of inducing capital flight and sucking out more resources than were originally provided. It was also an instrument for making African countries implement policies prescribed by rich countries against the will of many African people". (...)

"Africa bled and continues to bleed from two further mechanisms —tax avoidance and competition, and import penetration. A favourite policy of the aid providers over the past 20 years has been to encourage poor countries to reduce tax obligations on foreign investors. Consequently, across Africa governments offered mining companies tax holidays ranging from 20 to 35 years. Ghana’s Anglo-Ashanti will not pay tax for over 25 years. In addition, the company is allowed to hold as much as 80 percent of foreign exchange earned abroad in its own accounts.

Add in widespread mis-invoicing practices and the amount of legitimate revenue lost to Africa runs to hundreds of billions of dollars". (,,,)

"We need to make it clear to the G8 that Africa’s markets are too open and that we probably need to reverse the situation, especially in manufacturing and for some agricultural products, to have any chance of recovering. We must oppose any trade rules based on even the most minimalist form of reciprocity in market access.

The media answer to the cause of Africa’s poverty is bad governance, by which is meant either corruption or the lack of visionary or caring leadership. All these are a part of the problem, but it goes deeper than that. Africa has not lacked in visionary leadership and its leaders have not always been corrupt.

Kwame Nkrumah of Ghana and Patrice Lumumba of the Congo were notable visionaries. These, and other, leaders became victims of Cold War reprisals. Did you know that in the first ten years of Africa’s independence, 27 leaders were removed by military coups and other violent means? Most of the coups were orchestrated by Western intelligence. Removing leaders by coups became implanted early in Africa’s post colonial experience. The current crisis of governance is rooted not simply in corruption but in the increasing irrelevance of the state to citizens. In the first 20 years of independence the relevance of the African state was clear to its citizens.

It built unity around a nationalist project, delivered improvements in well-being through investing in health education and production". (From "My image of Africa", by Charles Abugre, published on Socialist Worker).




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 Foreign involvement in Africa
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