| Explaining Africa’s Poor Performance and What to Do about It |
While attending a conference on the status of women at the United Nations in
Besides God and Glory, colonialism was mainly based on the exploitative relationship between the colonizer and the colonized whereby the latter produced and exported agricultural and mineral commodities with very low and unpredictably fluctuating prices in exchange for manufactured products with high and ever increasing prices from the metropolitan countries. This relationship was justified under the rubric of the classical Ricardian concept of comparative advantage whereby As independence was approaching, the metropolitan governments decided to maintain the colonial exploitative relationship and to prevent communism from gaining a foothold in In return, African leaders and their governments have, by and large, responded not to the requirements of their people but to the needs of their foreign sponsors who are interested in In their new roles as advisors and with the power of the purse, these former colonial officers urged African governments to continue producing and exporting raw materials for processing in the metropolitan countries. They also groomed some Africans through on-the-job training and in western universities to think and advise African governments the same way as foreign advisors do. African leaders or professionals with second thoughts about the appropriateness of the colonial development model who wanted to do things differently have either been removed from power altogether or forced to resign or marginalized. Since the 1980s, African economies and societies have been dominated by the imposed stabilization and structural adjustment programs which focused on macroeconomic issues such as inflation control, trade and exchange rate liberalization, price deregulation, export diversification, privatization of public enterprises, balanced budgets, economic growth and downsizing public services at the expense of building infrastructure such as roads and energy and institutions as well as human capital. Education, healthcare and nutrition, the very building blocks of a nation, were considered unproductive in the short-term and received inadequate support. In order to increase and diversify export earnings, non-traditional exports largely of foodstuffs traditionally produced for domestic consumption received governments’ priority support. In the process, more land was privatized and brought under cultivation to grow cut flowers and horticultural produce as well as beans and maize etc. The expansion of the traditional commodities of coffee, cocoa, tea and cotton etc was also undertaken. And forestry, mineral and fishery resources were extensively harvested for the export market. The results are there for everyone to see: massive de-vegetation, resource depletion such as fisheries, water and soil pollution as the use of mining and agricultural chemicals has increased. Unemployment, income inequality, de-industrialization and hunger have all increased in In spite of this disappointing performance, some African leaders continue to boast that they are happy with their adjustment programs especially inflation control in large part because the donors are satisfied. Rarely do these leaders seek a feed back from their fellow Africans. The experience with To get out of the trap, Africa and its leaders need to take bold steps and embark on establishing and nurturing economically strategic industries that, besides creating the badly needed jobs, will add value to
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