Thanks to the Globe and Mail for the comprehensive package of articles in the October 29 issue on international aid, "Save the World Inc". But the most impotant idea in the ten-page section was a statement which, unfortunately, was not pursued in any of the articles: "What brought people out of poverty was export-led economic growth and political stability." Such was the case with the Asian "tigers".
Yet half a century after colonialism, even the politically stable African countries are still living as economic colonies of northern countries, supplying raw materials cheaply and buying finished products at inflated prices. The old colonial trade routes are still largely in place, whereby African countries continue to trade on inequitable terms with developed countries, including the emergent Asian economies, more than with one another. African countries do not at this time need more trade with developed countries. They need more trade with their neighbours on the same continent and even between regions within their own countries. The road links between and within African countries were never sufficiently developed by the colonizers and remain in a deplorable condition today. Yet these roads are vital to the development of an intra-African trade that would enable Africans to begin developing mature economies and emerging from poverty. How can the world best help Africa? Help improve the intra-continental transportation infrastructure.
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Burris Devanney is a Canadian educator, development worker
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