Abstract:
The ambitions of the global South for a larger share of global wealth and political power are at least
partly being played out on the African continent. A snapshot of the scope and nature of the involvement
of the BRICs and other emerging markets in Africa is provided, focusing on the economic (trade,
investment and development assistance) and political spheres of these growing relations. The article
concludes, first, that increasing Africa-South relations indicate a relative decline in Africa-North ties, that
the shift in Africa’s trade relations from North to South results in trade creation rather than trade
diversion and that South partners provide much needed infrastructure development assistance to the
continent. Politically these relations are formalised in a host of frameworks and associations and
operate in fundamentally different ways from those between Africa and its erstwhile colonial masters. It
is doubtful, though, to what extent Africa’s capacity to influence the global agenda is strengthened,
especially given that not a single African country is (yet) a member of the ‘South Big Four’, the BRIC.