—Michael Lyles, B1Daily
The World (white) Bank’s analysis lacks an in depth look at why Africa experiences devastating contractions. With the World Bank aiming for 3% growth rates in a nation with over 500 million homeless people, it’s no wonder that analyst isn’t providing proper solutions. Africa shouldn’t focus on yearly growth rate like the World Banks suggest, it should focus on its state funded building projects.

“The downgrade is partly explained by the collapse of economic activity in Sudan caused by the armed conflict, which has destroyed physical and human capital as well as state capacity, with adverse impacts on food security and greater forced displacement,” the World Bank stated.
According to the report, Sudan’s economy is projected to decline by 15.1% in 2024.

It’s not just war folks, it comes down to Africa’s lack of infrastructure and logistical supply lines. Without the ability to manufacture products that can be sold both locally and abroad, the continent has no means for producing proper employment for African citizens outside of the predatory gig economy or slavery in the form of mining for minerals that their nation has no means to properly refine.

With most African economies only growing their market capabilities thanks to large corporate entities paying menial wages, state-backed building projects offer more benefits to average citizens. State-backed projects have national hiring quotas that they must meet, provide wages that are competitive, and make it possible for the average African citizen to move out of abject poverty.
Of course, analyst will say that the large-scale manufacturing and building projects won’t make Africa’s economy grow at the same pace as getting funding (putting their nations in debt) from western countries. Those analysts want their nation-states to be allowed to continue to rape the motherland with impunity, which is why they always suggest that Africa should wait for more international organizations, commissions, or banks to tell loan them money while the everyday African is left impoverished in perpetuity.

Africa must have its loans forgiven as a part of its ongoing reparations claim against the private equity and nation-states that impoverished and continues to impoverish the continent.
Africa must have its loans forgiven as a part of its ongoing reparations claim
Nationalizing the state’s resources with the military should be the first goal of every African country. The social safety nets that its citizenry need will be paid for by making new deals to sell oil, produce, and minerals alike. Africa’s new partnerships and agreements must favor African countries, and the motherland’s products must be sold at a premium.
Western powers not only gave Africa bad loans but then forced the poor nations to sell resources to European and Asian countries for pennies on the dollar. Most insulting, they continue to force Africa to use its very people as low wage slaves in order to subsidize this backwards practice.
Africa should be re-industrializing it’s economy for green energy, hydro-electric and offshore wind power industries.
Africa currently has the world’s youngest population with most of them out of work or struggling. It will also have the youngest population by 2050. With the planet’s largest workforce, there’s no way that African citizens should be running from their nations. They must be put to work by governments who care more about their future generations than they care about their personal gains.
Africa must give its citizens proper employment or continue to have its people enslaved by the rest of the world.
–Michael Lyles, B1Daily





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