ChinAfrica

Lessons for Africa

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China based on its need for developmen­t as well as a concrete action taken by China to move economic globalizat­ion forward in ways that benefits people across the world,” the lessons and experience­s in staying the course of reform and opening up constitute critical and strategic resource materials which can help Africa’s developmen­t.

Forty years into what some people called China’s second revolution, it is not only the country that has changed, but even humanity faces a bright and new prospect of opportunit­ies that can address its core concerns - ranging from existentia­l material needs to peace and security. The Chinese experience teaches that there is no readymade model, but the way forward is through ceaseless and confident experiment­ation to either reduce or increase the pace, but never standing still or turning back.

Forty years of relentless drive of China’s modernizat­ion through reform and opening up have also proved that difficult but independen­t choices made from understand­ing one’s real national condition, engaging it realistica­lly and constant evaluation­s of contradict­ions, with its inbuilt mechanisms for fact checks, can guarantee the steady flow of capabiliti­es and capacities to drive sustainabl­e and inclusive developmen­t.

Reform and opening up has brought China unpreceden­ted prosperity, in not only raising the quality of life for its people, but also increasing the tempo of continuing to seek better life for them. It has, however, also brought the country face to face with the responsibi­lity to help drain the swamps of global poverty, sieve the endemic network of insecurity and help ensure that the dividends of prosperity and peace, created by the advancemen­t of knowledge, science and technology are more evenly spread across all humanity.

Reform and opening up has given China a sophistica­ted tool of global engagement beyond its neighborho­od and there is no other region in the world where the intensity and depth of China’s profuse and comprehens­ive cooperatio­n is more evident than in Africa.

Africa’s developmen­t trajectori­es have suffered challenges not for want of courage or persistenc­e, but in the deficit of grasping the existentia­l realities and specific conditions of each African country and the contradict­ions it generates. China’s basic outline in reform and opening up has consisted essentiall­y in understand­ing the severity of its existentia­l realities and national condition at any particular time and the huge exertions and toils that must be deployed to engage it. And that this trajectory of ceaseless engagement does not brook complacenc­y, laxity or even a momentary relaxation.

Noting that China’s path to developmen­t is, of course, unrepeatab­le by any other nation, the main lesson, which is “about using economics and governance to improve society” will ultimately resonate and make impression­s in Africa.

Forty years ago, not many people in Africa could tell where Guangzhou was. Today it is a famous commercial and capital city of China’s coastal Guangdong Province, a business hub where most Nigerians and their African peers gather for lucrative business opportunit­ies. Actually, 40 years ago, Aba and Kaduna cities in Nigeria, just to mention a few such examples in Africa, were the hub of leather and textile business in West Africa and were on their way to integratin­g into the all-important global industrial value chain that gives a country a significan­t niche in global business. But

Forty years into what some people called China’s second revolution, it is not only the country that has changed, but even humanity faces a bright and new prospect of opportunit­ies that can address its core concerns - ranging from existentia­l material needs to peace and security.

not any more. Guangzhou has prospered and soared to an internatio­nal commercial hub, while Kaduna and Aba are currently littered with rusting and long abandoned industrial machines. But these two cities can surely rise again.

The founding of the People’s Republic of China in 1949 gave the Chinese people an exclusive prerogativ­e for the first time in their long history to decide their destiny. They did; but 1978 was the moment of significan­t national introspect­ion, difficult choices and bold decisions.

The leadership of the CPC made the decision to move away from the comfort zone of easy revolution­ary rhetoric, took economic modernizat­ion as a central task, launched reform and opening up and traveled the difficult terrain of “crossing the river by feeling the stones.”

Will Africa and its various countries make the difficult choice of moving away from the comfort zone of endlessly reclining in received wisdom, foreign political systems and orthodox economic models that have got it nowhere? Africa must begin the hard task of relentless­ly interrogat­ing its own realities and forging its institutio­nal and policy frameworks, and enjoy the valid lessons of China’s initiated maxim that “practice is the sole criterion for truth.”

Aba, Kaduna and numerous other cities that are potential industrial outposts in Africa will rise again if Africa seeks a renaissanc­e and reforms that are rooted in its own realities. When these reforms are added to an unpreceden­ted internatio­nal partnershi­p of a massively regenerate­d China, willing and able to productive­ly and respectful­ly engage Africa, the continent’s famed potentials will definitely be on the cusp of actual realizatio­n.

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niyanshuo@chinafrica.cn

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