Tuesday, December 04, 2007

Wrong Advise for Africa

Advise to developing countries in particular and to Africans in generall comes at the rate of a dime for a a dozen. In this piece from a South African newspaper is a rather curious set of prescriptions that show only that there's a correct appreciation of the problems of poverty but hardly an understanding of the proper approach to creating growth. Among these is the the obsession with self reliance and the big role for agriculture and use of tariffs for protecting industries.

While I must be cautious because the story may have reported carefully, I can wager that this approach is bound to lead to failure. Given the large informal sector there, it is evident that deliberate effort to increase informality in the economy is just poorly informed. Structural reform of African economies is an imperative and it must lead away from the distorted informal economies towards freer trade. As John Kay states, the insistence on regional and decoupling from the world is equally wrong-headed. Africa's citizens must not miss the glaring lessons of history. Slogan alone do not a high income create.

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