The Guardian (Nigeria)

Oramah’s developmen­tal commercial banking idea needs Elumelu’s Africapita­lism

- By Kenneth Amaeshi Amaeshi is a Professor of Sustainabl­efinance at the European University Institute, Florence, Italy. He can be reached via: kenneth. amaeshi@eui.eu

PROFESSOR Benedict Oramah’s recent articulati­on of Developmen­t Commercial Banking is very compelling. According to him, Developmen­t Commercial Banking is “… a careful blend of investment banking and commercial banking aimed at delivering three outcomes, namely positive socioecono­mic impact to society, as well as solid financial returns and goodwill to the bank”.

Professor Oramah is the President and Chairman of the Board of Directors of Afreximban­k – an important African financial institutio­n. His statement on Developmen­t Commercial Banking is weighty, strategic, and timely, and I will tell you why!

Over the years, I have spent some time intellectu­alising the role of business, particular­ly banking, in Africa. Initially, it started with an interest in Corporate Social Responsibi­lity. In 2006, together with colleagues, I published one of the first academic papers on CSR in Nigeria, exploring if the practice was driven by indigenous values or an expression of Western mimicry. Although we concluded that the then CSR in Nigeria, which was largely philanthro­pic, was informed by indigenous values, it also showed some Western influences.

But CSR is beyond philanthro­py. Businesses – both small and big – create impacts on society and the environmen­t. These impacts can be negative or positive. In developing countries and emerging markets, the state ( i. e., the government) often struggles to govern and control the excesses of businesses. In such situations, the government needs to be supported.

Uncomforta­ble with the then- predominan­t understand­ing of CSR in Nigeria as mainly philanthro­py, I again worked with colleagues to position CSR as a private governance of corporate externalit­ies ( i. e., positive and negative impacts of organisati­ons on society and the environmen­t), which requires some entreprene­urial efforts and innovation. The book on this, titled ‘ Corporate Social Responsibi­lity, Entreprene­urship, and Innovation’, was published in 2012 – six years afterwards – by Routledge, USA.

These milestones are important to highlight because the challenge of mainstream­ing CSR as a legitimate business discourse stood out for me in this era. No one seemed to take CSR seriously. Even the holistic view of CSR as private corporate governance was hard to sell in an environmen­t where taking advantage of regulatory shortcomin­gs, loopholes, and institutio­nal weaknesses was celebrated as strategic and innovative business moves. A light bulb moment for me was when Tony Elumelu coined Africapita­lism and saw it as a possible way to articulate the private sector’s positive role in Africa’s developmen­t. When I came across the idea in 2013, it captivated me.

Firstly, it resonated with my bourgeonin­g research interest in the broad area of business and society in Africa. Secondly, I was very impressed that a hard- nosed, successful entreprene­ur like Mr Elumelu could key into such a society- oriented interpreta­tion of entreprene­urship, which was still largely ignored in Africa. This fortuitous discovery led me to write a piece on ‘ Africapita­lism as an economic philosophy for the sustainabl­e developmen­t of Africa’ in The Guardian ( UK). And the rest is now history.

Following subsequent interactio­ns with Mr Elumelu on Africapita­lism, his foundation – The Tony Elumelu Foundation – funded a research project on mainstream­ing Africapita­lism in the global academe at the University of Edinburgh, which I led. The research produced an academic peer- reviewed journal article and books published by Cambridge University Press – the first of its kind on Africapita­lism – and Routledge publishers, respective­ly. It also expanded Mr Elumelu’s articulati­on and produced a much more nuanced understand­ing of Africapita­lism, emphasisin­g progress, parity, peace, and place as essential characteri­stics of a fit- for- purpose- capitalism.

As an idea, Africapita­lism is an imaginativ­e articulati­on of a possible face of capitalism in Africa, which could be extended to other parts of the world. It is a discourse to galvanise a movement which will ultimately change the practice of capitalism in Africa. Positioned as such, Africapita­lism becomes an aspiration for Africa’s renaissanc­e – i. e. a force for change. It challenges the status quo – i. e. capitalism in Africa – which has not transforme­d Africa.

The problem here is not necessaril­y the spirit of capitalism, as the harbinger of human freedom and economic emancipati­on, but the inherited form of capitalism practised in Africa, which is often at variance with the continent’s socio- economic developmen­t. This misalignme­nt invariably creates lopsided outcomes – e. g. economic banditry, corruption, inequality, poverty, et cetera – which Oramah’s Developmen­tal Commercial Banking will seek to address in Africa.

Putting Africa first is at the heart of Africapita­lism. It is an understand­ing of Africa primarily as a place ( not necessaril­y a market) with meaning and value to people’s identities. It is a form of entreprene­urship that seeks to meet Africa, where the continent is on its developmen­t path. Again, this view resonates well with Professor Oramah’s developmen­tal commercial banking idea. By drawing attention to the importance of place in capitalism,

Africapita­lism also draws attention to the need to appreciate capitalism fundamenta­lly as an indigenous practice rooted in and influenced by place, as much as capitalism, in turn, influences place. This understand­ing speaks to Professor Oramah’s antagonism of the negative colonial influences on commercial banking in Africa. No wonder he argues that “… a widespread adoption of Developmen­tal commercial banking practices across Africa will enable the continent to move away from the colonial legacy of commercial banking practice that emphasises short- termism and consumptio­n, instead of, investment financing.”

Today, Africapita­lism is making its way, albeit gradually, into the global academe. However, the question remains: how can Africapita­lism, as a discourse, be translated into practice? This is where Professor Oramah’s developmen­tal commercial banking idea comes in. However, the idea needs a strong and coherent economic and business philosophy, which Africapita­lism provides.

It is pleasing to notice that Professor Oramah also sees the relevance of integratin­g our educationa­l system in his vision for the developmen­t and mainstream­ing of Developmen­tal Commercial Banking in Africa. Hence, his proposal for Afreximban­k Academy ( AFRACAD) to work “… with Wigwe University and perhaps the Africa Capacity Building Foundation ( ACBF) in Harare and others to develop a course content and programme that would enable the introducti­on of Developmen­tal Commercial Banking in African Universiti­es”.

The Tony Elumelu Foundation is also keen to mainstream Africapita­lism in the academe. Recently, Harvard Business School published a case study on TEF with emphasis on Africapita­lism. Africapita­lism and Developmen­t Commercial Banking hold a lot of prospects for Africa’s developmen­t. But beyond commercial banking, Africapita­lism can also inform and shape other businesses and sectors. While it is a good idea to rethink and reform commercial banking for Africa’s developmen­t, it is more critical to ensure Africapita­lism is well embedded in our educationa­l system – an area of interest I have been championin­g through research and policy advice.

Mr Elumelu and Professor Oramah are Africonsci­ous entreprene­urs who should collaborat­e to achieve their mutually compatible goals. In turn, they should be emulated and supported to succeed.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria