Neocolonialism, according to Nkrumah, is the use of foreign capital to exploit rather than advance the prosperity of the world's less developed regions.
Neocolonialism is the exploitation of former colonies by their former rulers, based on economic inequality
Kwame Nkrumah, the architect of Ghana’s independence and a renowned African statesman and scholar, wrote the book titled "Neocolonialism: The Last Stage of Imperialism" in 1965, eight years after Ghana gained its independence.
He described how former colonial powers continued to dominate and
take advantage of recently independent nations in this book. The terms
"neocolonialism" and "post-colonialism" gained popularity
during Africa's decolonization.
Nkrumah wrote, “The result of neocolonialism is that foreign capital is used to exploit rather than to promote the prosperity of the less developed parts of the world. Under neo-colonialism, investment widens rather than narrows the gap between the rich and the poor in the world.
The
struggle against neo-colonialism is not about excluding the capital of
developed countries from the economies of less developed countries. It is about
preventing the financial power of developed countries from being used to undermine
the economies of less developed countries.”
Neocolonialism is therefore the continued exploitation of former colonies by their former rulers, based on economic inequality. Like colonialism, it includes cultural and language influence, as well as unequal economic and political‑military relations between the former colony and the former colonial power.
A clear example is the so‑called “banana
republics,” countries whose economies depend
on exporting one main agricultural product, often controlled by a single
foreign company.
Colonialism started as a system where powerful countries
controlled weaker ones from the 16th to the 20th centuries. These powerful
countries conquered smaller states for many reasons: to make trade easier, to
take natural resources, and to control trade routes. Countries with strong
economies and armies became metropolises, while weaker countries became
colonies.
The metropolises spread their culture and language, while the colonies lost political and economic independence. Often, citizens of the metropolises had more rights and privileges in the colonies than the local people.
For example, British colonizers in Australia applied the Magna Carta
and the 1689 Bill of Rights to themselves but not to the Indigenous
Australians, who were bought or kidnapped and forced to work on British farms.
European powers treated colonized cultures differently, but
in most cases, colonization caused suffering and tragedy. For example, the
British East India Company’s rule caused major famines in Bengal in the 1760s
and 1790s, killing an estimated 10 million people in the first famine.
Colonialism in its original form ended after World War II, when societies began
to support human rights, democracy, and decolonization.
The year 1960 is often called “the year of Africa.” It was the year when the largest number of African countries became independent: 17 nations, many of them formerly colonized by France, including the Democratic Republic of Congo, Somalia, and Gabon.
That same year, the UN General Assembly
passed a declaration supporting independence for colonial countries and
peoples, confirming the right of all nations to self‑determination
and calling for the quick end of colonialism.
Neocolonialism affects the whole world today. Developed countries still spread their political and economic influence using post‑colonial methods. For example, one condition for the Philippines’ independence was allowing the United States to keep military bases there.
Also,
Northern Cyprus has been occupied by Turkey since 1974. Some organizations are
also accused of spreading the culture and values of former colonial powers.
One major effect of post‑colonialism is ethnocide, the destruction of a people’s national or ethnic identity. This happens when local languages disappear, and Western traditions replace local customs, erasing history and culture.
Western values are often linked
with personal freedom, rational thinking, and democracy, but countries like
Japan, Singapore, and Hong Kong show that modernization and progress can happen
without full Westernization.
On 21 February 1966, Kwame Nkrumah traveled to North Vietnam at the invitation of Ho Chi Minh and then continued to China. While he was in Beijing, a group of conspirators, many trained in England, carried out a coup in Ghana.
The main leader was Lieutenant Colonel Emmanuel Kwasi Kotoka,
commander of the 2nd Infantry Brigade in Kumasi. They used Nkrumah’s absence to
take power. After the coup, Nkrumah never returned to Ghana and lived in exile
in Guinea.
Kwame Nkrumah later went to Romania for medical treatment in August 1971. He died there on April 27, 1972, at the Flamingo Hotel in Bucharest. He had been suffering from a serious, incurable illness, later identified as prostate cancer.
Years after his passing, declassified U.S. records showed that
the CIA was instrumental in the 1966 overthrow of Ghana's first president,
Kwame Nkrumah.


