
Africa Beyond Borrowing: Fixing Fiscal Governance for a Debt-Resilient Future
By uniting governance, leadership, and resilience, Africa can move from reactive debt dependence to proactive economic sovereignty

By uniting governance, leadership, and resilience, Africa can move from reactive debt dependence to proactive economic sovereignty

By combining reform decisiveness, infrastructure efficiency, institutional reliability, and service‑oriented governance, African economies can transform scale into sustained investor confidence

African nations continue to grapple with fragmented and uncoordinated public transport networks.

While South Korea, China, Singapore, and Rwanda have witnessed a positive correlation between debt and increased productivity, many African countries have experienced the opposite

By uniting governance, leadership, and resilience, Africa can move from reactive debt dependence to proactive economic sovereignty

By combining reform decisiveness, infrastructure efficiency, institutional reliability, and service‑oriented governance, African economies can transform scale into sustained investor confidence

African nations continue to grapple with fragmented and uncoordinated public transport networks.

While South Korea, China, Singapore, and Rwanda have witnessed a positive correlation between debt and increased productivity, many African countries have experienced the opposite
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Part of the problem facing Africa is that the agency to articulate the trials and tribulations of Africans has for long been usurped by foreigners. As a principle, everyone should get involved in debates on Africa, of course. However, rather than Read more