Nigerian Vice President, Prof Yemi Osinbajo has told American scholars and professionals that Africa’s impressive economic transformation was being driven by ambitious businessmen and women.
These entrepreneurs were stepping beyond national borders and going global, Osinbajo said at the inaugural “Africa Rising’’ lecture of the Harvard University Business School last Tuesday evening.
He spoke at the Harvard Business School in Cambridge Massachusetts, where he delivered the keynote at Batten Hall on the course ‘Africa Rising, understanding business, entrepreneurship, and the complexities of a continent.’
“Africa Rising is as much about improving standards of governance as it is about an increasingly confident youths and civil society.a
“It is also about businessmen and women who are stepping beyond national borders and going global,” he said.
Osinbajo told the gathering of erudite scholars and professionals that “it appears the political pan-Africanists of old have given way in terms of prominence to the business pan-Africanists of the likes of Aliko Dangote, Issad Reb Rab (Cevital), Mike Adenuga, Kim Bello-Osagie, the Sawiris owners of Orascom from Egypt, and mining magnate Patrice Motsepe, among others.”
He traced the genesis of Africa’s economic turnaround to the last decade of thé 12th century and noted that democracy provided the fulcrum for change in the mid 1990s.
The president observed the change was accelerated by “phenomenal rise in Chinese resource bullishness, the commodities boom including new oil and gas discoveries in many African countries, digital technology, mobile phones and the Internet.”
He explained that the creative ingenuity of Africa’s businessmen and women cut across different sectors of the economy such as in agriculture, telecommunications, manufacturing and IT.
“We’ve been seeing the slow but steady maturing of institutions; press and civil society that are boldly taking advantage of the empowering nature of the internet; and an increasingly engaged diaspora,” he added.
Drawing attention to Africa’s phenomenal growth, Vice President Osinbajo observed that the continent developmental experience had thrown up very important lessons one of which is that “economic growth is not sustainable without nation-building, and even of greater importance, state building.”
“Many of the ethnic and other parochial tensions that have tended to create insecurity and outright conflict time, and time again, are largely as a result of failure to deliberately undertake nation- building efforts,” he submitted.
Other lessons highlighted by Osinbajo included: “The benefit of discarding the error of African Exceptionalism – belief that African countries were in some way exempted from the rules by which other countries and continents have succeeded; that somehow Africa must not be judged by the standards and expectations that apply to other countries.’’
He emphasised “the need for a healthy distrust of purist ideological prescriptions, in favour of a common sense introduction of markets with a fair balance of state participation or intervention that has shown interesting results.’’
Osinbajo noted that sustainable growth comes from productivity increases in the real sector, which perhaps explains the continued high unemployment in Africa even at six per cent growth rates; the ‘jobless’ growth phenomenon.
“Africa cannot afford to underestimate the power of technology to fast-track the continent’s rise. Emerging technologies have played extraordinary roles in every aspect of the continent’s most touted successes.
“Many – including Africans themselves – constantly need to be reminded that Africa is not a country. Policy-makers and development partners must understand that what worked in Rwanda or Zambia might not necessarily work in Ghana.’’
Osinbajo, according to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), advised African leaders to pursue a people centered economic model which translates economic growth to an improved standard of living of the average citizens on the continent.
He stated that social safety nets have become imperative, citing the over N500 billion social Investment programmes of the Buhari Presidency which is committed to targeting the youths, artisans, market women and the vulnérables.
Earlier, in her welcome remarks, Prof. Caroline Elkins of the Harvard Business School, noted the contributions of the vice president to legal profession in Africa and his impressive public service career especially during his tenure as Attorney-General of Lagos State. (Thisday. One photo: Novo Isioro)