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A Strategic Framework For Africa’s Domestic Value Addition: Blueprint for Resource Sovereignty – OpEd

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True transformation of nations begins within the borders of individual nations  instead of through pipedreams of a unified, continent-wide agendas like the “Agenda 2063”. Many African states have operate as extraction zones, shipping out raw wealth while importing the very finished goods their own resources created. To move from this import-dependency trap to the self-reliance seen in the Gulf, African nations must abandon the pursuit of meagre financial incentives, often going to the pockets of those who sign the contracts and leaders. Africans must adopt a sovereign first strategy that prioritizes local ownership, industrialization, and radical accountability.

The first step toward building a nation with its own resources is knowing that they have the resource and must, therfore, stop the current ongoing resource drain through fairer negotiation. Historically, many leaders have signed lopsided contracts, trading decades of mineral or oil rights for immediate cash infusions or loans that never reach the public. Unlike the Gulf states, which asserted control over their oil during the 20th century, many African nations remain trapped in agreements where 90% of the profits flow to foreign entities, and the remaining 10%  mostly goes to the pockets of the leaders, which follow the other 90% through deposits in foreign countries. Take Somalis, for instance, who invest in Kenya and other East African countries and Gulf countries, for most of the income they generate from their country and from the rest of the world building other nations but their own!

Botswana serves as a rare African success story in this regard. By negotiating a 50/50 profit-sharing model for its diamonds with De Beers, the government secured the revenue needed to fund universal healthcare and education, rather than allowing the wealth to disappear into offshore accounts. This is not a pipe dream; it is a tactical choice to value national longevity over personal kickbacks.Wealth is not found in raw dirt; it is found in the processing. The Gulf did not just sell crude oil. They built refineries, petrochemical plants, and global logistics hubs. In contrast, Africa possesses 30% of the world’s mineral reserves, including 70% of the world's cobalt, 80% of its platinum, 76% of its manganese, 30% of its bauxite, 11% of Lithium, and so on, but often lacks the facilities to turn these into batteries or electronics.

When a country like Nigeria, an oil giant, has to import refined fuel because its own refineries are dormant, it is effectively paying a tax on its own incompetence. True inward-looking growth requires a refuse to export raw policy. If nations like Guinea or the DRC insisted on processing bauxite or cobalt within their borders, they would create the jobs and industrial base that currently benefit workers in Europe or China. This shift creates a multiplier effect where one resource builds an entire ecosystem of local industries. It is a lesson for countries like Somalia which is coming to potentially export oil and other minerals soon.

The most significant barrier to the Gulf Model is not a lack of resources, but the theft of opportunity by the ruling class. An estimatedUS$ 88 billion leaves Africa every year in illicit financial flows or so they report, in general; money that could have built power grids or high-speed rail, roads, schools and health centers and much more in the place on spending on armed forces for the self-preservation of the ruling elite and/or depositing them in foreign accounts, beyond the reach of the ordinary owners, the general public of Africa. In the Gulf, even with centralized power, there was a foundational understanding that the state’s wealth must be visible in the state’s infrastructure. Looking inward means ending the culture where national budgets are treated as private ATMs. It requires building stronger institutions that can penalize corruption and ensure that resource revenue is reinvested into the social contract. Without this accountability, even the richest gold mine is just another way to fund a lifestyle for a few while the majority remains in darkness.

If we were to propose a new blueprint for African countries, we would consider three immediate requirements, the first involving a mandatory local processing for all raw materials or at least a certain percentage being refined and/or manufactured locally before being exported. The second would institute a sovereign wealth management, where resource revenues are transferred to and transparently managed, much like the UAE’s Mubadala, which invests in non-resource sectors like technology, agriculture, fishing, ports, rail and roads to ensure that the economy surivives beyond the resource – the mineral or oil and gas run out. The third step would involve a renegotiation of extraction rights with others. Existing contracts must be audited to ensure that the state receives its fair share, prioritizing long term equity over short term incentives.

Building a country with its own resources is not about waiting for a continental vision. It is about every single African nation deciding that its wealth belongs to its people. The tools are already in the ground; the only thing missing is the political will to keep them there until they can be turned into something greater than a raw export. Resource wealth is fundamentally meaningless unless it manifests as a tangible, improved quality of life, mirroring the Gulf model where national riches are visible in local streets, hospitals, and schools. To achieve true self-reliance, African nations must adopt a human-centric approach to sovereign wealth, investing in world-class healthcare and technical universities to halt the capital flight that occurs when the elite seek services abroad. 

This internal investment must be supported by modern infrastructure such as high-speed rail, stable power grids, and efficient ports, which serve as the indispensable veins of a manufacturing economy, ensuring local factories can actually compete globally. Furthermore, by leveraging tourism and conservation as renewable resources, nations like Rwanda and Kenya are proving that protected landscapes and luxury eco-resorts can generate sustainable revenue long after mineral deposits are depleted. Ultimately, the transition from a raw material exporter to an industrial power requires that the wealth extracted from the ground be immediately reinvested into the civilization built above it, creating a sophisticated, self-sustaining society that no longer depends on external incentives.

The theft of opportunity remains the primary barrier to this model, as an estimated US$ 88 billion in illicit financial flows exits Africa annually, capital that could have electrified the continent or built multiple futuristic cities. Ending the treatment of national budgets as private ATMs requires establishing Sovereign Wealth Funds that are professionally managed and legally shielded from political interference. As the global green energy transition drives a surge in demand for African minerals, shifting from a raw material supplier to an industrial power is an urgent economic necessity. Leaders must seize this window to build domestic refineries and infrastructure, or they will trade their children’s future for another round of meagre incentives. The tools are ready and the blueprint is clear; only the political courage to build remains.




Moscow.media
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