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Martin Lowy's avatar

I was the first African Studies graduate student in the U.S. in 1962. Numerous African countries had become independent or were about to become independent. My focus was West Africa, and I was optimistic about the future of Ghana and its neighbors. Sixty years on, progress has been extremely slow. I was again drawn to Africa in the 1990s, as counsel to a pan-African bank and President of the U.S.-Africa chamber of commerce. Again I shared the optimism of my African friends.

But corruption in government and business has continued to hold African nations back. Maybe in the 2020s they will kick the habit. But since China, where the biggest slice of investment in Africa is coming from, is known to engage in payoffs wherever that is useful, I have a hard time thunking that the end of corruption in neigh. I can think of no African nation where corruption has been stamped out for more than a decade or two before taking root again.

Corruption corrodes society. It makes a mockery of governance and of the benefits of education and market economies.

I would like to be optimistic again. But demography by itself won't do it. Sorry.

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Yaw's avatar

I write a lot about Africa, but I wouldn't say I'm "optimistic on the Continent". Optimism comes from seeing something to be optimistic about. There are specific countries I am very optimistic about and there are countries that I am very pessimistic about. I long for the day when people stop talking about Africa as a whole and start thinking specific countries.

If you ask me about Ivory Coast, I am optimistic, they learned to not just sell cocoa beans but sell over $1B in cocoa paste.

https://yawboadu.substack.com/p/history-of-cote-divoireivory-coast

If you ask me about Morocco, I am very optimistic, they have become the aerospace and automotive hub of Africa. They are trying to become The EU's "China" or "Mexico" - an assembly hub.

https://yawboadu.substack.com/p/moroccos-development-process

If you ask me about Eritrea, I am don't even know what to think since they don't even post a lot of their economic data to the World Bank/IMF.

https://open.substack.com/pub/yawboadu/p/a-quick-read-on-eritrea?r=garki&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web

If you asked me about Equatorial Guinea, I am extremely disappointed with how they misused their new found oil in the 90s. I am pessimistic about them since they will run out of oil in 10 years.

https://open.substack.com/pub/yawboadu/p/the-economic-and-geopolitical-history-b7c?r=garki&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web

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