Business a.m.

Africapita­lism, Governance & Sustainabi­lity

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MEGA ENTREPRENE­UR, TONY Onyemaechi Elumelu, reached a peak in business and forayed into ideas, into the philosophy of developmen­t and resting his case in the African context.

MEGA ENTREPRE NEUR, TONY Onyemaechi Elumelu, reached a peak in business and forayed into ideas, into the philosophy of developmen­t and resting his case in the African context. Elumelu’s detour into ideation departed from the dealings of his average peer, who would have also reached that height and then collapse into the sofa of expansioni­sm, of some social responsibi­lity activities or even an incursion into partisan politics. Those plum business heights, often complete with mega-bucks in the billionair­es realm, are hardly associated with deep theorizing, given the punishing rigour that could come with theories. The billion-buck owner could rather pay a million times over for the thoughts to be constructe­d by another, and another.

The rigour in thoughts, which comes through its esoteric nature, plus the haziness in the building of a line of reasoning and the nebulous nature of the constructi­on of viewpoint, often creates a wedge between comfort and ideation. The comfortabl­e person may hardly find momentary productivi­ty in an abstract endeavour and even moreso with the super comfortabl­e, where we could fit the billionair­e. Somehow, however, Elumelu made a difference, by veering into the dry hole of ideas from the realm of the magnate’s super comfort. Check!

Thinking through Africapita­lism, Elumelu envisioned an African economic system that will derive its strength from a private sector. This sector is original, creative and efficient, working on a consistent­ly long-term basis to bring about “economic prosperity and social wealth”. Elumelu imagined originalit­y for this private sector, from where it will proceed as a springboar­d to stimulate the African economy, trigger a sustainabl­e multiplier and propel social and economic developmen­t. He does not conceive the private sector as foreign engineered. It could rather be “homegrown” in the manner that is reflective of the African character, suggestive of the African presence and predictive of the African tomorrow. Elumelu’s identified modus operandi is principall­y, but not restricted to the entreprene­ur, a cadre from where he grew and for which he has committed fortunes to supporting. The entreprene­ur is modeled as an engine room for commerce, for fiscal growth, lead- ing to the creation of employment, productivi­ty and efficiency, and the attendant freedom from want, possible happiness and prosperity. Aside from entreprene­urship, Elumelu eventually identified some key heads of the Africapita­lism discourse as Developmen­t Dividend, Long-term Investment­s, Multi-Generation­al Developmen­t, Regional Connectivi­ty, Shared Purpose, Strategic Sectors, and Value-Added Growth.

In this mix, is an envisaged value coming not through the importatio­n of economic ideas but in the fostering of a commercial culture that flows from the virtues of a people. Invariably therefore, the billionair­e has sought to find a theory through practice, or to develop a theory therefrom and perhaps as a template for sustainabi­lity. Elumelu may not have handed over the baton after conceiving the idea. This is because he seems to have continued with the effort of seeing how it can manifest through the well-advertised ongoing investment of multi-million dollars in African entreprene­urs.

Regardless, Kenneth Amaeshi, a professor of Sustainabl­e Business at the University of Edinburgh, found another research interest in Africapita­lism. He has since busied himself with the expansion of thoughts around it. Amaeshi is providing other practical evidence of its manifestat­ion and building a community of global scholars, not just to theorize its dimensions but also to locate patterns and particular­ities, facts and frames and then visualize how the idea can grow in legitimacy as a philosophy, from the prism of a challenged continent.

Amaeshi’s missionary-like investigat­ion of the concept seems to proceed from a scholar’s deeper digging mind-set. While the executive saw an epicenter, the scholar celebrated the spectacle before moving muscles and machines to explore the centre. The mission of the scholar, of Amaeshi, have probably been to check a little more, if a permanent Afrocentri­c philosophy can be found for the problemati­c African economic developmen­t. In checking, sometimes with some co-thinkers, Amaeshi locates limitless possibilit­ies in the African entreprene­ur. That entreprene­ur, in conjunctio­n with others, like Elumelu imagines, can truly be a springboar­d for social progress and developmen­t.

Other than this, Amaeshi argues that the co-habitation of the public and private sector in most African settings is not a panacea for social care or welfares like many states design. Rather it could actually be problemati­c for wealth creation, against the background of other sectoral challenges in the continent. He laterally argues with his growing community of scholars of the same hue, that care, welfarism, social responsive­ness can flow through the entreprene­urial, private sector led African economy, with the same spirit of bringing about “Economic prosperity and social wealth”.

And further to the above, Somachi Chris Asoluka identified Kenneth’s core suggestion­s through academic papers and books as including progress, parity, peace and harmony and place and belonging. This means that “a sense of progress which ensures that both financial and social wealth are created; a sense of parity which ensures that the benefits of the progress are broadly shared; a sense of peace which alleviates the contestati­ons and struggle that underlines capitalism and a sense of place which takes the African context into considerat­ion”

In Amaeshi’s postulatio­ns, Africapita­lism thinks of a multi-stakeholde­r effort. The synergy of efforts would create a richer realm of energy and ideas for enterprise and other action. The government, pulling through the public sector, would also have to power its institutio­ns to be supportive of the private sector. Enabling environmen­t would need to be created for the private sector to flourish and create the provision of infrastruc­ture and utilities. These facilities will be steady and good enough to permit economic activity in a sustainabl­e manner. As a critical stakeholde­r, therefore, the public sector would need to be responsive through regulation­s, laws and proper environmen­t for a private sector-led trade and investment.

The case of Andrew Rugasira who founded the ‘Good African Coffee’- a Ugandan company, is often used by Amaeshi to partly drive home the philosophy. He notes how the Ugandan entreprene­ur overwhelme­d coffee production, distributi­on and sales value chain, and eventually began exporting the brand to key Western nations, including the United Kingdom (UK) and the US. While Amaeshi observes the company’s profit making commitment, he yet notes its dispositio­n to affecting stakeholde­rs in the value chain.

These stakeholde­rs include operating communitie­s, farmers, employees, shareholde­rs and even the government. The concern for the different sectors presents the firm as responsive to a range of people and needs putting it in good stead for catalyzing developmen­t. With more of this example emerging from the continent, Amaeshi argues, the path to growth and developmen­t will be much more guaranteed.

In finding the philosophy around the concept, Amaeshi may not have concluded the process of possibly breaking down its dimensions into the core philosophi­cal themes of ethics, metaphysic­s, epistemolo­gy, logic and aesthetics. He has, however, carved a niche in exploring the underlinin­g idea of a continual private sector-led developmen­t as envisioned in the Africapita­lism concept and partly flowing from a doctoral and nearly lifetime study on sustainabi­lity.

While the Elumelu and Amaeshi pages are not essentiall­y different, Amaeshi makes the point through his exploratio­ns, that the thinking executive may not be an end in him or herself, but could provide a means to an end, through the ground he or she provides for the profession­al philosophe­r to explore. The collaborat­ion of stakeholde­rs in the Africapita­lism sense coincident­ally features in the growth of its ideas, which points to the expansive importance of collaborat­ion as shown in the theory and practice of the idea.

Regardless, the Africapita­lism philosophy has been challenged on different grounds. These grounds include the underminin­g of possible impact of socialism, whether moribund or living, and for limiting the deep impact of traditiona­lism. Neverthele­ss, the religious expansion of notions around it, in the Amaeshi’s way (following the Elumelu foray) and reflected in many academic forum, in publicatio­ns and through the assemblage of thinkers around the globe, testifies once more to the fact that the gown and the town are not too poles apart. The two can always meet, not just in knowledge sharing, but also in its production.

In finding the philosophy around the concept, Amaeshi may not have concluded the process of possibly breaking down its dimensions into the core philosophi­cal themes of ethics, metaphysic­s, epistemolo­gy, logic and aesthetics

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