Abstract

This work argues that Africa’s condition of poverty lingers because the continent fails to view poverty in its holistic sense in her attempts at tackling her economic challenges. Other types of poverty exist, such as mental poverty, moral poverty, emotional poverty, spiritual poverty, political poverty and social poverty, which pose great problems for the continent. Obviously, her failure to give worthwhile attention to solving these problems largely contribute to why she has not really benefited from her vast wealth of human and material resources. Also, this lack of holistic approach to perceiving poverty often allows Africa to be swayed by global forces of change such as socio-cultural factors, political factors, wars and terrorist activities, technological forces as information technology and electronic media, and so on. Consequently, majority of Africans seem to be blinded to the reality of possibility of redemption from the continents precarious economic condition. Thus, neglecting their nations, they emigrate abroad, under the guise of seeking enabling environment for productivity and survival. At the same time, those at the helms of affairs perpetuate the economic poverty status-quo by greedily enriching themselves. Thus, the con- tinent becomes an unfortunate victim of parochial perspectives as other continents become undeserving beneficiaries of her endowments and heritages. Using philosophy’s critical and argumentative methods of empirical, conceptual and historical analysis, this paper debates that a holistic perspective to poverty can help control global forces of change in ways that will favour Africa’s total development and enhance her profiting in the globalisation era.

Highlights

  • It is common among African scholars and people to identify some problems of underdevelopment in Africa and adduce reasons for why she is behind in global development

  • Using philosophy’s critical and argumentative methods of empirical, conceptual and historical analysis, this paper debates that a holistic perspective to poverty can help control global forces of change in ways that will favour Africa’s total development and enhance her profiting in the globalisation era

  • On the other hand are the ideas of contemporary African writers such as Bodunrin (1981: pp. 161-179), Hountondji (1983: p. 43), Kagame (Kagabo, 2004: pp. 231-241), Oruka (1990: pp. 45–46), Mbiti (1969: pp. 1-50), Wiredu (1998) and others that gingered a host of later writers to focus more on African development (Gyekye, 1997: pp. 192-203)

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Summary

Introduction

It is common among African scholars and people to identify some problems of underdevelopment in Africa and adduce reasons for why she is behind in global development. Even though elements of truth exist in the ideas of Rodney, Fanon and others about how Europe underdeveloped Africa or how colonialism undermined Africans’ potentials at personal and national levels of development, current events reveal that Africans continue to underdeveloped themselves, based on their choices and certain deluded perspectives, despite their continent’s vast human and material potentials. Africans have allowed their continent to be controlled by certain forces of change but largely to their detriment. Arguing in favour of a holistic approach to an examination of the poverty situation in the continent, in pursuing its objectives, the paper adopts conceptual, historical and empirical analysis to shed light on the various aspects of poverty in Africa

The Idea of Poverty
Economic Poverty
Moral Poverty
Emotional Poverty
Spiritual Poverty
Social Poverty
Consequences of Poverty on Africa
Global Forces of Change
Addressing Poverty Holistically in Africa
Conclusion
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