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Africa: Should Credit Rating Agencies Be Rated?

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Reflections on Trust, Sovereignty, and Africa’s Economic Destiny
When the language of numbers claims to replace the voice of the people—when trust becomes a score and sovereignty a chart—it is time to pause, breathe, and question the gaze that evaluates. The recent downgrade of Senegal by Moody’s revives an essential question: how can one believe in the neutrality of institutions that judge without ever being judged? And how can a country deemed “risky” manage to mobilize billions thanks to the confidence of its diaspora and foreign partners? This paradox, at the heart of global finance, calls for a deeper reflection on trust, sovereignty, and economic discourse.
I. When the Rating Becomes a Story
Sometimes, numbers make more noise than drums. In Dakar, Moody’s recent downgrade struck like a sharp clap in the warm air: one letter down, and suddenly an entire nation is reduced to a symbol—to a solvency assessment—as if the heartbeat of a country could be measured to the decimal point.
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These verdicts, presented as technical assessments, claim the language of neutrality and economic reason. Yet they are, above all, narratives—stories of the world—external gazes distributing credit and suspicion, trust and doubt. Beneath the accounting formulas lies a text, and behind every text, an ideology.
In Senegal’s case, most indicators cited refer to past cycles: public debt, budget deficits, external debt, current account imbalances—all legacies of previous governments. Yet Moody’s report projects forward—it extrapolates, anticipates, and imagines risk in continuity with the past. These figures measure less the choices of a new government than the delayed consequences of a closed political era. This double gaze—backward and forward—constructs an implicit message: before acting, the state must reassure; before governing, it must prove itself.
Thus, the rating becomes performative: it doesn’t just describe reality—it shapes it. It creates hierarchies of credibility, defining who inspires confidence and who must constantly earn it back. This is the invisible power of economic language—to turn collective belief into global norm.
II. The Power of Numbers and the Shadow of Suspicion
Moody’s, Standard & Poor’s, Fitch: three names, three judges deciding the cost of debt for nearly 190 nations. All three American, they do not observe the world from some planetary neutrality—they embody a culture, a philosophy of debt, a moral faith in market discipline. They don’t simply measure risk; they define it, sometimes even create it. Their influence rests less on the rigor of their models than on a quasi-religious belief in their authority.
The “trust” they claim to assess is not that of the people, workers, or citizens—it is the trust of institutional investors, funds, and creditors. An abstract, disembodied trust based not on lived experience or solidarity, but on forecasts and graphs. Beneath the veneer of objectivity hides a cultural and moral prism inherited from Western tradition—one that confuses debt with guilt, solvency with virtue.
To assign a rating is to assign a place in the global economic order—to decide who deserves credit and who must atone for risk. In this theater, Africa appears as a pupil under constant surveillance—graded harshly, distrusted by default. Good marks are hard to earn; mistakes are costly. The rating becomes a moral frontier.
And yet history has often disproven these institutions’ supposed infallibility. In 2008, they awarded AAA ratings to toxic assets, precipitating the largest global crisis since 1929. A few years later, Greece was punished harshly, not for its real capacity to repay, but because it deviated from normative models. These “errors” revealed the political dimension of credit rating.
For Africa, this systemic bias is costly: between 2006 and 2022, the so-called “African premium”—the extra cost imposed by perceived risk—amounted to nearly five billion dollars (Olabisi & Stein, 2024). Five billion: schools, hospitals, infrastructure deferred. Every additional interest point becomes a social delay.
And yet, reality contradicts suspicion. We are told there is a “trust deficit,” but at the same time, Senegal’s diaspora bond raised 150% of its target, driven by popular enthusiasm. The country also secured investment pledges exceeding 13,200 billion CFA francs—several times its national budget.
Even without judging the wisdom of these initiatives, one must ask: how can a supposedly fragile country inspire such broad confidence, both at home and abroad? The paradox is glaring: the distrust measured in New York collides with the trust lived in Dakar.
Behind this contradiction lies a truth: credit ratings are not exact science—they are symbolic constructions, instruments of power. They measure not only risk, but conformity to an implicit norm—a world shaped by other histories, other standards, other times.
III. Invisible Trust, Constrained Sovereignty, and Symbolic Finance
What do these agencies really evaluate? Not the trust of citizens or communities, but that of global investors. Yet popular trust remains the foundation of any sustainable economy. African societies rely on solidarity networks, informal institutions, and mutual credit systems invisible to financial markets.
In many African cosmologies, value is not fixed—it is relational. It is woven through social ties, memory, and speech. It circulates like water through the earth. Where global finance freezes and standardizes, African economies breathe through cyclical rhythms—seasons, relationships, reciprocities. The trust measured by Moody’s is cold and external; lived trust is warm, organic, rooted in daily life.
This gap is ontological. Financial rating is a cultural artifact—a Western projection onto plural realities. Where solvency is virtue and debt is sin, many African societies view debt as a moral link, an act of mutual confidence. Ignoring this dimension is to confuse accounting with anthropology, numbers with symbols.
This cultural blindness is compounded by monetary dependency: the CFA franc, a colonial legacy. Pegged to the euro and managed under French oversight, it offers stability at the price of sovereignty. As Sylla (2023) argues, the CFA franc has turned trust into a matter of tutelage: to be credible, one must first please the outside world.
Add to that the weight of rating agencies, and you have double subjugation: economies under control, sovereignties under surveillance.
Creating an African rating agency, as currently envisioned by the African Development Bank (AfDB) and the African Union (AU), makes sense only if it does not replicate Western paradigms. It must not merely adapt Anglo-Saxon models that reduce vitality to technical solvency ratios. A truly African agency must invent another evaluative language—rooted in the continent’s realities.
It should redefine value itself: social cohesion, cultural vitality, ecological sustainability, technological innovation, economic justice. Such an institution would embody epistemic sovereignty—a space for conceptual invention and methodological freedom.
To reclaim evaluation is to reclaim the narrative of one’s future. It is to refuse that value be dictated from outside, and to restore meaning to measurement—as an instrument of emancipation, not domination.
And since these agencies are largely American, why not evaluate them by the very academic principles of their own culture? In American universities, students evaluate professors; scholars review one another according to rigor, transparency, and intellectual integrity. Evaluation is dialogical, not unilateral. Why should nations be judged differently?
From our perspective as researchers, every evaluation must be justified, methodologically sound, and contextually grounded. This is the spirit behind our recent scientific publications—Sagna & Sylla—on colonial finance and Senegal’s “unpayable debt.” These works show that debt is not merely economic but historical and symbolic—embedded in memory and institutions.
The question, then, is not only whether rating agencies are wrong, but from where they speak, in whose name, and by what values.
IV. The Symbolic Reversal
History, at times, enjoys irony. In his essay “Ratings Agencies Downgrade the Dollar’s Exorbitant Privilege,” L. Randall Wray of the Levy Institute reminded us that even the dollar—the totem of global capitalism—could be downgraded. Watching the self-proclaimed guardians of financial virtue doubt their own idol reveals a symbolic inversion of the global order. If even the dollar can tremble, what of African economies forever viewed with suspicion?
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This reversal teaches us something profound: trust is a collective fiction—fragile, shifting. The agencies that claim to measure it depend upon it. Their own credibility is a form of symbolic capital—and like all capital, it can erode.
That is why credit rating agencies must themselves be rated—for the sake of narrative and ethical sovereignty. Not out of revenge, but to restore symmetry in judgment. A true global democracy cannot tolerate unchecked powers. Evaluating them is to return them to critical reason—to remind them that the measure of risk must never be separated from the measure of meaning.
Sovereignty today is not only fiscal—it is narrative. It is the capacity to define what counts, what builds trust, what makes humanity. Africa, rich in imagination and living traditions, can transform rating into creation—into a polyphonic song where value is no longer reduced to solvency, but measured by the vitality of its peoples.
When Africa speaks its own language of value, numbers will cease to be instruments of silent domination. They will become signs of renewed confidence—of a chosen future, of a world being reinvented.
Because the true rating of a nation is not the one assigned to it—but the one it composes, patiently, with its people, its dreams, and its promises.
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Dr. Mahamadou Lamine Sagna is an accomplished professional with over 20 years of international experience bridging technology, innovation, and socio-economic development. Trained in both sociology (Ph.D.) and business (MBA), he combines analytical insight with strategic execution to help organizations design solutions that are innovative, inclusive, and globally competitive.
AllAfrica publishes around 600 reports a day from more than 110 news organizations and over 500 other institutions and individuals, representing a diversity of positions on every topic. We publish news and views ranging from vigorous opponents of governments to government publications and spokespersons. Publishers named above each report are responsible for their own content, which AllAfrica does not have the legal right to edit or correct.
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AllAfrica is a voice of, by and about Africa – aggregating, producing and distributing 600 news and information items daily from over 110 African news organizations and our own reporters to an African and global public. We operate from Cape Town, Dakar, Abuja, Johannesburg, Nairobi and Washington DC.
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Africa: Climate Science and Early Warnings Key to Saving Lives

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No country is safe from the devastating impacts of extreme weather — and saving lives means making early-warning systems accessible to all, UN chief António Guterres said on Wednesday.
“Early-warning systems work,” he told the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) in Geneva. “They give farmers the power to protect their crops and livestock. Enable families to evacuate safely. And protect entire communities from devastation.”
“We know that disaster-related mortality is at least six times lower in countries with good early-warning systems in place,” the UN chief said.
He added that just 24 hours’ notice before a hazardous event can reduce damage by up to 30 per cent.
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In 2022, Mr. Guterres launched the Early Warnings for All initiative aiming to ensure that “everyone, everywhere” is protected by an alert system by 2027.
Progress has been made, with more than half of all countries now reportedly equipped with multi-hazard early-warning systems. The world’s least developed countries have nearly doubled their capacity since official reporting began “but we have a long way to go,” the UN chief acknowledged.
At a special meeting of the World Meteorological Congress earlier this week, countries endorsed an urgent Call to Action aiming to close the remaining gaps in surveillance.
Extreme weather worsens
WMO head Celeste Saulo, who has been urging a scale-up in early-warning system adoption, warned that the impacts of climate change are accelerating, as “more extreme weather is destroying lives and livelihoods and eroding hard-won development gains”.
She spoke of a “profound opportunity to harness climate intelligence and technological advances to build a more resilient future for all.”
Weather, water, and climate-related hazards have killed more than two million people in the past five decades, with developing countries accounting for 90 per cent of deaths, according to WMO.
Mr. Guterres emphasized the fact that for countries to “act at the speed and scale required” a ramp-up in funding will be key.
Surge in financing
“Reaching every community requires a surge in financing,” he said. “But too many developing countries are blocked by limited fiscal space, slowing growth, crushing debt burdens and growing systemic risks.”
He also urged action at the source of the climate crisis, to try to limit fast-advancing global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial era temperatures – even though we know that this target will be overshot over the course of the next few years, he said.
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“One thing is already clear: we will not be able to contain global warming below 1.5 degrees in the next few years,” Mr. Guterres warned. “The overshooting is now inevitable. Which will mean that we’re going to have a period, bigger or smaller, with higher or lower intensity, above 1.5 degrees in the years to come.”
Still, “we are not condemned to live with 1.5 degrees” if there is a global paradigm shift and countries take appropriate action.
At the UN’s next climate change conference, where states are expected to commit to reducing greenhouse gas emissions over the next decade, “we need to be much more ambitious,” he said. COP30 will take place on 10-21 November, in Belén, Brazil.
“In Brazil, leaders need to agree on a credible plan in order to mobilize $1.3 trillion per year by 2035 for developing countries, to finance climate action,” Mr. Guterres insisted.
Developed countries should honour their commitment to double climate adaptation funding to $40 billion this year and the Loss and Damage Fund needs to attract “substantial contributions,” he said.
Mr. Guterres stressed the need to “fight disinformation, online harassment and greenwashing,” referring to the UN-backed Global Initiative on Climate Change Information Integrity.
“Scientists and researchers should never fear telling the truth,” he said.
He expressed his solidarity with the scientific community and said that the “ideas, expertise and influence” of the WMO, which marks its 75th anniversary this week, are needed now “more than ever”.
Read the original article on UN News.
AllAfrica publishes around 600 reports a day from more than 110 news organizations and over 500 other institutions and individuals, representing a diversity of positions on every topic. We publish news and views ranging from vigorous opponents of governments to government publications and spokespersons. Publishers named above each report are responsible for their own content, which AllAfrica does not have the legal right to edit or correct.
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Africa: Insecurity Is Threatening Africa's Ability to Finance Its Own Development, Warns New Mo Ibrahim Foundation Research Brief

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London — The Mo Ibrahim Foundation has released a new research brief, Africa’s natural resources and conflicts: a vicious cycle, examining how growing competition over natural resources is fuelling conflicts across the continent – and how these conflicts are, in turn, undermining Africa’s ability to leverage its own wealth for development.

The Foundation warns of a vicious cycle in which resources fuel conflict, while insecurity erodes governments’ capacity to manage those resources effectively, deters investment, and reinforces perceptions of Africa as a high-risk destination.

The new research brief highlights that the security situation in Africa has worsened sharply, with security incidents increasing by 87% between 2019 and 2024. Drawing on data from the 2024 Ibrahim Index of African Governance (IIAG), it notes that Security & Safety is the most deteriorated of all 16 governance sub-categories, declining by -5.0 points between 2014 and 2023 at the continental average level.

While this surge is seen as reflective of wider international rise in conflict, the brief highlights the enormous economic cost of insecurity in Africa. Between 1996 and 2022, intense conflict was associated with an average 20% reduction in annual economic growth. National-level impacts are also stark: in Sudan, GDP is projected to shrink by up to 42% under current conflict conditions.
The research identifies an emerging trend across the continent, where struggles over resource control are intensifying insecurity and weakening governance. The brief includes three case studies:
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Sudan: The war has deepened an already complex illicit financial flows (IFFs) landscape, with an estimated 57% of gold production smuggled in 2023. Both the SAF and RSF are funding operations through the gold sector, as international actors compete for influence.
The Sahel: Conflicts are increasingly driven by local grievances over land, climate stress, and control of resources such as gold, uranium, and oil. Armed groups, criminal networks, and foreign actors exploit these resources to finance violence, further eroding state authority in Mali, Burkina Faso, Niger, and Chad.
DR Congo: Foreign powers and armed groups continue to fight over the country’s mineral wealth, especially cobalt, of which the DRC produces 75% of global supply. Corruption and underreporting remain rampant, with mining companies failing to declare an estimated $16.8 billion in revenue between 2018 and 2023.
The research underscores the urgent need to address the links between security and resource management to ensure that Africa can leverage its own resources and take ownership of its development agenda.
AllAfrica publishes around 600 reports a day from more than 110 news organizations and over 500 other institutions and individuals, representing a diversity of positions on every topic. We publish news and views ranging from vigorous opponents of governments to government publications and spokespersons. Publishers named above each report are responsible for their own content, which AllAfrica does not have the legal right to edit or correct.
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AllAfrica is a voice of, by and about Africa – aggregating, producing and distributing 600 news and information items daily from over 110 African news organizations and our own reporters to an African and global public. We operate from Cape Town, Dakar, Abuja, Johannesburg, Nairobi and Washington DC.
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Africa: Powering Africa's First Solar Ai Research Hub

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The Namibia University of Science and Technology (Nust) is partnering with international and local institutions to develop Africa’s first solar-powered artificial intelligence (AI) research cluster.
The university is in advanced discussions with the Fraunhofer Institute for Solar Energy Systems and Karibu Kwetu Trading to establish micro-concentrated photovoltaic technology.
Micro-concentrated photovoltaic technology is a high-efficiency solar technology that uses lenses to focus sunlight onto highly efficient solar cells to achieve high concentration ratios.
Fraunhofer delivers up to 43% higher conversion efficiency, which will be aligned with Namibia’s growing research and innovation ecosystem.
This will be supported by Karibu Kwetu’s renewable energy expertise and Nust’s academic leadership in digital transformation.
The Namibian uses AI tools to assist with improved quality, accuracy and efficiency, while maintaining editorial oversight and journalistic integrity.
Read the original article on Namibian.
AllAfrica publishes around 600 reports a day from more than 110 news organizations and over 500 other institutions and individuals, representing a diversity of positions on every topic. We publish news and views ranging from vigorous opponents of governments to government publications and spokespersons. Publishers named above each report are responsible for their own content, which AllAfrica does not have the legal right to edit or correct.
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AllAfrica is a voice of, by and about Africa – aggregating, producing and distributing 600 news and information items daily from over 110 African news organizations and our own reporters to an African and global public. We operate from Cape Town, Dakar, Abuja, Johannesburg, Nairobi and Washington DC.
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