Ing Professor Douglas Boateng
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As cracks spread across the civic roof, Deliverism, not the barracks, remains the only beam strong enough to keep Africa’s house standing.

AFRICA’S NEW CROSSROADS: DELIVERISM NOT MILITARISM IS THE REAL VACCINE AGAINST COUPS

Across the African continent, an old political conversation has returned with troubling familiarity. Yet beneath the surface, something far more profound is shifting. The resurgence of coups does not indicate a renewed attraction to military rule. Instead, it exposes a quiet but powerful realisation that has spread through towns, cities and villages: citizens fear stagnation more than they fear soldiers.

A generation ago, the rumour of a coup sent shockwaves across nations. Today, many citizens meet such news with weary resignation or muted curiosity, reflecting a deeper sentiment that a future without progress is the true danger. This shift in psychological calculation is one of the most consequential political transformations in Africa since independence.

Military takeovers do not begin with the sound of boots on gravel. They begin when taps run dry and remain unfixed. They begin in clinics where patients wait for medicines that never arrive, and in schools where broken infrastructure becomes normal. They begin when young graduates roam cities searching for opportunities that do not exist. They deepen in communities where state institutions lose meaning because they deliver too little for too long.

Africans do not suddenly favour military rule. They simply reach a point where failed delivery feels more dangerous than abrupt change. When the roof of a house groans without repair, even the loyal begin to look for the nearest exit.

The real question is whether Deliverism, the consistent and visible provision of public goods, can restore trust before societies reach their breaking point. A second and equally urgent question is whether leaders will recognise this moment as a final invitation to rebuild credibility, not through rhetoric, but through results.

Across the continent, an unavoidable truth has settled: when leaders fail to deliver, citizens imagine alternatives that once felt unthinkable.

And as a timeless Nyansakasa insight teaches, a nation collapses in the minds of its people long before it collapses in its buildings.

WHAT DELIVERISM REALLY MEANS

Deliverism is not a political slogan or a manifesto ornament. It is a governance discipline rooted in functioning systems, predictable services, and measurable improvements in citizens' daily lives. It understands that legitimacy grows from delivery, not declarations.

A repaired road communicates more sincerity than a lengthy political address. A hospital with medicine does more for national unity than a stadium full of applause. Deliverism is leadership that proves itself through actions measured quietly in households rather than loudly on podiums. It also reflects an ancient African truth: a community begins to fracture the moment the bucket it depends on starts to leak. Citizens may tolerate hardship, but they cannot tolerate neglect.

Why Deliverism is now at the centre of youth expectations

Africa’s youth, numbering more than 400 million, are globally connected and technologically empowered. Through their screens, they witness the efficiency of Singapore’s planning, the discipline of Rwanda’s governance, the industrial progress of Vietnam and the reliability of Norway’s social systems. They compare these realities to their own without mediation or delay.

This generation does not ask for perfection. It asks for progress. It wants electricity that stays on, schools that prepare them for meaningful work, digital platforms that enable enterprise and institutions that treat citizens with dignity. For the youth, Deliverism is not theory. It is survival. Non-delivery translates into indifference. Indifference translates into betrayal. And betrayal creates the conditions in which alternatives, even disruptive ones, begin to appear rational.

Why leaders must adopt Deliverism immediately

Deliverism aligns naturally with global development frameworks, especially those of the United Nations. Countries that deliver in education, gender equity, employment, infrastructure and strong institutions demonstrate higher GDP growth, attract more investment and sustain more stable political environments. Countries that fail to deliver drift toward turbulence. Deliverism is not merely an economic vision. It is the continent’s most important stabilisation tool.

COUPS DO NOT RISE FROM NOWHERE. THEY RISE FROM GAPS LEADERS FAIL TO FILL

Coups emerge not from ideology but from gaps in delivery: hospitals without equipment, schools without materials, courts without credibility, civil servants without salaries and youth without opportunities. Citizens do not revolt because life is difficult. They revolt because life is not improving. When governance becomes unreliable, drastic alternatives start to appear less risky. Africa’s coups are ultimately governance verdicts. Where Deliverism fails, discontent gathers courage.

MILITARIES ARE BUILT TO PROTECT NATIONS NOT TO MANAGE THEM

Africa must face an uncomfortable truth with clarity. Militaries can protect borders but cannot build nations. They can impose order for a moment, but cannot construct the systems that lead to prosperity. Historical evidence is clear. Countries under prolonged military rule experience slower economic growth, weaker institutions and declining public services. A barracks can stabilise a crisis briefly, but it cannot modernise an economy. African stability requires the competence of delivery, not the command of the barracks.

GLOBAL EVIDENCE: DELIVERISM WORKS

Global examples illustrate the transformative impact of consistent delivery:

  1. Rwanda: 7.2 per cent average growth from 2000 to 2019, with life expectancy rising from 49 to 69.
  2. Ethiopia: Nearly 9.5 per cent average growth during industrial expansion, with more than 60,000 new jobs created.
  3. Ghana: Free Senior High School improved access and strengthened human capital.
  4. Morocco: Noor Solar Complex created 50,000 jobs and advanced women’s participation.
  5. Kenya: The ICT sector grew more than 10 per cent annually, supporting 300,000 youth jobs.
  6. Botswana: Predictable institutions strengthened development over decades.
  7. Mauritius: GDP per capita increased more than tenfold since independence.
  8. Vietnam: Extreme poverty reduced from above 70 per cent to under 5 per cent.
  9. Brazil: Social programmes lifted 36 million people out of poverty.
  10. Norway: Strong public institutions support long-term national well-being.

Where delivery is strong, stability follows. Where delivery weakens, instability grows.

LAYING THE FOUNDATIONS FOR DELIVERISM

Deliverism demands systems that endure beyond individuals:

  1. Establish institutions stronger than personalities
  2. Adopt twenty to thirty-year national development commitments
  3. Professionalise and digitise the public service
  4. Strengthen fiscal discipline and transparency
  5. Treat human capital as national security
  6. Empower local governments to deliver where people live
  7. Embed rigorous performance measurement
  8. Foster meaningful public and private sector collaboration
  9. Ensure women and youth are placed at the centre of national progress

A Nyansakasa reminder puts it simply: a nation that seeks shade must plant trees capable of sheltering future generations.

AFRICA’S YOUTH: THE DECISIVE BUT UNPREDICTABLE VARIABLE

Africa’s youth are the continent’s greatest source of energy, creativity and political leverage. Their expectations rise faster than governance responses. Their frustrations accumulate faster than reforms. Their ability to mobilise grows stronger with every passing year. This generation inherits information, not fear. It knows what functioning nations look like. It knows what fairness feels like. It knows what progress should deliver. It is unwilling to accept repetitive stagnation presented as stability. Youth unemployment in many African countries ranges between 30 and 60 percent. Millions enter labour markets with no meaningful opportunities. A future without opportunity becomes fertile ground for frustration, and frustration becomes the spark for upheaval.

Today’s youth are not persuaded by speeches. They are persuaded by systems that work. They are not intimidated by authority. They are convinced by performance. A single viral video of a collapsed classroom or failed hospital can ignite national outrage within hours.

Many young Africans view rising political tensions not as threats but as opportunities for overdue correction. A generation that does not fear disruption cannot be subdued. It must be engaged, included and inspired. Africa’s youth are both its greatest opportunity and its greatest warning. Their direction will depend on whether Deliverism becomes a lived experience rather than a rhetorical ambition.

THE FINAL INCONVENIENT TRUTH: STABILITY MUST BE DELIVERED, NOT DECLARED, AND THIS IS THE MOMENT FOR LEADERSHIP TO RISE

Militaries may silence a moment, but only delivery silences frustration. Africa’s current tensions are warning signals, not inevitable outcomes. With strategic planning, disciplined governance and a renewed commitment to citizens, leaders can prevent instability long before it becomes a crisis. Short-term thinking has consistently undermined long-term success. A nation cannot build prosperity on promises that expire before they mature. Expectations are social contracts. When they are broken, trust erodes, and resentment grows. Yet there is hope. Africa retains the capacity, the intellect and the resources to rewrite its story. Its youth represent an unmatched reservoir of potential. Its private sector is increasingly innovative. Its institutions, when strengthened, can create the conditions for transformation.

The path ahead requires courage, humility and discipline. Leaders must choose delivery over excuses. They must choose planning over improvisation. They must choose the next generation over the next election. Africa still has time to reset its trajectory. But hesitation is costly. A continent that embraces Deliverism will discover that its people are ready to unite behind a shared future that finally feels within reach. A continent that delays risks hearing the footsteps it hoped never to hear at the door again. The window for transformation is open. The responsibility to act is now. Deliverism is no longer an option. It is the continent’s lifeline.

Ing Professor Douglas Boateng
Chartered Director UK | Chartered Engineer UK | Governance and Industrialisation Strategist | Generationalist

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DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.