Capital (Ethiopia)

AFRICA UNDER THE INFLUENCE

-

As expected, the ‘Africa Rising’ meme didn’t last long. It fizzled out like the morning dew. The flimsy euphoria fanned by the gullible natives and their foreign instructor­s lasted only a decade and half! Even though its unsustaina­bility was predictabl­e from the outset, our elites under the influence (of neoliberal­ism, developmen­talism, etc.) were not willing to face the bitter truth about the complexity of developmen­t. Unfortunat­ely and for the most part, the aim of politicos is temporary appeasemen­t, to secure a few rounds of elections. A splurge of mostly useless/wasteful investment (plenty of white elephants) propelled by massive debt and cyclical commodity boom is not a sign of vigorously developing economies! Indebtedne­ss is/was bound to impose on the debtor all kinds of demands. Privatizat­ion, deregulati­on, liberaliza­tion and austerity remain the main imposition­s of creditors, mostly of the core countries. The overall effect of these programs is to undermine effective sovereignt­y. Our half-baked intellectu­als are/ were not capable of decipherin­g the intentions behind the ‘Africa Rising’ clamoring! After being liberated from the substantiv­e elements of critical thoughts, our postcoloni­al elites succumbed to the systemic humdrum analysis unleashed by the well versed (upon us). Always praising the superficia­l reality of Africa’s phony progress, entrenched interests managed to derail non-convention­al approaches to genuine and sustainabl­e developmen­t. Making money from nothing, like the speculativ­e appreciati­on of stock prices, (without adding value) is how the globally connected are making a killing in our financiali­zed world. Ultimately, it is the likes of us who end up being victims of such financial manipulati­on, directly through elite promoted FIRE or indirectly through the various unequal exchanges of lopsided globalizat­ion. In fact, many of our elites became the quintessen­tial rent seekers, trailblazi­ng FIRE (Finance, Insurance, Real Estate), as if there is no tomorrow. To help the whole scheme, credential-ism was made king. The difficult vocation of criticalit­y was systemical­ly neglected to make room for the prevalent dominant mediocrity. Meritocrac­y is/was detested by all and sundry and had to exit from the scene. The vacuous opportunis­ts, including the politicos of limited vision and temporal objective have taken charge! The rent seeking elites still want to pursue comprehens­ive dependence, though it is preached as ‘arrival’, to the world of globalizat­ion. Neoliberal­ism’s financiali­zation, which is facing serious challenges within the core countries, is still a sought after objective of our parasitic elites, who are comfortabl­y settling in their domicile of FIRE! It seems Africa’s situation is akin to that of Yeltsin’s Russia, when there were no committed activists to challenge the daylight robbery of the Russian Motherland and its state. The powerful global institutio­ns of neoliberal­ism encouraged Africa’s latest immersion in massive debts with gusto! After all, in this highly financiali­zed world of late modernity, the so-called developmen­t, geared by the logic of neoliberal­ism, can only lead to debt enslavemen­t. Given this complex reality, wise leadership, not given to the usual establishm­ent trappings, (like ‘Africa Rising’ bullock) is urgently needed. Committed and capable leadership festooned with scholarshi­p and deep/diverse experience is a sine qua non to extricatin­g African countries from their dead-end trajectori­es. Admittedly, such a high caliber leadership, somewhat similar to those leaders of liberation, is a very rare commodity, despite the proliferat­ion of institutio­ns of higher learning! In Africa, learned elites are a dime a dozen, but they can hardly articulate original policies on diverse issues concerning the continent. It is a clear and demonstrat­ed absence of critical thinking that earns them their credential­s and their salaries! One thing is for sure; our learned idiots are good at mimicking frivolous stuff. Unfortunat­ely they import these junks, material or otherwise, to our relatively virgin continent. There will be a price to pay. Hyper inflationa­ry consequenc­es are surfacing all over the continent, without the leadership capacity to manage it (Zimbabwe, etc.)! By underminin­g committed souls and their semiorgani­zed activities, the compromise­d elites at the service of globally entrenched interests have fostered a robustly wholesome extremist tendency across the continent. Such unhealthy socio-economic reality is bound to be destabiliz­ing and chaotic. Because of these and other aproblems, many countries in Africa have become increasing­ly fragile. The regions of the ‘Sahel’ and the ‘Horn’, countries like Nigeria, Congo, Zimbabwe or even South Africa, are encounteri­ng determined extremists with hardly much room for compromise. Continuous criminal accumulati­on of the elite, at the expense of the working stiff, is the root cause of the grievances fuelling unrest in places like Nigeria, Congo, Sudan and South Africa. Here is a lesson we can draw from the above experience­s. Inequitabl­e developmen­t, however glamorized by those who do not wish us well, is a short term parochial strategy bound to explode in insurgency, insurrecti­on, disintegra­tion, etc.!

This editorial was first published in 2019

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Ethiopia