Monday, August 3, 2015

Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Africapitalism

Dear Jibo,

A Fantastic and faithful summation of the friendly intellectual fisticuffs that occurred at the event. The truth is that, although all of us believe that organizing production along capitalist principles has become inevitable and even necessary in today's world, some of us believe that it should be done in a manner that is humane, sustainable, and beneficial to the entire society, not only to a few profit-seeking people, hence the need to develop values and rules that should guide the conduct of businesses on the continent. 

Even market fanatics today realize that a more humane capitalist order that is adequately regulated for the common good is more durable than an unfettered reign of the market that is driven by greed, rigged rules, and unrestrained transfer of wealth from the many to the few. Ditto with the role of the state. As you state, and as was repeatedly stressed at the retreat, a disciplined, adequately constrained state can be a catalyst in development and a partner to capital. What impressed me more than anything is that discussions reinforced the point that economics, whose principles one is often accused of violating, is not an exact science nor is it driven by universal, monolithic principles. On full display at the retreat was the various schools of thought and theories in economics--classical, neoclassical, neoliberal, Austrian, Keynesian, supply side, demand side, etc. These contrasting perspectives underscore the diversity of economic thought and the hegemonic nature of the current tyranny of market fundamentalism.

Personally, I am glad that the organizers invited people from the intellectual, political, and ideological left. It indicates that they are not afraid of scrutiny, of having their ideas and assumptions challenged, and of having their premises questioned. It shows self-reflexivity and a willingness to interrogate one's own assumptions and truisms. I think that in the end the set of principles that emerged approximated, however roughly, the tough questions asked and the critiques posed to the taken-for-granted assumptions of those who fetishize the profit motive and see business as an independent, sacrosanct engine of development. The creative tension (ying and yang) between the two main camps resulted in a better set of principles, in my opinion, than the points of reference with which we began.

Thanks again for beautifully capturing the productive and positive intellectual tension of the retreat.

On Mon, Aug 3, 2015 at 3:56 AM, Jibrin Ibrahim <jibo72@gmail.com> wrote:

Entrepreneurs and Philosopher Kings for Africapitalism

Jibrin Ibrahim, Deepening Democracy Column, Daily Trust, PremiumTimes.com, Newsdairyonline.com, 3rd August 2015

I spent last week in Calabar discussing principles of "Africapitalism" with a group of economists, entrepreneurs and social scientists convened by a capitalist called Tony Elumelu. Initially I wanted to decline the invitation because of the damage associating with capitalists could do to my street credibility. I have spent a good deal of my life castigating the evils of capitalism and have no intention of stopping so associating with Tony Elumelu's staff, friends and ideologues was not something I could jump on without caution. When I heard that some of my own type of people such as Professors Patrick Wilmot, Olu Ajakaiye, Moses Ochonu and Christiana Okojie would also be there, I decided it was worthwhile attending to give them a fight for their money.

Tony Olumelu and I did not read the same type of literature on the definition of capitalism. The literature I read taught me that capitalism is a mode of production in which the means of production such as factories and other facilities, machines, and raw materials are owned by a small group of people known as the capitalists or bourgeoisie who get the majority - the workers or the proletariat to work for them. According to Karl Marx, the economic interest of the capitalist is to pay the worker as little as possible, in fact just enough to keep him alive and productive. The workers, in turn, come to understand that their economic interest lies in preventing the capitalist from exploiting them in this way hence the permanent antagonism that would lead eventually to the victory of … okay, lets not get into that. The key issue however is that capitalism is all about exploitation of the worker and stupendous wealth of the small capitalist class. I still believe that the huge income inequality in today's capitalist society is as bad, in fact worse than in the times of Marx. As I have no current alternative to capitalism, I felt, why not, I could still go to Calabar, the cleanest Nigerian city and listen to Elumelu's ideas.

 

For Tony Elumelu, Africapitalism is an economic philosophy he personally developed predicated on the belief that Africa's private sector can and must play a leading role in the continent's development. His staffers explained to us that its key principles are the development of entrepreneurship to unlock the power of individuals to create and grow their business ideas into successful companies. Engaging in long-term investments targeted to deploy forms of "patient" capital that creates greater and broader economic value as opposed to merely the extraction of resources. The targeting of strategic sectors for investment such as agriculture, power, healthcare, and finance so as to create broader economic and social value. In other words, he supports a form of capitalism that is less rapacious and more focused on promoting broad based capitalist development that would provide inclusive opportunities for the greatest number. I do not really have a quarrel with that.

 

His notion of Africapitalism is strongly anchored on the development of entrepreneurship targeted at young Africans. He is putting his money where his mouth is by offering to spend $100 million over the next ten years providing seed capital to 10,000 young Africans so that they are empowered to be rich capitalists and provide jobs for others. As he puts it; "it will enable our young people to create their own jobs, become employers, and take charge of their futures, instead of letting the future happen to them."

The arena of struggle at the retreat was on the role of the State in today's Africa. The market fundamentalists argued that the role of the State should be limited to creating enabling environment for business to flourish. They were hard-core believers in the dictum that the State has no business in business. Our side of the divide contested this perspective. The State, we argued is an expression of the popular sovereignty of the people, all the people. It therefore has a broad role in directing society and its resources towards promoting the welfare and security of all. The government as an agent of the State must therefore mould institutions to serve the common good, which business as a community never thinks about until external pressure forces them to. The market is driven by the profit motive alone and although it could drive development through adding value to the production system, it also produces misery and huge distortions in terms of ownership of resources. The State has a role therefore of constraining capitalists and their profit motive to improve equity in the system, including ensuring that workers are paid a decent wage.

We also questioned the limited understanding of the history of capitalism by the market fundamentalists. It is not true, we argued, that capitalist entrepreneurs simply use their capacity for innovation to devise novel means of value production. Innovation needs fundamental research in science and technology as a source of what is possible, and while capitalists fund applied research, it is the State that provides the resources and institutional mechanism for fundamental research. The State also through its basic function of taxation captures huge flows of financial resources, which it uses for the production of public goods but also for directing resources to capitalist organisations to boost their investments and production. Much of the American capitalist structure and process is for example largely dependent on the military-industrial complex, which is dependent on State funding and support.   

The reality of capitalism is that the capitalists looks for the biggest profit and if it comes from governmental corruption, that is where they will be rather than in agriculture and other productive strategic sectors. Immanuel Wallenstein reminds us that the bourgeoisie has no developmentalist mission and more often than not, they avoid strategic sectors such as agriculture, industry and transportation. It is for this reason that the key to the development of capitalism is not, as is often thought, in the hands of the capitalist but in those of the State. The construction and modernisation of the State has led it to capture financial flows which in successful capitalist States is then directed to the strategic sectors. To transform the nascent market economy into capitalist development, specific forms of accumulation must be groomed and directed by the State. Capitalism has been slow to develop in Africa because the business class is allowed to make money through corrupt deals rather than productive investment. It is important to recall Max Weber's analysis of prebendalism in China where he shows that for a long time, "booty capitalism" blocked the development rational entrepreneurial capitalism, which in the Occident found its specific locus in industry. Capitalist development requires the transformation of what Marx called primitive accumulation of capital through rents to capitalist accumulation, which takes place in the productive system through economic means. The problem in contemporary Africa has been that the appropriation of rent was not leading to the enhancement of capitalist production, it was producing a patrimonial state in which access to State resources was more important than production. One African capitalist has shown the way forward; Aliko Dangote is showing today that vast accumulation is possible, and indeed very profitable in capitalist production itself. I do hope Elumelu's entrepreneurs would be looking at that path and the State would play its own role, such as ensuring producers actually have access to credit rather than just traders and speculators. Meanwhile, if Tony Elumelu himself would add Karl Marx to his already impressive reading list, we can have more to talk about as he progresses in his determination to produce entrepreneurs for the strategic and productive sectors of the economy.

 

 

 

Jibrin Ibrahim PhD
Senior Fellow
Centre for Democracy and Development
16 A7 Street,
CITEC Mbora Estate,
Jabi/Airport Road By-pass,
P.O.Box14345, Wuse
Abuja, Nigeria
Tel - +234 8053913837
Twitter- @jibrinibrahim17
Facebook- jibrin.ibrahim

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Listserv moderated by Toyin Falola, University of Texas at Austin
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