Opinion and Analysis
By CAROLINE MUGO
In Summary
- Biggest misunderstanding about the continent is that because it has been labelled an emerging market, it is to be treated as just that.
The CNN reporter’s attempt to discredit Kenya by
terming it a “hotbed of terror” at the height of US President Barack
Obama’s historic visit to the country – though surprising to many locals
filled with excitement over the “homecoming of their son” – was not
uncharacteristic of the Western media’s view of Africa.
The damaging label came at the exact time the entire world was watching Kenya, dealing a big blow to the country’s image.
Africa has been misrepresented using every manner
of negative labels: corrupt, poor, insecure, hungry, conflict-ridden,
diseased, illiterate, unskilled and poorly governed.
Ironic, though, is the fact that the same continent is home to six among the globe’s fastest growing economies.
Indeed, it cannot be denied that African nations
are grappling with serious challenges. The fact is, however, that every
country and region in the world is grappling with its own set of
problems.
One by one, beginning with the not quite ended
recession in the US, the continuing debt crisis in the Eurozone, the
recent plummeting of Chinese markets, the on-going decline in Brazil’s
economy, the major currency devaluations and drop in equity prices all
around the world; all are pressing problems.
Still, Africa continues to receive a
disproportionate amount of negative focus from the rest of the world for
its problems in comparison to the focus it deserves for the pivotal
role it has so relentlessly played in the global economy.
Such focus is triggered by misrepresentation from international media and other influencers of opinions.
It is these preconceived notions that have been so
loosely applied alongside the definition of Africa as a whole that are
behind the continents slow rate of contribution to the world economy.
It is an indisputable certainty that in the global
economic equation, Africa collectively is where the promise of global
prosperity lies. And it all begins with a changing mindset.
The rest of the world needs to view Africa through a
different lens from what it is used to, if Africa is to deliver upon
its promise of catalysing global economic prosperity.
Even when these notions and labels are not
expressly negative or derogatory, there are outdated and misrepresent
the way in which Africa really fits into the global economic system.
For instance, Africa has long been referred to as
the final/last frontier. To the undiscerning investors, this can very
well be misunderstood to mean that Africa is an investment destination
of last resort, when all else is said and done.
This is a view that would need to shift radically.
It is time to buy into Africa as the place new investments should head
first and not the last. A change in such a view can dramatically impact
the amount of investment that is destined for Africa.
Another long perpetrated but equally misleading
view is that Africa is the source of raw materials that will then feed
into a more sophisticated supply chain in a more ideal processing
location.
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