Zulu Sushi and Other Hopes

AuthorKumi Naidoo

Zulu Sushi and Other Hopes Finance & Development, December 2016, Vol. 53, No. 4

Kumi Naidoo

Globalization has offered little to Africa

As an African I cannot oppose globalization: it gave me sushi. South Africa has fused this delicacy with the country’s love of raw steak—“Zulu sushi,” it is proudly called. Conceptually, globalization is our vision for Africa: economic, technical, and even culinary integration, applied worldwide. It can mean shared responsibility for the welfare of all humankind.

But this is not the globalization we in Africa have witnessed, which enriches the few at the expense of the many. In Africa today, it is a tale of foreign interests undermining domestic control.

Unfair rulesInitially young African nations hoped the Uruguay Round of multilateral trade negotiations would offer market access to the developed world. But the economic elite supported rules that favored advanced economies—and pressured African and other developing economies to obey (Kumar, 2002). Bilateral investment treaties and free trade agreements promoted by the richest countries entrenched their dominance and generated an uneven bargaining environment.

Thirty years later, the World Trade Organization members have yet to support inclusive and sustainable growth. The failure of the Doha Round last year symbolized the imbalance between developed and developing economies (Keating, 2015). Policies that protect industrialized countries, home to most of the rule makers, allowed them to grow into the giants they are today. But these economies need continuous feeding and—along with emerging market economies, including China—are now pursuing resources and markets in Africa.

Demand for Africa’s resources has driven the continent’s economic growth: over 5 percent a year on average for the past decade. But it has also spurred illicit financial outflows by foreign governments and multinational companies—$850 billion between 1970 and 2008 (UNECA, 2015).

Policies behind this welcome growth entrenched inequality and poverty. During the past decade of trade liberalization and higher overall output, inequality within countries increased (Ortiz and Cummins, 2011). Workers competing for jobs in the global marketplace drive down wages, and competition between countries can mean social expenditure cuts and less progressive taxation.

Despite improvements in official global poverty figures in the past 50 years, 48.5 percent of Africans live on less than $1.25 a day. Half a...

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