Economics

AfroN8V
3 Views · 4 days ago

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AfroN8V
3 Views · 4 days ago

🎙️ "Viviendo la Realidad de la Negritud en Colombia" 🇨🇴
La verdadera negritud se vive sin privilegios, sin economía y en la periferia. En este clip, abordamos las duras realidades que enfrenta la comunidad negra en Colombia, historias de lucha, identidad y supervivencia. ✊🏿
#negritudencolombia #realidadnegra #mikecrohpone #identidad #luchacultural #concienciasocial #tiktok #instagram #negritud #colombia #identidad #culturaafro #realidadessociales #MúsicaConsciente #privilegio #experienciascotidianas #comunidadafro #vocesnegras

Yaw Ababio
5 Views · 2 months ago

⁣Over half a million people impacted by major data breach — full names, SSNs, financial data and more exposed

Bakari Kwento
7 Views · 2 months ago

⁣As the price of gold exceeds $3,300 per ounce, the Ghanaian government and a multinational gold miner operating in Ghana employ surveillance drones and security teams to confront the growing number of illegal small-scale gold miners in the country.

Kalanfa Naka
7 Views · 2 months ago

⁣A commission of inquiry into the policies of the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank that have entrenched Africa’s debt crisis, undermined public services, and driven inequality.

The commission of Inquiry will hear testimonies on how these institutions’ austerity measures and debt-driven models harm African development, with the goal of raising awareness, advocating for debt cancellation, and pushing for reforms that prioritise people over creditors.

Kalanfa Naka
9 Views · 2 months ago

⁣Following a wave of coups in Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger, military regimes have entrenched their rule, established the Alliance of Sahel States (AES), withdrawn from the regional bloc ECOWAS, and dismantled mainly Western-led bilateral and multilateral stabilisation mechanisms. These shifts have caused further disruption to an already unstable region plagued by ever-growing jihadist violence and economic hardship. With multilateralism in retreat, bilateral power dynamics are taking on new roles: Russia, Turkey, Iran and increasingly Qatar and the UAE are vying for diplomatic influence and economic footholds in the region.

Yaw Ababio
10 Views · 2 months ago

Buyer beware when moving to Ghana.

Yaw Ababio
18 Views · 3 months ago

Whenever the West says some old scheme is a thing of the past, you know they've just moved on to a more PR friendly version of the same. Colonialism is probably the prime example. Instead of exploiting people at the barrel of a gun, they now do it at the barrel of US Dollar denominated debt. Even resource rich and prosperous countries like Sri Lanka can't escape the terrible logic, once corrupt elites sign the contracts that kick-off debt-trap spirals of doom.

Today I’m talking to Dr. Darini Rajasingham-Senanayake. Darini earner her PhD from Princeton University and Is now a social and medical anthropologist with research focus on international development and political economy. She is also a prolific writer in several online outlets on the politics of South Asia and especially her native Sri Lanka. She often points out the neo-colonial structures and the many regime change operations that have been economically and politically devastating her part of the Eurasian continent.


Links:
Article: https://www.colombotelegraph.c....om/index.php/facades

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Kwabena Ofori Osei
14 Views · 3 months ago

The World Bank has warned that Nigeria’s poverty levels are rising fast and will likely get worse in the coming years. A high cost of living and poor wages have eroded earnings and plunged millions into poverty. And the situation isn't helped by the government's decision to end decades of petrol subsidies.

Al Jazeera’s Ahmed Idris reports from Dan Tawaya, northwest Nigeria.

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Kwabena Ofori Osei
42 Views · 3 months ago

Africa is rich—rich in copper, oil, gold, diamonds, and people. But its wealth flows out while its people remain in poverty.

Stealing Africa
Release date: November 28, 2012 (Finland)
Director: Christoffer Guldbrandsen
Writer: Niels Borchert Holm
Stars: Christoffer Guldbrandsen, Bernhard Elsener, Ivan Glasenberg
Country of origin: Denmark
Language: English
Also known as: Plundringen av Afrika
Filming locations: Rüschlikon, Horgen, Kanton Zürich, Switzerland
Production companies: Guldbrandsen Film, The Why Foundation

Stealing Africa explores the mechanisms that keep the continent poor long after the end of formal colonial rule—revealing how modern multinational corporations, global tax havens, and unjust trade systems continue to extract resources and wealth on a massive scale.

At the center of the story is Zambia, home to the third largest copper reserves in the world, yet a country where 60% of the population survives on less than $1 a day and 80% are unemployed. Meanwhile, in the idyllic Swiss village of Rüschlikon, local government coffers overflow thanks to one resident: Ivan Glasenberg, CEO of Glencore, a commodities giant whose Zambian copper mines generate billions—but almost no tax revenue for Zambia.

Through extensive research and access to public financial records, the documentary uncovers how multinational corporations legally avoid paying taxes through transfer pricing, offshore shell companies, and favorable tax treaties. The result? For every dollar in aid Africa receives, ten dollars quietly vanish—spirited away through financial flows that benefit corporations and wealthy nations.

Stealing Africa is not just a film about economics—it’s about power, inequality, and accountability. It lays bare the modern architecture of plunder and asks the crucial question: What does it mean to be "post-colonial" when the money still flows in the same direction?

Produced by Steps International, this documentary is part of the “Why Poverty?” series and remains a vital watch for anyone interested in global justice, development, and the real cost of globalization.

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