US Financial Crisis: Lessons for Africa

Published on 30th September 2008

Anti-capitalist pundits in Africa are questioning the efficacy of the Free Market and Capitalism in the light of the financial crisis that has hit the US, prompting the Bush administration’s to have congress endorse a $700 billion bail out for the beleaguered financial sector.

The Free Market/Capitalism ideology was delivered in Africa through colonialism and coups. Comsequently, Africans not only shied away from the fact that self interest (under government watch) drives the world but also associate Free Market economics with the US.

Capitalism is about pursuing 'self interest' under the careful watch of the government  to curtail harm and unfair practice. Self interest is not a preserve of the US! What happened in the US?  The referee (government) slept on his job and let the wrong team (underperforming companies) take home the victory trophy. African governments must neither sleep on the job nor engage in statist submerging of private enterprise. Africa must reform existing constitutions to legitimise the social contract with existing governments and learn to competitively harness self interest to penetrate the global economy.

Whereas the current global financial crisis interrogates the manner in which the free market message is delivered to poor countries, it also brings the debate on whether African countries ought to invest heavily in the SAVING as opposed to the CREDIT industry; or push for both with equal momentum.


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