George Ayittey: Cheetahs vs. Hippos for Africa's future

88,735 views ・ 2007-08-01

TED


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Well, first of all, let me thank Emeka -- as a matter of fact,
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TED Global -- for putting this conference together.
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This conference is going to rank as the most important
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in the beginning of the 21st century.
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Think African governments will put together a conference like this?
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You think the A.U. will put together a conference like this?
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Even before they do that they will ask for foreign aid.
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I would also like to pay homage and honor to the TED Fellows
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June Arunga, James Shikwati, Andrew, and the other TED Fellows.
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I call them the Cheetah Generation.
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The Cheetah Generation is a new breed of Africans
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who brook no nonsense about corruption.
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They understand what accountability and democracy is.
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They're not going to wait for government to do things for them.
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That's the Cheetah Generation,
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and Africa's salvation rests on the backs of these Cheetahs.
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In contrast, of course, we have the Hippo Generation.
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(Laughter)
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The Hippo Generation are the ruling elites.
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They are stuck in their intellectual patch.
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Complaining about colonialism and imperialism,
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they wouldn't move one foot.
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If you ask them to reform the economies,
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they're not going to reform it
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because they benefit from the rotten status quo.
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Now, there are a lot of Africans who are very angry,
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angry at the condition of Africa.
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Now, we're talking about a continent that is not poor.
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It is rich in mineral resources, natural mineral resources.
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But the mineral wealth of Africa is not being utilized
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to lift its people out of poverty.
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That's what makes a lot of Africans very angry.
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And in a way, Africa is more than a tragedy, in more ways than one.
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There's another enduring tragedy, and that tragedy is that
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there are so many people, so many governments,
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so many organizations who want to help the people in Africa.
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They don't understand.
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Now, we're not saying don't help Africa.
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Helping Africa is noble.
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But helping Africa has been turned into a theater of the absurd.
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It's like the blind leading the clueless.
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(Laughter)
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There are certain things that we need to recognize.
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Africa's begging-bowl leaks.
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Did you know that 40 percent of the wealth created in Africa
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is not invested here in Africa?
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It's taken out of Africa.
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That's what the World Bank says.
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Look at Africa's begging-bowl.
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It leaks horribly.
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There are people who think that we should pour more money,
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more aid into this bowl which leaks.
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What are the leakages?
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Corruption alone costs Africa 148 billion dollars a year.
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Yes, put that aside.
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Capital flight out of Africa, 80 billion a year.
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Put that aside.
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Let's take food imports.
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Every year Africa spends 20 billion dollars to import food.
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Just add that up, all these leakages.
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That's far more than the 50 billion Tony Blair wants to raise for Africa.
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Now, back in the 1960s Africa not only fed itself,
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it also exported food.
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Not anymore.
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We know that something has gone fundamentally wrong.
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You know it, I know it, but let's not waste our time
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talking about these mistakes because we'll spend all day here.
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Let's move on, and flip over to the next chapter,
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and that's what this conference is all about -- the next chapter.
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The next chapter begins with first of all, asking ourselves
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this fundamental question,
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"Whom do we want to help in Africa?"
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There is the people, and then there is the government or leaders.
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Now, the previous speaker before me,
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Idris Mohammed, indicated that
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we've had abysmal leadership in Africa.
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That characterization, in my view, is even more charitable.
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(Laughter)
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I belong to an Internet discussion forum,
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an African Internet discussion forum,
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and I asked them, I said, "Since 1960, we've had exactly
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204 African heads of state, since 1960."
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And I asked them to name me just 20 good leaders,
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just 20 good leaders --
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you may want to take this leadership challenge yourself.
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I asked them to name me just 20.
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Everybody mentioned Nelson Mandela, of course.
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Kwame Nkrumah, Nyerere, Kenyatta -- somebody mentioned Idi Amin.
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(Laughter)
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I let that pass.
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(Laughter)
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My point is, they couldn't go beyond 15.
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Even if they had been able to name me 20,
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what does that tell you?
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20 out of 204 means that the vast majority
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of the African leaders failed their people.
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And if you look at them, the slate of the post-colonial leaders --
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an assortment of military fufu heads,
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Swiss-bank socialists, crocodile liberators, vampire elites,
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quack revolutionaries.
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(Applause)
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Now, this leadership is a far cry from the traditional leaders
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that Africans have known for centuries.
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The second false premise that we make
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when we're trying to help Africa
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is that sometimes we think that there is something called
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a government in Africa that cares about its people,
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serves the interests of the people, and represents the people.
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There is one particular quote -- a Lesotho chief once said
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that "Here in Lesotho, we've got two problems:
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rats and the government."
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(Laughter)
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What you and I understand as a government
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doesn't exist in many African countries.
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In fact, what we call our governments are vampire states.
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Vampires because they suck
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the economic vitality out of their people.
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Government is the problem in Africa.
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A vampire state is the government --
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(Applause)
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-- which has been hijacked by a phalanx of bandits and crooks
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who use the instruments of state power to enrich themselves,
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their cronies, and tribesmen and exclude everybody else.
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The richest people in Africa are heads-of-state and ministers,
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and quite often the chief bandit is the head-of-state himself.
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Where do they get their money?
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By creating wealth?
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No.
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By raking it off the backs of their suffering people.
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That's not wealth creation. It's wealth redistribution.
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The third fundamental issue that we have to recognize
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is that if we want to help the African people,
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we must know where the African people are.
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Take any African economy.
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An African economy can be broken up into three sectors.
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There is the modern sector, there is the informal sector
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and the traditional sector.
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The modern sector is the abode of the elites.
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It's the seat of government.
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In many African countries the modern sector is lost.
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It's dysfunctional.
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It is a meretricious fandango of imported systems,
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which the elites themselves don't understand.
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That is the source of many of Africa's problems
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where the struggles for political power emanate
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and then spill over onto the informal and the traditional sector,
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claiming innocent lives.
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Now the modern sector, of course,
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is where a lot of the development aid and resources went into.
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More than 80 percent of Ivory Coast's development
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went into the modern sector.
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The other sectors, the informal and the traditional sectors,
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are where you find the majority of the African people,
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the real people in Africa. That's where you find them.
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Now, obviously it makes common sense
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that if you want to help the people, you go where the people are.
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But that's not what we did.
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As a matter of fact,
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we neglected the informal and the traditional sectors.
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Now, traditional sector is where Africa produces its agriculture,
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which is one of the reasons why Africa can't feed itself,
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and that's why it must import food.
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All right, you cannot develop Africa by ignoring
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the informal and the traditional sectors.
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And you can't develop the informal and the traditional sectors
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without an operational understanding of how these two sectors work.
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These two sectors, let me describe to you,
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have their own indigenous institutions.
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First one is the political system.
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Traditionally, Africans hate governments. They hate tyranny.
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If you look into their traditional systems,
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Africans organize their states in two types.
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The first one belongs to those ethnic societies
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who believe that the state was necessarily tyrannous,
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so they didn't want to have anything to do
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with any centralized authority.
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These societies are the Ibo, the Somali, the Kikuyus,
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for example. They have no chiefs.
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The other ethnic groups, which did have chiefs,
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made sure that they surrounded the chiefs
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with councils upon councils upon councils
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to prevent them from abusing their power.
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In Ashanti tradition, for example,
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the chief cannot make any decision
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without the concurrence of the council of elders.
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Without the council the chief can't pass any law,
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and if the chief doesn't govern according to the will of the people
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he will be removed.
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If not, the people will abandon the chief,
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go somewhere else and set up a new settlement.
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And even if you look in ancient African empires,
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they were all organized around one particular principle --
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the confederacy principle,
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which is characterized by a great deal of devolution of authority,
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decentralization of power.
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Now, this is what I have described to you.
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This is part of Africa's indigenous political heritage.
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Now, compare that to the modern systems
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the ruling elites established on Africa.
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It is a total far cry.
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In the economic system in traditional Africa,
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the means of production is privately owned.
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It's owned by extended families.
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You see, in the West, the basic economic and social unit
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is the individual.
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The American will say, "I am because I am,
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and I can damn well do anything I want, anytime."
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The accent is on the "I."
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In Africa, the Africans say, "I am, because we are."
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The "we" connotes community -- the extended family system.
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The extended family system pools its resources together.
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They own farms. They decide what to do, what to produce.
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They don't take any orders from their chiefs.
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They decide what to do.
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And when they produce their crops, they sell the surplus
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on marketplaces.
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When they make a profit it is theirs to keep,
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not for the chief to sequester it from them.
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So, in a nutshell, what we had in traditional Africa
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was a free-market system.
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There were markets in Africa
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before the colonialists stepped foot on the continent.
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Timbuktu was one great big market town.
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Kano, Salaga -- they were all there.
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Even if you go to West Africa, you notice that market activity
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in West Africa has always been dominated by women.
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So, it's quite appropriate that this section is called
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a marketplace.
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The market is not alien to Africa.
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What Africans practiced was a different form of capitalism,
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but then after independence, all of a sudden,
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markets, capitalism became a western institution,
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and the leaders said Africans were ready for socialism.
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Nonsense.
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And even then, what kind of socialism did they practice?
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The socialism that they practiced was a peculiar form of
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Swiss-bank socialism,
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which allowed the heads of states and the ministers
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to rape and plunder Africa's
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treasuries for deposit in Switzerland.
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That is not the kind of system Africans had known for centuries.
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What do we do now?
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Go back to Africa's indigenous institutions,
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and this is where we charge the Cheetahs to go into the informal sectors,
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the traditional sectors.
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That's where you find the African people.
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And I'd like to show you a quick little video
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about the informal sector, about the boat-building
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that I, myself, tried to mobilize Africans in the Diaspora
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to invest in.
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Could you please show that?
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The men are going fishing in these small boats.
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Yes, it's an enterprise.
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This is by a local Ghanaian entrepreneur, using his own capital.
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He's getting no assistance from the government,
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and he's building a second, bigger boat.
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A bigger boat will mean more fish will be caught and landed.
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It means that he will be able to employ more Ghanaians.
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It also means that he will be able to generate wealth.
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And then it will have what economists call
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external effects on a local economy.
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All that you need to do, all that the elites need to do,
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is to move this operation into something that is enclosed
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so that the operation can be made more efficient.
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Now, it is not just this informal sector.
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There is also traditional medicine.
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80 percent of Africans still rely on traditional medicine.
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The modern healthcare sector has totally collapsed.
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Now, this is an area -- I mean, there is a treasure trove of wealth
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in the traditional medicine area.
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This is where we need to mobilize Africans,
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in the Diaspora especially, to invest in this.
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We also need to mobilize Africans in the Diaspora,
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not only to go into the traditional sectors,
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but to go into agriculture and also to instigate change from within.
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We were able to mobilize Ghanaians in the Diaspora
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to instigate change in Ghana and bring about democracy in Ghana.
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And I know that with the Cheetahs, we can take Africa back
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one village at a time.
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Thank you very much.
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(Applause)
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