If Africa is on the rise, it is on the rise as a wealth generator for multinationals and not for Africans themselves.
I thoroughly get miffed when Western analysts continue to talk of Africa's rise based on GDP projections and consumption power because these are mainly based on Africans consuming imported products.
In my view that does not help us at all. Africa's rise must be based on the emergence of a new world view based on principle centered leadership, self empowerment and responsibility. This means Africa must adapt new economic systems not based on the acquisition and concentration of wealth, but on creating social equity and lifting the majority out of the poverty cycle. GDP does not measure that nor does the Western based economic model, whether it be aid or investment, address the fundamental social problems we face.
In my opinion, Africa will only rise when our consciousness as a people realizes that we have everything we need to educate our population, to make things, do our own research and create our own factories and consume our own manufactured products. In order for that to happen the new narrative on Africa must be led by Africans themselves. This must be led by a new political leadership. It is clear therefore, that our current political leadership has contributed significantly towards the failure of Africa to rise.
A good example is the incessant focus on how Zimbabwe's GDP is rising, but I do not see any change in our values as a society nor do I see an improvement in the general level of the quality of life for ordinary Zimbabweans. In fact, Zimbabwe is hardly rising at all, but will do so once we have totally revamped our socio political values and we have a new political leadership that is not only legitimate but sensitive to the fact that Africa will not rise until its people are free.
Global income inequality is actually on the rise and Africans are getting poorer despite the projected increases in GDP and increase in mining activity on the continent. The consumption spend by Africans is also rising but there is no match in indigenous investment.