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AFRICABIZ
VOL 2 - ISSUE: 131
April
15 - July 14, 2013
Previous
Issue
Editor: Dr. Bienvenu-Magloire Quenum
Click here for contact & support console
| A
WORD FROM THE EDITOR
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Dear visitor and international investor,
We warmly welcome
you, if this is your first visit
to Africabiz Online - The ultimate
newsletter on trading and investing
in 49 sub-Saharan African countries.
If you are a regular and faithful
reader, welcome back.
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THE SETUP OF BRICS's DEVELOPING BANK MARKS THE BEGINNING OF A NEW ERA IN INTERNATIONAL
AFFAIRS
To
review what the BRICS entity
stands for, please
revisit a previous delivery titled,
The BRICS's Emergence Opens
New Political and Economic
Alternative for African Nations.
From March 26 to March 27, 2013,
BRICS's Heads of States met at
Durban, South Africa for their
fifth annual gathering, dedicated
to further implementing decisions
taken during New Delhi's March
29, 2012 fourth meeting - explained
in above outlined link. The
Summit Declaration and
Action Plan is
here to review.
Amongst other important decisions,
the main announcement concerns
the final setup of a US$100billion
Developing Bank to assist financing
BRICS countries apart from existing
alternative provided by the World
Bank and the IMF.
Even if the location and the final
administrative structure of the
bank had not been revealed -
prompting several media to declare
the Summit had stalled,
the truth is the decision had been
made - and this is a tremendous
achievement that would strengthen
the economic development
of emerging nations (African countries
in particular,) to escape leonine
conditions set forth by the World
Bank's and the IMF's support-financing
- as exposed in Africans,
Stop Being Poor!
Listen to Afshin Rattansi in the
following YouTube/RT video
that clearly exposes the huge geopolitical
and strategic importance of the
BRICS's developing bank for emerging
nations.
As
already stated
in a previous delivery, "Now, with the emergence
of the Brics, to which several
countries around the world
are, no doubt about that, planning
to adhere to, the IMF and the
World Bank would need to compete
to stay "healthy", and survive.
They would have to drift away
from "astonishing" loans conditions,
and promote growth instead
of "absurd" austerity programs,
that had not help the developing
of African nations - to say
the least."
Noticed Afshin Rattansi mentioned John Perkins - referring
to his explosive book,
The Confessions of an Economic Hit Man?
This means BRICS countries
would have to watch their back, because these entities that ruled the show since
the end of WWII would not stay put seeing their lucrative scheme, blackmailing
emerging nations, fizzles out.
There is no doubt,
however, they would have it hard to prevail against the new revival
(political and economic) trend,
and the fierce desire of people all over the world to have better living conditions.
Indeed, as now everyone is aware about what John Perkins denounced, there is
no way going back to the dirty practices of the past that is the devious (and
Your feedback / objection / contribution is welcome. Visit WorldWide BizCenter, and choose General Information (as topic) to create a thread for discussion.
On the top of the WorldWide BizCenter page, there is a HELP link to assist you making an efficient use of the discussion board. This link also is useful
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Many
thanks for dropping by and see you here on July 15, 2013 Dr. B.M. Quenum Editor of AFRICABIZ
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BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITIES IN AFRICA
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Several business opportunities - component parts of the Integrated Developing Scheme described in Africans, Stop Being Poor! are listed in following table.
1-SHEA BUTTER (5,
6, 7,
11, 12,
13)
2- BLUE GOLD (14,
15, 16,
17, 18,
19)
3- FREEZE-DRIED PAPAIN (20,
21, 22
and here)
4- KENAF (23,
24)
5- VEGETABLE OIL (25,
26, 27,
28)
6- CEREALS (30,
31, 32,
33)
7- FRUITS (34,
35, 36,
37, 38,
39, 40,
42, 43,
44, 45,
46)
8- ESSENTIAL OILS (47,
48, 49,
50, 51,
52)
9- ROOTS & TUBERS (54, 55, 56, 57, 58, 59, 60, 61, 62, 63, 64) |
10- FOWL BREEDING (66, 67, 68, 69, 70, 71, 72, 73, 74, 75, 76)
11- FISH FARMING (78, 79, 80, 81, 82, 83, 84, 85, 86, 87)
12- BIOMASS ENERGY (89, 90, 91, 92)
13- SUGAR
CANE & PRODUCTS (93, 94, 95, 96, 97, 98,
99/100, 101, 102)
14- LIVESTOCK (103,
104,
105,
106,
107,
108,
109, 110,
111,
112
15- MISCELLANEOUS (113, 114, 115, 116, 117, 118, 119, 120, 121, 122, 123,
124,
125,
126, 127, 128,
129,
130, 131, 132 |
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NO MORE SYSTEMATIC UPDATE TO "BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES"
With the release on January
31, 2013 of Africabiz Media™ flagship eBook, Africans,
Stop Being Poor! The Roadmap to Prosperity for African Nations, the
systematic update of the "Business Opportunities" section ends
with delivery 129.
The several deliveries about "Business Opportunities" in African countries
- started since 1997 - exposed in the table above number 128. Each of these opening
way to at least five additional investment opportunities, that makes around 600
(six hundred) business opportunities exposed by Africabiz Online since 1997.
That is enough for anyone searching for business opportunities in African countries,
to find his bread and water to entering the promising market of 49 sub-Saharan
African countries where double-digit growth rate is the norm for well planned
and professionally implemented projects.
From time to time, some exceptional project might be
here reported, which needs shareholders.
- This is not the end of Business Opportunities
in Africa
This is not the end of the Blog thought! If you do need a specific project to
be tailored for you from the ground level, to financing research and implementation
supervision, please visit the support
page here available open a ticket to contact Dr. Quenum & Associates for
assistance.
MORE ON
DEVELOPING NATIONS |
1- Abramowitz, Moses. 1986. Thinking About Growth
2- Bhinda, Nils 1999. Private Capital Flows to Africa
3- Perkins, John. The Confessions of an Economic Hitman
4- Perkins, John, 2012. The Secret History of the American Empire
5- Kapuscinski, Ryszard. 2001. The Shadow of the Sun
6- Peyrefitte, Alain. 1992. The Immobile Empire |
7- Prestowitz, Clyde. 1988. Trading Places, How We Allow Japan to Take the Lead
8- Rodney, Walter. 1972. How Europe Underdeveloped Africa
9- Williams, Chancellor. 1987. The Destruction of Black Civilization
10- Yergin, Daniel. 1991. The Prize, the Epic Quest for Oil
11- Fanon, Frantz. 2005. The Wretched of the Earth
12- Sachs, D. Jeffrey. 2005. The End of Poverty
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