Triangular Cooperation

New Transitional

New Transitional Course in the Triangular Cooperation Policy

Within GECCA, triangular cooperation is re-engineered to be implemented as a geometry of shared sovereignty, mutual prosperity, and neo-civilizational shift for a new more balanced global Afrocentric world, oriented toward a new multipolar future.

The GECCA’s triangular approach elevates Africa from the margins to the epicenter of global economic rebalancing, transforms triangular cooperation into a vehicle for multipolar stability, enables Africa to renegotiate cooperatively rather than peripherally, diversifies partnerships without submission to the duty of alignment, and institutionalizes Afrocentric economic diplomacy as a permanent global force.

Under strategic Afrocentric terms and priorities, GECCA is destined to mobilizing and bringing together both African, global north and global south economies in one strong ecosystem of multi-stakeholder cooperation, in which Triangular Investment Compacts pool capital and resources from diverse geo-economics sources to create and invest in mutual growth and prosperity, de-risk Afrocentric investments through shared guarantees, shape long-term developmental sovereignty over short-term returns, and ensure the new Triangular Investment Compacts replace fragmented bilateral deals with new structured multilateral co-investment regimes.

Laying

Laying new ways of interconnection and bilateral & multilateral complementarity

GECCA shapes triangular cooperation as a major strength through which it’ll mobilize cooperation agreements, Official Funds, expertise and specialized resources, and necessary strengths from bilateral partners (individual investing and financing countries) to be channeled and deployed into specific transformation and development sectors tailored to a specific, member or non-member country.

At the intersection of the need for complementarity and efficiency, GECCA will combine bilateral and multilateral approaches to create and strengthening significant synergies where bilateral relations are sparked to complement the multilateral, and multilateral frameworks on their turn consolidate bilateral ties, leading to more efficient mobilization and use of diplomatic, strategic, financial and transformative resources for mutual interest, and driving greater impact for tailored, and addressing most complex challenges across global Afrocentric corridors.