Africa beware: New scramble for continent's soul

An opinion piece in Capital Ethiopia warns that Western powers are pursuing a new scramble for Africa through debt, trade, and technology. It describes this as recolonization disguised as development. The article calls for pan-African unity to counter these influences.

An opinion article published on February 10, 2026, in Capital Ethiopia argues that the United States, European Union, IMF, and World Bank are imposing financial and political controls on Africa under the guise of development. It likens this to the 1884 Berlin Conference but updated with modern tools like debt and digital oversight.

The piece highlights IMF and World Bank structural adjustment programs, which it says have impacted economies in Ethiopia, Zambia, and Ghana. These programs require cuts to public services, privatization of state assets to Western companies, and currency devaluation to favor exports. Resources such as Zambia's copper, DRC's cobalt, and Nigeria's oil are said to flow to the West while locals face hardships.

On trade, the article criticizes the African Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA) and EU Economic Partnership Agreements (EPAs) for flooding African markets with subsidized Western goods, harming local industries. The EU's Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM), effective from 2026, is described as imposing tariffs on African carbon-intensive imports like cement and steel. In technology, it notes that services like Starlink collect data, acting as Africa's 'new oil.'

The article points out Africa's strategic assets: 30% of global minerals for energy transition, 60% of uncultivated arable land, and a projected youth population of 1.2 billion by 2050. The African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) is said to create a $3.4 trillion market. It urges pan-African unity through debt audits, trade enforcement, tech independence, resource nationalism, and cultural preservation to achieve sovereignty.

Relaterte artikler

Public discontent with the African Union grows over its inability to achieve key goals like a single currency or unified military. Social media discussions highlight frustrations with the organization's perceived ineffectiveness. Calls for urgent reforms aim to align the AU with Africa's needs.

Rapportert av AI

The 9th Africa Business Forum, organized by the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa, opened in Addis Ababa on Monday. Leaders and entrepreneurs gathered under the theme 'Financing Africa’s Future' amid global economic challenges. Executive Secretary Claver Gatete highlighted Africa's potential as a growth engine through productive employment for its young workforce.

The University of the Witwatersrand has opened a new research centre to transform speculation about Africa's underground treasures into solid data, potentially boosting exploration investments. Launched in November 2025, the African Research Centre for Ore Systems Science aims to bridge the gap between outdated estimates and actual mineral deposits. This initiative comes amid discussions at the 2026 Mining Indaba on revitalizing Africa's lagging exploration sector.

Rapportert av AI

More than 14 foreign chambers of commerce, representing European, American, Chinese, and Indian interests, are uniting to tackle persistent business obstacles in Ethiopia. EuroCham has opened a new headquarters offering free workspaces to help new investors navigate local rules. Foreign direct investment rebounded to $4 billion in 2024/25, though bureaucratic issues continue to plague many investors.

 

 

 

Dette nettstedet bruker informasjonskapsler

Vi bruker informasjonskapsler for analyse for å forbedre nettstedet vårt. Les vår personvernerklæring for mer informasjon.
Avvis