Dickson Igwe

Africa: land of the rising sun, is second story in a series of articles on an emerging global powerhouse. The following article juxtaposes a new African dynamism, with financial conundrum in Western Society that has slowed global economic growth

2007 saw the start of the Great Recession in the West, which began with the collapse of Lehman Brothers, an old, established, and powerful Investment bank on New York’s Wall Street. This collapse, the largest bankruptcy in US history, saw Lehman’s 600 billion dollars of managed assets turn to sand, when it was revealed the company was holding huge amounts of bad housing loans.

The crisis opened up a Pandora’s Box that exposed the feet of clay of the global banking machine. The contagion swiftly spread to the City Of London, and then other global financial centers, leading to a worldwide recession, chiefly in the West, that lasted up, and until, sometime in 2009. The Western economy continues to suffer the after effects of these two years of recession.

This was a financial meltdown in the Western banking system: chiefly the result of decades of a cowboy culture, and a self regulating banking and investment framework in the world’s most critical financial markets. A modus Vivendi championed by laissez faire type commercial thinking; thinking which determined that small government and deregulation, were panacea for all things bright and beautiful.

This lack of regulation however, was a parody of commonsense, the inverse of economic wisdom, that led to unsustainable and crushing Western debt held by consumers, businesses, and governments, and running into trillions of dollars.

A culture of poker, a game of cards, in financial markets, characterized by greed, hubris, and a casino type economics, saw thousands of investors lose billions of their hard earned dollars, when the gravy train finally went over the proverbial precipice: the banking express had slammed into the buffers. And the train driver was found woefully ignorant of where he was going, and unable to keep the train under control. The already harassed taxpayer had to come to the rescue of an industry deemed, ‘too big to fail’ by the Western establishment: a double whammy for Joe Average!

Incredibly, after all the hard lessons of recent years, greed, hubris, and arrogance, is still a feature of the world of high finance. J P Morgan, the biggest bank in the USA, earlier in 2012, lost over 6 billion dollars in a ‘’bad trade,’’ this was the consequence of ‘’risky trades’’ that hearken back to pre 2007, and the carelessness over the management of other people’s money, and this may be just the start of something very rotten in that institution that points to the continued exposure of the global economy to mega bank incompetence. And this July, 2012, is seeing the start of a new banking crisis and scandal: the London Interbank Offered Rate matter-LIBOR.

‘’LIBOR, ‘’is a synonym for the illegal and deceptive, fixing and manipulation of bank interest rates, worldwide, by managers and traders of some of the world’s most powerful banks. Bankers and dealers in their ivory tower offices, playing the markets, and scooping the cream off of nearly one thousand trillion dollars worldwide in banking funds, a stupendous amount of money owned by depositors and investors, small and large.

The LIBOR matter may be about to trigger a further fall in consumer confidence in the global banking system, and a global investigation of some of the biggest banks. This is not good for the global economy. Hundreds of millions of average bank customers, Virgin Islands residents included, may have been swindled for years, suffering for the greed of the global banking establishment, and its army of financial mercenaries.

Average consumers, paying relatively exorbitant and inflated rates of interest, on home loans, car payments, and credit card debt, while getting ‘nada’ for their bank deposits. Victims of greedy men, who pocketed millions, illegally, off the back of the hard work and sweat of the consumer: a global scam!
Similarly, earlier, the banking crisis of 2007 was triggered by ill advised subprime mortgages that became bad debts, leading to millions of repossessions, and a drop in the Western house price. Again, greed was the motivator. It saw many homeowners in the USA living in homes with mortgages in excess of the home value. The housing crisis was to some extent mimicked in other Western countries.

Consequently, the Western economy plunged into a deep recession, and that has been followed by anemic economic growth ever since. The Western economy is paying for the sins of wealthy and unscrupulous bankers, and a culture of greed.

This is a new page in economic history, a Western idiosyncrasy of greed and deception, that has shifted the center of global economic and commercial gravity from Europe and the Atlantic, eastwards and towards the Pacific. Europe, the world’s largest market, is believed by the pundits to be in long term economic decline. And this is supported by some key demographics, social crises caused by austerity measures in countries such as Spain and Greece, including poor European economic growth that appears a new normal.

Add to that an unsustainable culture of welfare and entitlement supported by high rates of taxation, leading to high youth unemployment, and weariness to invest in job creating businesses, by businessmen. The future for Europe’s youth is not looking very rosy these days, with high unemployment among school and college leavers, aging populations, and long term economic stagnation.

But, while Britain, France, and other European nations have been scratching their collective skulls at the limp nature of their ‘post-the-Great-Recession-economic-performances, newly emergent powerhouses in Asia and Latin America, and a newly confident Africa, have been growing economically in leaps and bounds, and at rates the West can only dream of. However one caveat: this July 2012 is witnessing a slowdown even in emerging economies. China especially, is exports driven and weak growth in the USA, and the European Recession, is a drag on its economy.

Africa on the other hand has, and continues to grow strongly: the ‘Dark Continent’ appears to have turned a new leaf this 2012, and today, for the first time in hundreds of years, Africa may be sitting on the right side of social and economic history. This, according to the Economist of December 3, 2011: a Leader story titled, ‘’AFRICA RISING.’’

Apparently, ‘’after decades of slow growth, Africa has a real chance to follow in the footsteps of Asia.’’ Furthermore, ‘’ over the past decade, six of the world’s ten fastest growing countries were African. Africa has grown faster than East Asia, including Japan. The IMF expects Africa to grow 6% in 2012,’’ equal with Asia.

The story tells of shops that are, ‘’stacked six feet with goods, the streets outside jammed with customers, and salespeople sweating profusely under the onslaught. But this is not a high street during the Christmas shopping season in the rich world.

It is Onitsha, a market town in Southern Nigeria. Many call it the world’s biggest.’’ ‘’ Up to 3 million people go there daily to buy rice, soap, computers, and construction equipment. It is a hub for traders from the Gulf of Guinea; home to millions of highly motivated entrepreneurs, and increasingly prosperous consumers.’’ Onitsha is a portrait of African commercial dynamism that is being copied throughout Africa where an avant garde free enterprise culture, albeit of a peculiarly African quality has caught fire.

The Economist tells of some pretty interesting metrics coming out of Africa: ‘’ a commodities boom; growth from higher revenues from natural resources; favorable demography; with fertility rates crashing in Asia and Latin America, half of the increase in population over the next 40 years will be in Africa; and manufacturing and service economies have a lot to do with African economic growth.’’

This July 2012, in a world beset increasingly by gloom, Africa represents a renaissance in optimism: the African sun is clearly on the rise.

To be continued

Connect with Dickson Igwe on Twitter and Facebook

This article was posted in its entirety as received by bvinews.com. This media house does not correct any spelling or grammatical error within press releases and commentaries. The views expressed therein are not necessarily those of bvinews.com, its sponsors or advertisers.



3 Comments

Disclaimer: BVI News and its affiliated companies are not responsible for the content of comments posted or for anything arising out of use of the comments below or other interaction among the users. We reserve the right to screen, refuse to post, remove or edit user-generated content at any time and for any or no reason in our absolute and sole discretion without prior notice, although we have no duty to do so or to monitor any public forum. All comments posted on BVINews.com reflect the views and opinions of the commentators and not that of the management and staff. Click here for our full comment/user policy/ agreement.

  1. Not2Sure
    July 16, 2012
    Like or Dislike: Thumb up 1 Thumb down 0

    Dickson is right to point out the huge potential for growth in Africa. But historically the continent has always seemed to let everyone down – especially its own people. It is still the most violent place in the world, torn apart by ethnic civil wars. It has the lowest literacy level of any continent, the highest levels of corruption, the highest levels of crime generally, and it ranks rock bottom on almost any measure of ease of doing business. Human rights are fleetingly protected in small pockets.

    Most of all Africa is starved off inward investment at the moment. But the only capital flowing in right now is from China. The Chinese have no problem at all with cooperating with local stongmen to trample on human rights for the purposes of extracting natural resources.

    There is a lot of potential in Africa, but only a madman could witness the last 40 years (broadly since colonial independence) and fail to apply a great deal of caution to any predictions about Africa’s future.

    I am less confident about Dickson’s analysis of the global banking crisis. “Self regulation” as a cause? No country in the world (least of all the US) has allowed banks to self-regulate for nearly half a century.

    Reply to this comment
  2. E. Leonard
    July 15, 2012
    Like or Dislike: Thumb up 3 Thumb down 0

    For decades or even hundreds of years the Eurpoean and others plundered, raped and exploited the African continent and its people. The African continent had a rich and cultural heritage and great civilizations before its colonization. The African continent is blessed with much strategic natural resources. It is one of the richest if not the richest continent yet the masses live in abject poverty.

    Nonetheless, inspite of past and current misfortunes, it must have a laser focus on the future if it is going to turn that glimmer of economic light into a bright shining star, making the African continent an economic power house.

    The African continent has the potential to be an economic power house. It is known as the “Dark Continent” but light follows darkness and days follows night. But the first the step to living up to its economic potential is accepting that it has a problem. Recognizing that there is a problem is the first step in solving any problem. Problem recognized, the solutions often are identifying where you are, where you want to be, and what resources and actions are needed to get the destination or final objective.

    African continent has a myriad of problems. Many were caused by colonialists and some are self-inflicted. Nonetheless, it needs to put a choke hold on these problems in order to move forward. Among the African continent’s problems are exploitation, disunity among nations, greed, corruption, mismanagement, lack of capital, lack of proper planning, neocolonialism, lack or ineffectual economic mechanisms….etc.

    Moreever, for the African continent to leverage and transform that ray of positive economic light into a leading, bright economic star, there must be unity, collobaration, cooperation, and coordination among the majority the 50+ nations.

    They must embrace change and employ the economic mechanisms and skills to use its rich, natural resources to improve the quality of life and standard of living of the African masses. Change often has to precede improvement. The changes and improvements on the African continent will be challenging but changes must be embraced with action.

    Moreover, many of problems that plague the African continent also plagues its Caribbean/West Indian cousins. Caribbean countries are plagued with greed, corruption, mismanagement, disunity, insularity, poor planning….etc. Though there is wide geographic separation among cousins, they share some of the same problems.

    Reply to this comment

Post a Comment

:) :-D :wink: :( 8-O :lol: :-| :cry: 8) :-? :-P :-x :?: :oops: :twisted: :mrgreen: more »
............