Inter African Development is workable if only Africans can:
-Start regional conflicts through regional peacekeeping forces and by making concerted regional efforts to prevent armed involvement and material support of rebels by neighboring countries.
-Increase transportation and communication links to stimulate trade and competition and exploit economies of scale.
-Adopt sustainable macroeconomic policies by making currencies convertible and monetary policies consistent with low inflation reducing budget deficits and eliminating central bank financing of government spending.
"Promote and attract investment in infrastructure, health, and education by convincing donors and private investors of African countries' ability to provide a stable, non-corrupt environment based on the rule of law. A monetary union can in fact address very few of Africa's fundamental ills. At best, it can produce low inflation, but it cannot guarantee, but it cannot guarantee growth, and at worst, and at worst it can distract attention from essential issues. A more promising initiative is the New Partnership for African Development (NEPAD), through which African countries hope to exert peer pressure to correct governance failures and thus make progress in correcting Africa's problems. It is too early to see how effective that process will be, but if it succeeds, the monetary union can crown that achievement. If not, monetary union will almost certainly, and highlight Africa's more fundamental policies failures". (Paul R. Masson and Heather Milkiewicz, the Brookings Institution, independent research shaping the future)
"If the undeveloped world understands its potential, all alone it has the power to break the powerful nations' fascist control of the world what the wealthy nations are hit and bound by the many forms of monopolies with their countries within their countries not only they cannot change but also their economies are subject to collapse as change is forced upon them. If the developing world understands all this and avoids monopoly monopolization through Wi-Fi wiring the regions, they can quickly educate their citizens to develop and it is they who will then be in the driver's seat." (DR. J.W Smith author and founder of Economic Democracy)
Inter African Development programs can solve Africa's problems if adopted well by enhancing intellectual as well as political capital. - Idro Vuca