Macron's $27 billion Africa Forward Summit is exactly the kind of bold, equal-footing partnership the continent needs right now. By combining French public and private capital with African investor contributions, the deal creates real jobs and targets energy, agriculture and AI — not just old-school aid handouts. Reforming the global risk architecture so African nations can borrow at fair rates is the missing piece that could finally unlock the continent's economic potential.
Macron's $27 billion pledge looks less like partnership and more like a rebranded scramble for African resources wrapped in softer language. As France loses ground in the Sahel, it pivots east to Kenya, signing deals that risk preserving a familiar model in which Africa exports raw wealth while much of the value flows outward. By negotiating separately rather than as a unified bloc, African states hand external powers the leverage to shape arrangements that benefit everyone but Africa.
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