I have a crude idea in my head that I want people to eithet refine or dismantle.

The big problem Africa has with mobilising its natural resources to achieve results is that the mobilisation invariably needs money to get this done - and money is something we don't have much of.
What this means is that for example Zambia and Kenya might have all the natural (and human) resources to build a railway to each other, but without x bn dollars, those resources cannot be utilised and will lie fallow until they are exported cheaply for other people's benefit.
They also cannot use quantitative easing (printing money) as a solution because the Kenyan shilling and the Zambian kwacha are not mutually convertible.

In other words, without vast amounts of USD or GBP or EUR or JPY or RMB, Africa currently CANNOT build itself.
So my idea/question/crude hypothesis is this: Is it possible to create some sort of continental resource swap mechanism that makes it possible for large infrastructure projects to be possible without needing to use forex which we simply don't have?

Hear me out on this...
'Money' itself is just an idea - it isn't real. The difference between a cowrie shell and a dollar note is that you believe one is money and the other is worthless. In fact they are both objectively worthless.

Look at it this way:
The US Federal Reserve created $1trn out of thin air earlier this year, and nothing happened. No hyperinflation, nothing - because the market believes that the US economy and the world economy can absorb $1trn extra liquidity.

It is all based on belief and little else.
Now if African countries could trade resources with each other for infrastructural development without using money, with the only expense being to pay the humans involved (an expense they can afford), does that compromise their economies or fiscal position?

I don't think so.
I think the opportunity cost of the reduced resource export revenue will be offset by the value of GDP growth sparked by an infrastructure boom.
If Togo loses $1bn in resource exports to gain $12bn in GDP uplift through construction aided by resource swaps, that's a good deal IMO
Basically my idea is to change the paradigm of African development from "build $100bn of infrastructure using $9bn annual export revenue" - which will take forever - to "bypass the need for USD altogether and mobilise resources across borders in a different way."
This could be achieved theoretically using a network of cross-continental currency swap agreements that make our 42 national currencies mutually convertible, and then introducing a very heavily regulated form of QE.

HOWEVER...and this is the important bit...
Such a framework must NEVER be overseen, agreed on, or controlled in any way by politicians.

Muhammadu Buhari, John Magufuli, Uhuru Kenyatta, Omar Bongo etc must NEVER EVER EVERRRRR have ANY kind of control over it because their involvement guarantees its catastrophic failure.

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More from @DavidHundeyin

17 Dec
We're lucky we're so poor because if we weren't, those Russian and North Korean hackers would be making billions off our poorly-secured data like taking candy from a baby.

Like 5 different Nigerian govt agencies have our entire identity dataset including biometrics.

Why?
More importantly, is that data being stored in plain, unencrypted format on some unsecured server somewhere in Maitama?

It likely is, because that's how Nigeria does things.

Those hackers aren't interested for now simply because the data is worth nothing at present.
We need a Nigerian GDPR-style framework where everyone (govt inclusive) has to explain in granular detail WHY they need our data, WHAT it is used for and HOW it is stored.

Passport data dump
BVN data dump
MVAA data dump
PVC data dump
NIN data dump
SIM registration data dump.
Read 4 tweets
14 Dec
I know what I went through at KMPG UK and at Channels TV because of office politics. If I'm carrying the matter on my head, e get why.

If you smear me with the "misogynist" label because of that, I am here to tell you that it is 100% your problem. It's your electricity and data.
The difference between Oge and I is that I was raised by the world's biggest bully, so from age 5 or so I have learned to fight for my fucking life.

If not for that reservoir of violence, I could have ended up in a similar situation to her.

This shit is very personal for me.
I HATE people whose main skill in life is knowing how to network, make friends and grift their way through stuff without actually being exceptional at anything.

I hate them because they feed on the output of people like us who prefer to just work and let it speak for us.
Read 12 tweets
14 Dec
Nothing to see here. Just a few friends hanging out a few months before someone not in the pictures was forced to take her name off her work which was supervised by someone in the pictures, so that another person in the pictures could become a star.

Just Nigeria Nigeria-ing...
Before the inevitable delete.
Favour over labour baby.
Read 6 tweets
14 Dec
May the office politics we play not become the subject of tabloid headlines.

Office politics kills.
igberetvnews.com/1375311/everyo…
What is implied in Marina Forsythe's statement here is that Oge did not even want to be anonymous. The BBC forced it on her due to "security considerations" and then parachuted in a clout artist to take the glory.

No wonder Oge unravelled. This is scandalous.
They really used and dumped this girl! This is premium Nigerian office politics at its height!

Kiki Mordi is not a good person at all!
Read 4 tweets
14 Dec
When Nigeria segments along its natural boundaries, maybe the leadership problem for the southern half can be solved using the Somalia example where their entire parliament and cabinet is now from the 2nd or 3rd generation diaspora.

Those of us born here have been contaminated.
It goes back to how our parents raised us. 99% of us are abuse victims who have internalised the gratuitous and senseless cruelty. Given the slightest amount of power, we turn into brutal dictators because we are being teleguided by the ghost of our dysfunctional childhoods.
People like me who consciously rebelled against that system from an early age aren't excepted either, because we either try to go it alone and fail, because a system always defeats an individual; or we gather followers and become another type of dictator.
Read 4 tweets

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