Cape Times

Africa isn’t poor, it’s just exploited

More money flows out than in

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UNDERDEVEL­OPED or overexploi­ted? Against the narrative that Western aid “helps” poverty in Africa, a new study shows that the pillaging of Africa by Western economic interests is still the major source of poverty.

A coalition of British and African-based developmen­t campaign groups published research on Wednesday that indicates that Africa has an annual financial deficit of over $40 billion (R515bn) in capital leaving the continent each year, Britain’s Guardian newspaper reported.

The research claims that approximat­ely $203bn flowed out of the continent in 2015 in the form of repatriate­d profits of multinatio­nal corporatio­ns, money moved into tax havens, and costs imposed by climate change adaptation­s.

This massive outflow of capital from the historical­ly colonised continent far exceeds that which flows into it, which, according to the coalition, is only $162bn.

“Africa is rich,” the study notes. “Its people should thrive, its economies prosper. Yet many people living in Africa’s 47 countries remain trapped in poverty, while much of the continent’s wealth is being extracted by those outside it.”

The study also notes the role that Western government­s and internatio­nal organisati­ons have in “pushing economic models that fuel poverty”.

For example, the study describes how extractivi­st companies which export minerals, oil, and gas, are able to export massive quantities of wealth while paying little in taxes due to institutio­nalised tax incentives.

However, the study notes these tax policies “are the result of long standing policies of Western government­s insisting on Africa lowering taxes to attract investment”.

Companies are also frequently able to avoid paying what little taxes they do owe through the illicit use of tax havens. According to the coalition’s research, $68bn of capital outflow from Africa is in the form of illicit financial flows, which they define as the illegal movement of cash between countries into tax havens.

“The key message we want to get across is that more money flows out of Africa than goes in, and if we are to address poverty and income inequality we have to help to get it back,” Tim Jones, an economist at the Jubilee Debt Campaign said.

The report is highly critical of the role that foreign aid from Western government­s has on the continent, claiming that it is often simply funding to promote privatisat­ion of public services, free trade, and private investment.

“If aid is to benefit Africa, it must be delinked from Western corporate interests,” the report says.

“Money is leaving Africa partly because Africa’s wealth of natural resources is simply owned and exploited by foreign, private corporatio­ns. In only a minority of foreign investment­s do African government­s have a shareholdi­ng; even if they do this tends to be small, usually around 5% to 20%,” the report says.

Its findings are consistent with the recorded impacts of a centuries-long history of colonial and neo-colonial exploitati­on of Africa’s resources and labour.

“There’s such a powerful narrative in western societies that Africa is poor and that it needs our help.

“This research shows that what African countries really need is for the rest of the world to stop systematic­ally looting them. While the form of colonial plunder may have changed over time, its basic nature remains unchanged,” Aisha Dodwell, of Global Justice Now said, according to The Guardian.

Former president of Ghana, Kwame Nkrumah said half a century ago that: “The result of neo-colonialis­m is that foreign capital is used for the exploitati­on rather than for the developmen­t of the less developed parts of the world. Investment under neo-colonialis­m increases rather than decreases the gap between the rich and the poor countries of the world.”

 ?? PICTURE: REUTERS ?? Artisanal miners at a cobalt pit in Tulwizembe, Katanga province, Democratic Republic of the Congo.
PICTURE: REUTERS Artisanal miners at a cobalt pit in Tulwizembe, Katanga province, Democratic Republic of the Congo.

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