'Black Capitalists' global book tour sparks debate on wealth and ownership

get these nets

Veteran
Joined
Jul 8, 2017
Messages
60,420
Reputation
16,778
Daps
217,326
Reppin
Above the fray.
*c-span book tv appearance from 2025



Black Capitalists European tour sparks new dialogue on wealth, ownership, and diasporic power​


Apr 25, 2026

image


Across Amsterdam, Brussels, Paris, and London, a new wave of dialogue on economic empowerment, ownership, and long-term wealth creation is taking shape.
The Black Capitalists book tour is bringing together leaders, entrepreneurs, policymakers, and members of the African diaspora in a series of curated gatherings that move beyond conversation into coordination.
The European tour was initiated and organised by Nii Dsane, CEO of Q-Advise, a global software advisory company headquartered in the Netherlands.
His vision has been instrumental in convening high-level, cross-sector dialogue across multiple cities and positioning the tour as more than an event series, but as a movement.
At the centre of the tour is Dr Rachel Laryea — a Wall Street scholar, financial anthropologist, global speaker, entrepreneur and author of Black Capitalists: A Blueprint for What Is Possible. Her work challenges how Black communities engage with capital, ownership, and economic systems globally, not from the margins, but from a position of agency.
Black Capitalists European tour sparks new dialogue on wealth, ownership, and diasporic power

About the Book
Black Capitalists: A Blueprint for What Is Possible offers a grounded and provocative examination of how Black visionaries, from Wall Street to Lagos and beyond, are reimagining capitalism to serve broader societal outcomes. Combining personal narrative, historical analysis, and on-the-ground reporting, Dr Laryea interrogates who benefits from capitalism and under what conditions.
The book reframes participation in economic systems not as passive inclusion, but as strategic engagement with responsibility. As Vanessa Williams describes it, it is “a must-read.”

Amsterdam: Setting the Tone​

The tour opened in Amsterdam with a focused session for women entrepreneurs, organised in collaboration with Zwarte Vrouwen voor Technologie and Ondernemerswinkel Amsterdam. The room was defined by ambition, but more importantly, by clarity.
Speakers, including Siomara de Getrouwe-Spalburg and Marianne Dorder-Servet, emphasised a necessary shift: entrepreneurship must move beyond survival toward structured, scalable growth. Conversations centred on access to capital, business design, and building systems that sustain long-term value.
That tone carried over to the Black Capitalists Dinner and Discussion Forum, where diplomats, corporate leaders, and policymakers, including Anouschka Biekman, engaged in direct, at times uncomfortable, conversations about capitalism and access.
Black Capitalists European tour sparks new dialogue on wealth, ownership, and diasporic power

Moderated by Nii Nmai Dsane, the discussion moved beyond theory. It focused on what it actually takes to participate in, and ultimately shape, economic systems.
“The tools of capitalism are race-neutral,” Dr Laryea noted, “but access to those tools has never been. The work we must do is understand the system well enough to navigate and reshape it to produce outcomes in service of our communities.”

Brussels: From Theory to Structure​

In Brussels, the conversation evolved. With participation from members of the Ghanaian diplomatic community, alongside entrepreneurs and diaspora professionals, the discussion sharpened.
Different interpretations of capitalism emerged, ranging from free-market ideals to structural critiques of institutional barriers. But rather than remaining philosophical, the dialogue turned practical. How do diaspora communities collaborate across borders? What structures enable durable wealth creation? How does capital circulate intentionally within communities?
Black Capitalists European tour sparks new dialogue on wealth, ownership, and diasporic power

The conclusion was clear. Participation is not enough. Without positioning and ownership, participation has a limited impact.

Paris: Recognition and Expansion​

In Paris, the tour gained formal recognition. Dr Rachel Laryea’s work was acknowledged by the Ghanaian Community in France Council and the Global Diaspora Council, under the leadership of Osei-Mensah Michael.
Here, the conversation expanded outward. Discussions addressed systemic barriers, as well as the growing influence of diaspora networks in shaping economic futures beyond national boundaries.
“It is not about one individual,” Dr Laryea said. “This is a collective effort to rethink how we build, own, and sustain wealth.”

London: Energy and Application​

The European leg concluded in London with a reception and forum hosted by The 10 Talents Global at the London Latvian Centre.
Black Capitalists European tour sparks new dialogue on wealth, ownership, and diasporic power

The atmosphere was more informal, but the substance remained. Ahead of Dr. Laryea’s keynote, Dr Flora Chigwedere and Dr Ashiedu Joel grounded the discussion in lived experience, sharing practical insights from their respective journeys.
The panel that followed, featuring both speakers alongside Nii Nmai Dsane, focused on leadership, economic inclusion, and execution. The exchange was direct, at times light, but consistently grounded in reality.
Dsane emphasised a core principle of the tour: ownership starts locally. It is about investing in the environments where people live, work, and build their futures.

A Movement Beyond the Book​

Across all four cities, a consistent pattern emerged. These were not symbolic gatherings, but deliberate convenings designed to connect sectors that rarely intersect: policy, finance, entrepreneurship, and community leadership.
The underlying thesis is straightforward. Wealth is built. Through structure. Through access. Through discipline. And ultimately, through ownership.
What distinguishes the Black Capitalists tour is its shift from dialogue to coordination. Participants are not only exchanging ideas but actively exploring collaboration across cities and countries, reinforcing the role of the diaspora as a global economic force.
With future engagements planned across Africa and continued momentum within the diaspora, the initiative is positioning itself as a long-term platform for economic development.
As Dr Rachel Naa-Du Laryea puts it, “To me, Black Capitalists is not just a book. It is a movement. A movement to build, not just individually, but collectively. Across cities, countries, the diaspora, and Africa.”
 

WIA20XX

Superstar
Joined
May 24, 2022
Messages
10,573
Reputation
4,903
Daps
32,245
His existence, his navigation of the capitalist system, and how its benefitting Black countries during this current fuel crisis serves to complicate some of the standard critiques of Black capitalism.

I hate to say it but "he's practicing capitalism right way"...but he kinda is.

Like I was saying OTOS, a lot of African/Developing Country Business people - make the big money and do 2 things
  1. Buy Western Luxuries
    1. (and have mentally bought into the western idea of luxury, and then western luxury specifically (as opposed to Eastern/Middle eastern or Jah forbid African idea of luxury - which includes sending their children to get educated by their former(?) colonizers.
  2. Put their money in Swiss/Foreign Banks/Foreign investments.

Right now Dangote is using his profits to build up and build out African Industry and Infrastructure - which only makes him more money - but also he's making Africa more money. And that's the key, imo.

Just that idea alone (invest in your own) is revolutionary, but also his moves have also been a practical playbook on how to do it.

Some of those moves can be made by me and you/average folks, but arguably some are really only for cats at that level.

But think about how many cats are on that level - and fail to even think of doing those things, much less fail at actually trying....
 

get these nets

Veteran
Joined
Jul 8, 2017
Messages
60,420
Reputation
16,778
Daps
217,326
Reppin
Above the fray.
I got 5 minutes into it and then Jared Ball came up.

Hope this doesn't mess up my algorithm. Got him and the rest of his crew on block.
Bell and his ilk have been hustling for years.

Like I said, this current global crisis and how people are able to navigate existing systems and structures(or not), will make people question the standard critiques and critics.
 
Top