Kofi Akosah-Sarpong continues his discussion with Prof. George Ayittey on his argument that US President Barack Obama’s statement that Africa’s future is in Africans hands is an “intellectual vindication” for the “
While it is true that Africans are imbued with a greater sense of community awareness than most Western cultures, the concept of the individual was not completely absent. According to a Fanti proverb, "Life is what you (the individual) make it.” In the general African phrase: "I am because we are”, in which the "we" connotes community, the "I" (the individual or personhood) was not entirely absent. An analogous situation is supplied by the phrase: "Man is a social animal.” The meaning here is that the human being desires the company of others and abhors living alone. Accordingly, each person yearns for some "togetherness" or "a community”. But it cannot be inferred from this disposition that "man is a socialist”. Being a "social animal" (sociable or socialistic) is totally different from being a socialist.
Another distinction should be made: Socialism as public policy and socialism as an economic ideology. Public policy and responsible government mandate that the state should care about the poor, the handicapped, the unemployed, the sick and the elderly. In that sense, even the
Indigenous African economic systems are not characterized by these absences and therefore cannot be classified as "socialism.” Economic, political and intellectual repression as well as state controls, were never part of indigenous African tradition. Nor could traditional African rulers establish a "socialist" (state-controlled economy) if they had wanted to since the logistics were well beyond their reach. The control mechanisms and measures needed to control the economy were not yet developed.
Many of Africa's nationalist leaders either misread their own indigenous African economic systems or were ignorant of them. Nyerere (1962), for example, was right in pointing to the communalism of African peasants. It is true the people of
Being communalistic or socialistic did not necessarily mean the African peasant was communist or socialist and therefore willing to share his wealth equally with all members of the extended family. Julius Nyerere, ex‑president of
Among western writers and analysts, there has also been pervasive mythology about indigenous African heritage. One of the most strikingly misleading statement has been the claim of "communal ownership of the means of production.” There was/is no such thing as "communal ownership" of cattle or land. Forests, rivers, lakes and the ocean were for common usage. However, a community could set aside some grazing land for such use. In general, however, land was privately-owned — controlled by lineages. In traditional Africa, the person who first settles on unoccupied land becomes the owner. He may pass this land on to his descendants and they can pass it to their descendants. Thus, the land becomes "lineage-owned" or controlled, belonging to the first ancestor, the original settler. Kings and chiefs may hold royal land or "stool land" in trust but it does not belong to them or the state.
The myth of communal ownership of land may have arisen innocently out of confusion or misinterpretation. When a European colonialist asked an African whom a plot of land belonged to, the African would have replied: "It belongs to us. We own the land.” To the African, the "we" meant his extended family or lineage, but the European might have assigned a much wider interpretation to the "we" to mean the entire village community or the tribe. Hence, "communal ownership of land.”
Furthermore, in indigenous Africa, all the means of production were privately owned. The economic factors of production-labor, capital, and the entrepreneur-were owned by the peasants, not their chiefs or the state. Huts, spears, and agricultural implements were all private property. The profit motive was present in most market transactions. Free enterprise and free trade were the rule in indigenous
The African woman who produced kenkey, garri or semolina herself decided to produce those items. No one forced her to do so. Nor did anyone order the fishermen, artisans, craftsmen, or even hunters what to produce. In modern parlance, those who go about their economic activities on their own free will are called “free enterprisers.”
By this definition, the kente weavers of
For centuries, they have been selling their produce and wares in open, free, village markets. African chiefs do not harass them, impose ridiculous price controls on them, or even fix wages and jail violators: Africans bargain over prices. Nor do these chiefs monopolize the tribal economy, or operate "tribal government enterprises”, the equivalent of state enterprises.
Indigenous African markets have always been hospitable to foreigners. Nigerian traders are welcome, and can indeed be found, in virtually every West African market. The local chiefs do not expel them. Arab and Hausa long‑distance traders have for centuries traded freely in African markets. So too did the Europeans until they rolled out their guns and abused African hospitality. Free trade and private enterprise were the rules in indigenous Africa.
To be continued.