As always you want to reduce a complex issue into a single-issue - lay all the blame on Africa's political leadership. Africa leadership is wanting (albeit improving) but it not the only thing holding it back. There are so many other things holding us back.
You do realize that "complex issue" is singular, don't you?
Look, can list any number of "many other things holding us back". Once you are done with that, ask these questions: What can be done about them? What is being done about them? If you then reflect on those, you will end up at leadership.
We are doing UN SDGs and Vision 2063. That's what. The powerpoints are great; the execution is insufferably subpar since independence. My reflection reveals the classic leadership as scarce bearer of full blemish. It has been discussed here that a country reflects the
average citizen. If Wanjiku and Khadija are smart, educated and productive with high integrity and discipline then you get a new Canaan in short order. Sadly this is hardly the case in Kenya and most of Africa.
The literacy level in Kenya is 90%
Productivity is at 22%. We need 40% to score middle income. Japan has 76%
Corruption... this monster that chews any +ve blossom is ignored by all even UN. We are at the wrong end of the index
We need more than leadership by citizen and expert participation:
Literacy - this is being collectively handled for the better with mandatory, free basic education. Obviously there is massive room for improvement e.g. mandatory, free tertiary education (dip, bachelors in imperative economic areas)
Productivity - besides education, discipline and integrity should be instilled, we are doing poorly here. Mandatory 6 months NYS enrollment has been mumbled as part of the solution. Meritocracy too comes up
Corruption - we agreed a C- is generous for this Kenyan government
and mwananchi. Strong institutions are suggested here. Again, shared duty. You note yourself how huge anti-IEBC mobs eat teargas yet fail to show up for NYS rally
These and other success factors are a collective responsibility. Not leaders only. Hard work and discipline for instance are what I call "energy and efficiency" we lack badly at individual level. Hanging your coat at your office desk to go run personal errands half the day...
These 3 items, which are a shared responsibility, will result in hard and soft benefits. The state will build infrastructure; FDIs will increase. Incomes and revenues will rise. State will invest some more in SGR, LAPSETT, regional integration, etc...
All this is going on albeit at a rate that depresses you. Heck, it does a number on me too sometimes: you see me proposing importing wazungu to run key institutions. You are not alone. Look deeper. Pundit's indicators are a place to consider.
http://www.standardmedia.co.ke/mobile/article/2000103729/how-low-labour-productivity-pricks-kenya-s-growth-bubblehttp://www.brookings.edu/research/opinions/2013/12/30-kenya-economy-kimenyi