Blogs
The new paradigm in communications drives us to pay attention at the content published in blogs and websites. They provide with important information to understand the african markets from a wider perspective. Below you will find a list of interesting information founded on the Internet.
Tax Justice Network: Why tax havens cause poverty
The Tax Justice Network (TJN) is an international, non-aligned coalition of researchers and activists with a shared concern about the harmful impacts of tax avoidance, tax competition and tax havens.
Il ne fait plus de doute aujourd’hui que le développement de l’Afrique passera par le dynamisme du secteur privé seul capable de produire de la richesse, de créer des emplois et de payer les impôts que les Etats pourront investir dans les secteurs sociaux et lutter ainsi efficacement contre la pauvreté.
"So why am I starting yet another economist’s blog? The short answer is that I have changed jobs. I am now the chief economist of the World Bank’s Africa Region..."
This blog is supported by the staff of the African Development Bank. It contains news and analysis of the African market.
This is the African News and Current Affairs blog from the BBC World Service. Team members will be blogging about things that catch their eye and discussing the African stories that have got people talking.
Most, if not all of what we think and know about Sub-Saharan Africa, is wrong. The region is best studied through documentation and analysis of the normal, the moral and the effective. In short, embrace what works in Africa.
George E. Ngwane is a writer, poet, peace activist, educationist, political analyst, Pan Africanist and founder/Executive Director of AFRICAphonie.
Mario Pezzini, Director of the OECD Development Centre, interviewed by CNBC in South Africa.
Mario Pezzini, Director of the OECD Development Centre, interviewed on South-South trade by Engineering news.
Henri-Bernard Solignac-LeComte, Head of the Africa Desk at the OECD Development Centre, interviewed by Reuters in London.
Jean-Philippe Stijns, Economist at the OECD Development Centre, interviewed by CNBC Africa.














