The African Consensus
By Kofi Akosah-Sarpong*
United States President Barack Obama’s November 6 visit
to India has brought into the forefront the long-running
issue of what development philosophy is appropriate for
each developing region, especially Africa where there
hasn’t been any clear-cut development philosophy.
Ahead of Obama, Larry Summers, Obama's economic policy
point-man, in New Delhi, India touted China’s and
India’s development successes, grappled with whether
China’s Beijing Consensus or India’s Mumbai Consensus
was better for the rest of the developing world. With
Brazil’s success over the years that has seen millions
of Brazilians moved out of poverty and built an economy
in which the middle class is the majority, we can safely
say there is Sao Paulo Consensus in South America. That
makes the African region as the only place without a
notable developmental Consensus distilled from within
itself.
Such issues have cropped up because the dominant
Washington Consensus has been dictating development
doctrine for the developing world since 1989, especially
Africa which is disadvantaged in the international
political economy and which has had crisis-wrecked
economic development.
The Washington Consensus set specific economic policy
prescriptions such as legal security for property
rights, fiscal discipline, tax reforms, interest rates
that are market determined, liberalization of inward
foreign direct investment, privatization of state
enterprises, competitive exchange rates, among others,
that constitute the “standard” reform package promoted
for crisis-ridden developing countries by Washington,
D.C. based institutions such as the International
Monetary Fund and World Bank.
Honestly, all the above prescription has everything to
do with discipline. For some time, such prescriptions
were virtually imposed without considering each
country’s situation. Africa has suffered dearly because
of such uninformed thinking.
Sadly, Summers didn’t mention an African Consensus
because there is none. But his message is clear to
Africa since Africa is part of the international
development system. If there are Beijing Consensus and
Mumbai Consensus, where is the African Consensus? As
Michael Schuman (of the USA-based Time magazine)
explains while “some believe that China's state-heavy,
semi-market economy -- or “state capitalism”” is the
ideal model for developing countries, Summers think
“Instead, a Mumbai Consensus based on the idea of a
democratic developmental state, driven not by a
mercantilist emphasis on exports, but a people-centered
emphasis on growing levels of consumptions and a
widening middle class.”
Generally, in the Beijing and Mumbai models what is
important is their ability to tinker with the Washington
Consensus to their innate traditional values and
histories, and, in the process, have “boasted an
incredible record of alleviating poverty, building
industry, creating jobs, and translating economic power
into political power.” Alright, this isn’t all that new
to Africa – that’s the ability to mix their traditional
values with the global prosperity ones, Botswana has
been able to do this and they doing fine. But of concern
here is the need for an African Consensus. Botswana
could be used as rallying model, though, as a take-off
for an African Consensus.
In wrestling with either Washington Consensus or the
Beijing Consensus, Summers opts for the Mumbai Consensus
– “a third way not based on ideas of laissez-faire
capitalism that have proven obsolete or ideas of
authoritarian capitalism that ultimately will prove not
to be enduringly successful.” The lesson here is that
both China and India have not abandoned the principles
of the Washington Consensus but have appropriated them
into their innate traditional values and mixed both
ideals reasonably well for their progress. China’s
traditional Confucianism mixed with dose of communism
and capitalism, for example.
The fact is Africa had had a peak into both the Chinese
and the Indian models but didn’t work them out
appropriately from within its traditional values upward
for sustainability and progress. Ask Mathieu Kerekou
(Benin Republic) and Menghistu Haile Mariam (Ethiopia)
about this. At issue is development thinking that
emanates from the core ideals of African traditional
values and rational realities. The product of this
mixture can aptly be called, both philosophically and
practically, the African Consensus.
Waiting to be mixed and appropriated, all the
ingredients for an eventual African Consensus are there
to be used – the problem is lack of spiritual and
political will. From Kwame Nkrumah to Thabo Mbeki, the
talks have been superb but the actions are empty. The
cultures are there to be collated as symbols for
continental unifier and the spiritual lubricant to drive
progress; from ECOWAS to SADC, the regional
organizations are there for the construction of the
African Consensus; the over one billion African people
are there for solidly huge internal market; and aside
from the African Development Bank, other institutions
are increasingly being developed that can launch the
Africa Consensus.
Either as if being held by some unseen forces or more
correctly poor leadership, ex-Ghanaian President John
Kufour has bemoaned African leaders’ unwillingness to
integrate their economies. Kufour’s concerns reflects
the fact that 50 years ago, African founding fathers
such as Kwame Nkrumah passionately promoted Pan-Africanism,
among its striking attributes, as means of uniting
Africa politically and economically. But African leaders
are yet to appropriate it gamely for greater progress.
Yes, regional blocks such as ECOWAS are on the
ascendency but the direction towards a continental
African Consensus such as China’s or India’s cannot be
seen on the African development radar. How can an
African Consensus happen when majority of Africans in
the traditional, informal sector, where most of the
wealth are located and entrapped, as the rapid expansion
of the mobile phone phenomena across the continent
shows, aren’t factored in when policies are being
created?
The ability of African leaders to midwife an African
Consensus will be a response to Summers’ views and an
answer to Michael Schuman wearily asking, “India vs.
China: Which is the best role model for the developing
world?” While India or China may be of admirable
development footnote to Africa, of advancement lesson is
the fact that their successes are partly driven by their
core traditional values that drives their mentality,
discipline and work ethic. Yes, as Schuman indicated,
“every up-and-coming poor nation wants to “be like
China;” why not, for the good life, isn’t it? But how
Africa will be like China or India involves clear
substantial thinking from within African traditional
values by Africa’s leaders.
That means reasoning from within Africa’s cultural
realities, that’s from within its peoples. After 50
years of Africa’s birth, even some well-placed African
policy makers and editorialists doubt the development
policies currently running Africa. The Accra,
Ghana-based Daily Graphic and The Ghanaian Chronicle
doubt the current development policies running Africa.
The policies are tortuous; they aren’t overwhelmingly
brewed from within African cultural realities. China and
India teaches Africa that the Washington Consensus
principles only cannot flower an African Consensus – for
psychological and historical reasons part of game has
come from within Africans’ cultural ideals.
While China may have its own unique history, India’s has
a bit of Africa’s – European colonialism. As a
development venture, African states were founded on
ex-colonial Western development paradigms that didn’t
adequately factor in African cultural values. The
Beijing and Mumbai Consensus because their leaders were
able to move beyond the dominant Western paradigms by
re-orientating their development ideals and manufactured
from within their cultural tenets, and driven by
responsible leadership.
As the African development situation increasingly opens
up, the strategy is to simultaneously appropriate the
enabling aspects of the African culture and refine the
inhibiting values for progress. From Southeast Asian to
Europe, nations that have prospered, and sustained it,
have done so from within their core cultural values and
play them with other worldly prosperity ideals.
Consequently, this question from Schuman will be
appropriate to African leaders, elites and the mass
media: “So what’s a better model for” Africa’s progress?
“… The Mumbai Consensus or the Beijing Consensus?” The
best model for Africa isn’t either, but the one from
within Africa. But occasionally, Africans could draw
lessons from the Chinese and the Indian models. It is
such new thinking that will help grow the real African
Consensus, and open the way to the renewal of Africa’s
progress.
*Kofi Akosah-Sarpong is a journalist and academic
|