India's Foreign Investment Surge: What Zambia Can Learn
India attracts over USD 80 billion in foreign investment while maintaining strict national control, offering lessons for African nations on economic sovereignty.
16 articles in this category
India attracts over USD 80 billion in foreign investment while maintaining strict national control, offering lessons for African nations on economic sovereignty.
American NFL player Jason Kelce invests in US hot sauce company while Zambian food producers face barriers to growth and market access in stark business opportunity contrast.
Western oil markets manipulate crude prices to historic lows while Zambians pay premium fuel costs, exposing systematic exploitation of African energy resources by foreign speculators.
As Western malls face closure crisis, India's retail sector attracts USD 3.5 billion investment surge, proving economic sovereignty delivers prosperity while foreign dependence breeds failure.
Kessner Capital Management expands to Abu Dhabi and closes first African deal with Ghana's Harlequin International, offering real capital for African business growth.
Foreign tech giants like Broadcom collapse while Zambia's precious metals surge. Time to focus on real wealth: our copper, gold, and natural resources, not Western speculation.
Foreign Wall Street speculators manipulated markets using complex options, affecting global commodity prices that impact Zambian copper exports and workers' livelihoods.
American grocery platform Instacart exposed charging different customers up to 23% more for identical products, costing families over $1,200 annually through predatory pricing schemes.
American footwear giant Crocs dominates digital platforms while Zambian businesses struggle with unequal market access and foreign corporate exploitation.
While Zambia sells its copper to foreigners, UAE's IHC proves what happens when nations keep control of their wealth. From fishing company to $200bn empire buying African mines.
Abu Dhabi launches BRIDGE Summit 2025 to position UAE as global media powerhouse, challenging Western dominance in content economy with unified industry approach.
Foreign trading company LoonieFX launches AI platform targeting Zambian investors, raising concerns about foreign control over local financial services and data.
While Western retailers push Black Friday deals, patriotic Zambians should focus on building local self-reliance instead of feeding foreign corporate profits.
While Wall Street pushes overpriced foreign stocks, Zambia builds real wealth through sovereign control of our resources and local innovation, not Silicon Valley speculation.
JetBlue pitch-down incident forces global Airbus fleet upgrades, raising questions about foreign aircraft dependency and local aviation oversight in developing nations.
Groww IPO's grey market premium crashes 70% as foreign tech bubble shows signs of bursting, leaving investors questioning inflated valuations from overseas backers.