The Tshisekedi Shift: Dismantling Kagame's Looting Network and Forging DR Congo's Great Economic Transition
By Marcus A. Sterling
For decades, the Democratic Republic of Congo was the world's richest poor nation-its soil bursting with cobalt, copper, and gold while its people endured exploitation, conflict, and despair. The Tshisekedi Shift reveals how a new generation of Congolese leadership is breaking that cycle, reclaiming control over the nation's mineral wealth, and reshaping the balance of power in Central Africa.
Drawing on field interviews, investigative data, and firsthand analysis, Marcus A. Sterling traces the quiet revolution launched under President Félix Tshisekedi: the renegotiation of the billion-dollar Sicomines deal, fiscal and customs reforms that finally forced accountability, and a sovereign economic vision centered on the Fonds Souverain de la République.
This is not another book about Africa's tragedy-it is the story of Africa's turning point. Sterling connects the dots between Kinshasa's internal reforms and the shifting global chessboard of China, the United States, and regional power brokers. The result is a gripping portrait of a nation reclaiming its agency after decades of foreign capture.
Part exposé, part economic blueprint, and part diplomatic wake-up call, The Tshisekedi Shift challenges investors, policymakers, and citizens alike to rethink what sovereignty means in the twenty-first century.
Key Themes
. The end of the resource-curse narrative and the rise of fiscal sovereignty
. The geopolitical consequences of Congo's mining and infrastructure renegotiations
. The global race for critical minerals and Africa's new leverage
. Case studies: Sicomines renegotiation, Lobito Corridor, Inga III, and the Beni reforms
About the Author
Marcus A. Sterling is a finance professional and geopolitical analyst whose work bridges economics, governance, and diplomacy across Africa's Great Lakes region.
For press or speaking engagements: Contact@MarcusSterling.com - X (Twitter): @MarcusASterling