KEY POINTS:
The recent African Union summit in Accra, Ghana, proposed a road-map to a federation of African states without mentioning a single political or economic freedom for African citizens.
We do not need ideals, we need practical freedom to lift ourselves out of poverty.
Continental union was the founding principle of the original Organisation of African Unity but it never stood a chance. African leaders refuse to face up to their own or their neighbours' failures, while preventing ordinary Africans from using their ingenuity to build their own future.
We heard much at the latest meeting of lofty ideals of unity, not least from Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi, but nothing of any use on the real disasters of Zimbabwe, Darfur, Somalia, Ethiopia and Eritrea.
Other failures such as corruption and election-rigging did not even feature on the agenda - although these remain the real unifying features of Africa.
Above all, there was not a whisper about property rights, the rule of law and market freedoms that would allow Africans to emulate the growth of Asian countries such as Thailand, Malaysia and South Korea - which were as poor as we were at independence in the 1960s.
Even the growth records of South Africa, Mauritius and Botswana are ignored as being somehow exceptional instead of being acknowledged as the direct result of sound economic policies.
Positions at the African Unity meeting are divided between the so-called gradualists, who believe that individual countries should first build working economies and integrate them through regional blocs, and the radicals, who believe a supra-national authority would let Africa compete internationally.
Neither side, however, is talking about the real issue: economics.
Right now, Africans cannot compete locally or regionally, let alone internationally. We need economic freedom for Africans to raise themselves out of poverty, unshackled from state serfdom.
The life-changing power of trade has been demonstrated historically and not just in the West.
At the height of their glory, many pre-colonial African states and empires found trade to be a better way to prosperity than through conquests. Gold was shipped from Wangara in the Upper Niger across the Sahara desert to Taghaza, in Western Sahara, in exchange for salt, and to Egypt for ceramics, silks and other Asian and European goods.
The old Ghana empire controlled much of the trans-Sahara trade in copper and ivory. At Great Zimbabwe gold was traded for Chinese pottery and glass. From Nigeria, leather and iron goods were traded throughout West Africa.
Africa has lost that trade, and conspiracy theories abound for its backwardness. But the blame game ignores the devil within: the internal and regional barriers that hobble trade.
Tariffs within Africa are far higher than any tariff barriers by outside blocs. There are even politicians, bureaucrats and aid activists who argue that these tariffs make essential contributions to government revenue - meaning government offices are more valuable than citizens or the economy.
Opponents of US Free Trade Agreements or European Union Economic Partnership Agreements say these would allow cheap imports and send the already tottering African economies into collapse.
They ignore the consumers who would benefit from cheap imports or the producers who could export regionally and internationally. They think only of maintaining government power and protected industries.
But the real consequence of these anti-development policies is to keep the African farmer at subsistence level and keep our economies agrarian. Tariffs in rich countries have fallen by 84 per cent in the past two decades to about 3.9 per cent. Yet tariff barriers in Africa have declined by only 20 per cent to a still massive average of 17.7 per cent.
Other, non-tariff protectionism in the poorest African countries is four times greater than in rich countries.
So the issue here is not remote ideals of regional or continental unity that might, by some undefined and unprecedented magic, lift Africans out of poverty.
The issue is the lack of practical and everyday economic freedoms that would let Africans lift themselves out of poverty with well-defined and historically proven policies.
The beauty of sound economic policies is that they take effect within very few years, as in South Africa and Botswana, unlike fancy political notions such as Gaddafi's oft-delayed union with Egypt.
But leaders who can talk of unity while ignoring the carnage in Darfur and the tyranny in Zimbabwe can very easily ignore local economic barriers.
Ideology and fine concepts have kept Africans back when hundreds of millions in Asia were building a better life. Our growth and prosperity depends on proven common sense and breaking the economic shackles that still enslave us.
* Franklin Cudjoe is the director of Imani, a policy think-tank in Ghana.