Thursday, 23 January 2025

Neoliberal Economic Riot at the Base

Introduction

The purpose of this piece is to present a summary of how neoliberal economic features are acting and impacting at the lowest geopolitical space in a typical African entity. The reason is to extend the debate on post-independence collective degeneration. By moving away from national level arguments we show the dynamic processes and complex reactions at the grassroot. The political unit of focus in the autonomous community/republic.

Clarification of Terms

Neoliberal economics is a system of material and service exchanges where the primary objective is the maximisation of profit in a disequilibrium market. Uncontrolled market with limited government oversight is the king. It is liberal because its undergirding ideology assume that all participants in the market are discrete individuals with sufficient capacity for rational decisions. In this market everything is assigned a monetary value to be bought and sold. The market is rigged and controlled. Neo indicates the refinement of liberal thinking.

Where does this market operate? Anywhere in the world however the best examples are flag-independent countries i.e. countries where political leaders have limited ability to decide and act on their peoples' interest. Europe, Americas, Asia and Africa have thriving examples. However it is most severe in Africa, South America and Asia. The political, religious, cultural, civil and military leaders are hostages of external powerful interests even if they were elected. These leaders are powerful only on 3 grounds; allowing or ignoring peoples’ super exploitation and oppression, refusal to strategically invest in the peoples and deploying institutional violence on the peoples resisting and protesting in solidarity.

The Base

This is the grassroot, that reside in non-urban communities accounting for the majority of national populations. They are connected to the national and regional/state capitals from where most policies and decision are designed and implemented. Policy implementation is not guaranteed. Normatively, the capitals should be the primary source of resources, capital, investment and infrastructure. In addition grassroots depend on subsistence agriculture and secondarily by services. The social structure used to be strong, dependable, participatory and collaborative. This is the main safety net precisely located in families. There is no public neocolonial social security.

Governance-wise, the base seemingly endured with sophisticated indigenous mechanisms handed down from ancestors. However these are seriously challenged in the face of colonial realities. They have offices, structures, processes and institutions currently held by leaders with limited awareness of their basis, requirements and conditions. The leaders have no serious formation in indigenous knowledge, value system and cosmology rather are beneficiaries of Eurocentric methods whose relevance disconnects from facts on the ground.

The economy has been monetary and non-monetary with goods and services exchanged equitably in non-market and nearby market spaces. Usually food sovereignty is guaranteed in stable communities with sufficient arable land, water and labour. This guaranteed affordability and reliability.

Contemporary Experience

As neoliberal fiscal and monetary policies deepen from the capitals over time, incomes collapse, saving evaporate, costs rise from incorrect implementation of policies, limitation of statutory payments and lack of necessary goods and services. Simply put, the state fails to deliver its duties. Cashflow drastically decline with numerous implications. Cost of food begins to rise, as the cost of health care, schools and basic necessities. Costs are highest at the grassroot. This pressure is tackled in various ways by families and groups. How do the leadership react?

Despite the severity of the situation, it equally carries huge opportunities for leadership particularly in rallying citizens towards emancipatory and liberational search for solutions. At this point intellectual block and leadership suspension step in. Most indigenous, civil, political and religious leaders consistently fail to act because of their Eurocentric formation. Due to their delegitimised positions, they are inflexible to ground-up strategic solutions even as evidence of economic pain increase. In addition they have a spatially ontological blindness that disable them from grounding any credible response away from the capitals.

Most leaders are severely handicapped, incompetent and ignorant particularly the so-called Christian leaders who stew in brainwash. Their views of politics are distorted that they are content with colonial liberal theological focused on personal salvation without coherent asymmetric political framework. They forget that Jesus Christ was a colonised and oppressed subject of Rome. They are ignorant of economic structure, laws and impact as their demands intensify for more material sacrifices from oppressed members. 

This irresponsibility and lack of credible approach leads to distrust and mutation of places of worship for commercial purposes. The leaders mistake people’s focus on survival for their own competence and relevance. They blame the oppressed for lacking initiative, energy and lack of faith were applicable. They fail to see the strategic, institutional and collective dimensions of the complex processes and the begging need for credible response. Lightweight and miserable intellectuals evacuate the situation to poverty devoid of comprehensive long durée root-cause analysis.

Local markets shrink as fewer sellers go to bigger markets, while journey to bigger markets costs per capita rise in the absence of private transport. Many leaders still hesitate to approve new markets in proximity to retain capital and reduce waste at the base. Both grassroot production and quality decline in the absence of government support, community banks, cheap fund facilities and public social security. Insecurity, crime and immorality gain traction. 

Those with extra capital in the community set up shops to cater to customers with variable profit margins. Social relations slowly weaken as disputes grow. The unwell easily go to places of worship and questionable indigenous doctors. Debt, quality of life and standard of living rapidly. Death rate rises as lifespan decrease sharply in the face of collapse of preventive health care. Community composition, cohesion and identity gradually adjust negatively. Like controlled demolition, the grassroot is unravelled systematically over time. 

Conclusion

Collective degeneration from neocolonial policy is the natural controlled outcome from the colonial project. Its impact touches every part of a neocolonial state. Its mitigation is stalled by thoughtless, inflexible and delegitimised indigenous leadership formed on Eurocentric diet.  There are viable alternatives. Until leadership opens to indigenous value system and authenticity plus deleting the notion of history as a burden and embrace it as a treasure trove for reconstructing collective dignity of our peoples, comprehensive strategic action to reverse decline at any scale is remote.

Wednesday, 8 January 2025

Fundamental Obstacles to Africa’s Intellectual Renaissance

 Introduction

A closer look at Africa from inside and outside suggest among other movements a renewal of enduring tensions between forces at various scales since 2020. These tensions seem to have ebbed away or rather receded from the 1990s following the collapse of the Soviet Union. However post-collapse didn’t bring positive growth on most Africa’s indicators of life for the majority. Bad situations got worse before advancing to a freefall from 2011 to the present. The forces driving this collective holistic degeneration of peoples are consistent, unwavering and predictable. For many reasons, the intellectual springs and most African intellectuals either ignore the true underlying currents or fail to appreciate the reality of their structural power. Our focus in this output is to unveil two features of these gaps both of which reinforce each other.

Function of Time

Most readings of Africa’s experience even among Africans on the continent and in diaspora flow from unquestioned imposed timelines. Even when the timelines are appropriated, the substance of outcomes offer lightweight testimonies of positively disruptive solutions to facts of the ground. In most cases timelines are presented as mostly short and medium, both of which are insufficient and insignificant for comprehensive investigation of complexity. The popular timeline is the 1950s – 1960s given as disruptive when colonial powers or rather European elite offered most African nationalist leaders flag independence. If critical reflection is tolerated, such gestures of deceit were made without compensation after an average of 100 years of violent imposition. None of the colonial structures, philosophy, strategy and institutions including religions were radically changed. Just a change of personnel!

A wrong reading of pre-flag independence endured from colonial miseducation policies with its brainwashing operations and reductionist curricula. While indigenous neocolonial leaders pretend to offer credible alternatives, their policies only reinforced colonial agenda. Colonial oppression, massacres and genocide of millions of indigenous Africans were extended with radical passion in the name of national security. Many intellectuals move to uncritically glorify colonial excesses and even make pyrrhic distinctions between the British, Portuguese, Belgian and the French as if oppression and genocides as categories operated strictly along those lines.

Sadly, indigenous leaders including intellectuals since 1950s – 1960s settled for perpetuating false narratives of European superiority while failing repeatedly to show positive replications on the grounds. These deluded minds only feast on their illusions in so far as their lower appetites located in narrow personal interest are satisfied. They seek legitimacy without solidarity. There was nothing for the community and the peoples. The illusion is propagated in universities, secondary and primary schools in state-sanctioned intellectual poisoning of generations via public education. Till this day, cheerleaders with numerous degrees and rabid spokespersons in high places including religions continue to wax lyrical for indigenous mass degeneration. Colonialism in all its forms have no positive, it is an inherently evil geopolitical and geoeconomic strategy implemented by European elite with premeditated mass murder from institutional violence.

Civilisational Appeal

While colonialism in all its forms is evil regardless of timeline and executor, an extended timeline opens a wider frame for appraising it without diminishing the features of its operation in Africa. There are enduring core African principles recognised across diverse communities. These are family, community, religion and learning. This is the bedrock of millennia of civilisations and developments across the continents during periods of ascendance and instability respectively. Internal contexts offer useful insights on how peoples organise and developed. A longer time frame favour broader outlines of principles and features of mechanisms. Civilisations are never static and aren’t imposed to change radically in very short periods. Africa for the most part is an exporter of life and dispenser of true nobility.

The last 500 years has validated Europe as a geography of regression for Africans whose main products and exports to Africa till this day are evil and death. All European institutions and elite are united in their conviction that their boots of impunity and oppression on the neck of Africans is normative. This is a systematic geostrategic initiative with consistent resonance and sustaining power in each generation. Unfortunately most African intellectuals prefer to disinterestedly essentialise this clear stream of intergenerational construct against the strategic interest of their peoples. They offer no counter-narrative or contrary presentations. For those whose lands and peoples where subject to the gravest holocaust for over 300 years, in the form of international trade in African persons, intellectual dishonesty is intolerable. It is not so much that European elite spare their own peoples, no. The so-called first and second world wars with millions of fatalities are indisputable testimonies. European peoples worth less than their projected profits.

The idea that European elite offer shining examples for Africa’s advancement is reprehensive. To suggest that an uncritical implementation of so-called European theories and strategies for the strategic uplifting all Africans including the dead without taking into account indigenous cosmologies, civilisational realities and unique experiential categories is fraudulent. The avoidance of asymmetrical response and critical interrogation of foreign ideas, experiences, hypothesis and theories prior to implementation is the fountain of most African intellectuals. They are not only blind to inherent goodness of Africans, they accentuate their ignorance by explicating their own ontological poverty, thoughtlessness and historical unconsciousness.

Conclusion

The current global geopolitical conflagration is a strong sign of the times, a slow transition to an irreversible phase. Our reflection reaffirm the inherent evil of colonialism and delineate Europe as a space of evil and death (for Africans collectively), its enduring primary exports to Africa. Europe is not an example, its elite are strategically conditioned to go violently against Africa’s interest. Most African intellectuals have refused or failed to acknowledge consistent facts, patterns and relationships. The currency of new reactions and tentative counter-actions in Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger are the first robust entrée to indigenous appropriation of history since the 1960s. While it is too early to draw conclusions, all the hallmarks of indigenous resistance to European elite and defacing of flag independence are undeniable in these territories.