Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Expanding the welfare state in Africa is a threat, not a help
Expanding the welfare state in Africa is a threat, not a help
Jan 11, 2026 5:09 AM

Traditional family values, a strong work ethic, and an informal economy have until now stood in the way of a creating a social-security scheme for most African nations. A new agenda aims to change that. What Africa needs instead are those good intentions wedded to sound economics.

Read More…

While bilateral and multilateral talks are hitting impasses around much of the globe, “Agenda 2063: The Africa We Want” is a continental agreement that breaks the mold. For all its lofty ambitions, this blueprint aiming at “transforming Africa into the global powerhouse of the future” is paradoxically both a celebration of and a threat to the family.

The document accurately captures the high esteem in which Africans hold the family munal ties. It pledges that Africa will be a continent where “there would be a strong work ethic based on merit” and “traditional African values of munity and social cohesion would be firmly entrenched.” This focus on the family is hardly novel—nearly half the countries in Africa explicitly evoke the family in their constitutions as the basic nucleus of social organization. The family often acts as the first social safety net the individual resorts to. In times of economic, social, or physical distress, the extended family is expected to step in and help.

The family also serves as the soil in which virtues like honesty, reciprocity, cooperation, and a strong work ethic are cultivated. While we tend to think that these concepts apply to the raising of children, Herman Bavinck reminds us that the family is also a powerful vehicle for internalizing values like “devotion and self-denial, care for the future, and involvement in society” in the parents as well. This confluence of factors often leads to scenes reminiscent of the bustling house in Disney’s Encanto: the family’s household es a makeshift retirement home and shelter for grandparents, cousins, and the odd distant uncle or two. But more importantly, that household produces mitted to virtues essential in market interactions and so critical on a continent stricken by corruption and a weak rule of law.

Yet despite its pledges in favor of the family, “Agenda 2063” misguidedly promotes the expansion of social security programs and policies. This is not to say that I oppose the laudable goals of alleviating poverty or taking care of the elderly; it is simply that I (and most proponents of the free market) refute that this is primarily the government’s role. This is to dangerously conflate munity and state duties. The welfare state may have brought about modest improvements by virtue of the its reaching the “low-hanging fruits” of development (such as South Africa’s asset delivery program that markedly increased the household access rate to public assets like formal dwellings), but as Frédéric Bastiat once warned us, oftentimes “when the immediate consequence is favorable, the ultimate consequences are fatal.” I fear we, too, are easily brushing off the consequences.

The expansion of centralized social safety nets crowds out the individual’s sense of familial duty. By conceding this battle to the welfare state, we effectively outsource the care of the poor, the sick, the widowed, and the elderly to faceless and often inhumane institutions. Not only would this be a blow to the moral responsibility inculcated in families, but a greater share of the family’s hard-earned money would go into the state’s purse. Actually, a perforated purse may be a more apt metaphor; studies have shown that an increase in government spending has caused as much as a 6.5% reduction in economic growth.

Such “social security” programs have been limited in Africa for three major reasons. The first is that the general African population’s view of culture and its work ethic run counter to the underpinnings of a welfare state. This set of values likely stems from Pan-Africanism and its insistence on self-reliance. The second is that Africa (and developing countries in general) have historically allocated less than 2% of their already limited GDP to welfare schemes. While this last figure pales parison to, say, France’s hefty 31%, this gap may soon be narrowed. The third reason for Africa’s reluctance to broaden its welfare state is the unviability of any significant employment-based contributory social security plan, a result of the informal employment sector in Africa. Fittingly, “Agenda 2063” aims at demolishing the second and third obstacles to broader state-centric welfare. Naturally, and thankfully, it cannot demolish the first.

As evidenced by the goals of “Agenda 2063,” and the growing number of welfare schemes in Africa already, a clear and alarming pattern is forming. Western nations hailed as the exemplars of democracy continue to extol the virtues of a strong welfare state, and Africa’s leaders are entirely beguiled. My word of advice is that they fight the urge to chase their Western counterparts on the path to supposed social equity. Africa is far from perfect, but for all its problems, the love mitments of family life is not one of them.

If we as Africans were to lean more into the traditional family structure and aim at limiting government interference (while conversely not falling into tribalism), the Encanto-esque scene confined to singular households might very well spread and formalize into institutions like private healthcare providers and private charities that can effectively and efficiently provide relief where it’s truly beyond the capacity of individual families.

Fr. Robert Sirico once posed a sobering question akin to the one made nearly 200 years prior by Alexis de Tocqueville: “How is it possible that society will escape destruction if the political tie is strengthened and the moral tie is relaxed?” As reflected by “Agenda 2063,” Africa is standing on a precipice. The question is, will she choose to stand on the bedrock of humane civil institutions or will she jump into the treacherous nets of the state?

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Acton Commentary: Liberty for AOC but not for thee
During a congressional hearing late last week, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez likened Christians who refuse to perform medical procedures that violate their religious beliefs to Klansmen, segregationists, and slaveholders. But in this week’s Acton Commentary, Rev. Gregory Jensen writes that it is the congresswoman who shares the Jim Crow tactics of using the government to deny other people their inalienable rights. In a video clip that went viral, AOC, a democratic socialist, said that Christians lack the right to live according to...
As it turns out, Lake Erie does not have ‘rights’
Last week, a federal district court judge in Ohio declared that the city of Toledo’s move to establish a Lake Erie Bill of Rights, or LEBOR, was invalid. Judge Jack Zouhary put it this way: Frustrated by the status quo, LEBOR supporters knocked on doors, engaged their fellow citizens, and used the democratic process to pursue a well-intentioned goal: the protection of Lake Erie. As written, however, LEBOR fails to achieve that goal. This is not a close call. LEBOR...
Bloomberg and Sanders are both wrong about money in politics
Super Tuesday – the single day in the U.S. presidential primaries with the most delegates at stake – e and gone, and so have quite a few presidential candidates. Former South Bend Mayor Pete Buttigieg and Senator Amy Klobuchar (D-MN) both dropped out before Tuesday and endorsed former Vice President Joe Biden. After lackluster performances on Tuesday, both former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg and his debate nemesis, Senator Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts, have dropped out, as well. The...
Acton Line podcast: The biggest problems of national conservatism
In recent years, a rift has opened within American conservatism, a series of divisions animated in part by the 2016 presidential election and also by a right concern with an increasingly progressive culture. Among these divisions is a growing split between self-professing liberal and illiberal conservatives as some on the right scramble to give explanation for a culture which has e hostile to civil society and traditional institutions, most notably the family. One movement which has grown out of this...
Clayton Christensen: ‘If you take away religion, you can’t hire enough police’
The Founding Fathers understood, in the words of John Adams, that “we have no government armed with power capable of contending with human passions unbridled by morality and religion.” An Ivy League professor recently heard the same conclusion repeated by a Chinese Marxist. “I had no idea how critical religion is to the functioning of democracy,” the economist told Clayton Christensen. Christensen, who died last month at the age of 67, taught business administration at Harvard Business School and served...
3 books to help you think and talk about politics without practicing politics
When people talk about politics, they are usually discussing passions and interests, often with a whole lot of passion and interest. This is why prohibitions exist in polite society against talking about politics. Political discussions about issues, parties, or candidates are often performative recitations of opinion: yesterday’s knowledge, right or wrong, applied to today’s situation. These debates can be engaging, enraging, or enjoyable. It is this sort of politics that, as Henry Adams observed, “as a practice, whatever its professions,...
A look inside a pro-life, free-market healthcare system
Proponents of massive government programs like Medicare for All often present their schemes as though there were no alternative to state intervention. Thankfully, a life-affirming, healthcare practice shows that the free market has a superior answer about how to care for vulnerable women and their babies. Chris Gast of Right to Life of Michigan drew my attention to the story of Mark Blocher, a Christian bioethicist who believes medical practices should reflect their faith, something often difficult even in our...
Hubris old and new
Adam MacLeod, a law professor at Faulkner University in Alabama, wrote a couple of years ago in the New Boston Post of “chronological snobbery,” the idea that “moral knowledge progresses inevitably, such that later generations are morally and intellectually superior to earlier generations, and that the older the source the more morally suspect that source is.” We don’t have to look too hard to see how widespread this attitude is now. No other age has had the hubris of ours....
Why businesses should use the servant leadership model
I recently flew from Grand Rapids to Los Angeles on Delta. With the exception of some extra frisky TSA agents here in Michigan, the experience was largely positive. My flights were on time, the crew was helpful, and the planes were clean and well equipped. Even for those of us sitting in the back, the seating fortable. Bonus—I had a whole row to myself on the trip home! All of this got me thinking about a news article that blipped...
For Roger Scruton, philosophy and culture were inseparable
It’s almost two months since the death of perhaps the twentieth century’s most important conservative philosopher, Sir Roger Scruton, but discussion of the significance of his work and life continues to occupy a great deal of space in journals, opinion pieces and on the airwaves. Like many others, I have found myself looking again at many of Scruton’s great books, such as his classic “The Meaning of Conservatism” (1980), the very reflective “England: An Elegy” (2000) and the aesthetic arguments...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved