Africa’s great economic paradox
Africa remains one of the richest continents on earth. The continent is abundantly blessed with minerals, energy resources, agricultural potential, youthful human capital, entrepreneurial energy, cultural diversity, and strategic geographical positioning. Yet despite this enormous abundance, Africa continues to rank among the least economically integrated regions in the world.
For decades, African countries have often found it easier to trade with Europe, Asia, and North America than with neighbouring African nations. A product manufactured in one African country frequently faces more barriers entering another African market than when exported outside the continent. This contradiction has quietly weakened Africa’s economic progress for generations.
The consequences are visible everywhere. Businesses face high transport costs, border delays, inconsistent regulations, currency barriers, and fragmented standards. These inefficiencies increase the cost of doing business, weaken industrial competitiveness, limit manufacturing growth, and deepen dependence on external markets. This is precisely why the
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