How UNESCO got it wrong in Africa
May 30, 2017
Hopes of an economic revival in Zimbabwe lie in tatters 14 months after President Emmerson Mnangagwa took office, as the...
Read moreDetailsBy Ken Amaeshi The dominant view in most countries is that firms are excessively involved in tax avoidance. The...
Read moreDetailsInnocent Okwuosa Africapitalism rests on the notion that the cure for developing countries’ problems especially Africa, rests with private sector...
Read moreDetailsSeth Kaplan When presenting my recent book on poverty and inclusive development in fragile states, I always start off with...
Read moreDetailsMega entrepreneur, Tony Onyemaechi Elumelu, reached a peak in business and forayed into ideas, into the philosophy of development and...
Read moreDetailsBy Norimitsu Onishi and Selam Gebrekidan An Indian family rose to the heights of power and fortune in South...
Read moreDetailsWhen presenting my recent book on poverty and inclusive development in fragile states, I always start off with the concept...
Read moreDetails“Do you want to pay for it?” Growing up, this was the sardonic reply I got from my mom whenever...
Read moreDetailsSouth Africa emerged from its first recession in almost a decade in the third quarter as recoveries in manufacturing and...
Read moreDetailsBlack farmers in the US’s South— faced with continued failure their efforts to run successful farms their launched a lawsuit claiming that...
Read moreDetails