“Africa’s Golden Moment Has Come,” Says World Bank Vice President for Africa

Published: 2 April 2010 y., Friday

Ilga kelionė per Sacharos dykumą Maroke (V. Afrika)
As seventeen of Africa’s 53 nations celebrate 50 years of independence in 2010, Africa’s “golden moment has come” and investors around the globe must look to the continent often painted only as risk-prone if they are to capitalize on business opportunities.

This, according to World Bank Vice President for the Africa Region Obiageli Ezekwesili, who spoke to investors, business executives, members of the African Diaspora and students attending the seventh edition of the Columbia University African Economic Forum in New York.

With US$60 billion in investments, the revolution now visible to all in Africa’s information and communications technology (ICT) sector for example “is only a signpost of what is possible in other sectors still virgin in Africa,” the vice president said.

ICTs, only one of many opportunities

Predicting that Africa’s development will follow a totally different paradigm from that of other regions on account of the technology factor, Ezekwesili said the ICT sector is only one example of Africa’s many opportunities of cashing in on transformative growth.

Thanks to mobile telephony, even where land lines were once non-existent or a luxury for the rich few, cell phones are now aplenty. Cell phones have, in fact, become one of the important assets for poor farmers in Kenya and fishermen in Sierra Leone, helping them to gain access to market information, bargain hard for their products, boost their incomes and take advantage of opportunities that would otherwise have past them by.

The emergence of a knowledge economy—driven by innovation, ideas, education and technology—once thought remote for Africa, now appears to be unfolding before the ink has dried on gloomy forecasts by Afro-pessimists.

All of a sudden, stereotypes—even those once true about Africa—seem increasingly removed from fact. Publishers are bombarded increasingly with books that speak of Africa as a “rising” development star; of Africa “becoming the new Asia”; of Africa as the crucible of future global markets and wealth. National Geographic Magazine could not have been more accurate when it headlined in September 2005: “Africa – Whatever You Thought, Think Again”.

“If the global financial crisis proved one thing, it is that the riskiest markets and business ventures are not necessarily only in Africa,” Ezekwesili told investors. The continent also offers splendid profit-making opportunities, she added, suggesting that investors who could but failed to get in on the ICT sector before the current boom must now be gnashing their teeth.

The ICT sector in Africa has proven that effective basic service delivery to the poor can be the basis for profit. Africa, she stressed, offers some of the highest rates of return on investments.

As Africa rebounds from the global economic crisis with growth forecasted at between 4.4 and 5.2 percent in 2010, opportunities in larger economies seem to be slowing down. “It is a good thing. Now we can get you home,” Ezekwesili told members of the African Diaspora in attendance.

She encouraged the Diaspora to think creatively about how to use some of the US$20 billion they wire home every year in remittances to help create jobs on a continent where growth has been without jobs.

Investing in Jobs

Unemployment rose 10 percent in Africa last year. An estimated seven to 10 million youth are added each year to an already long line of 200 million jobless African youngsters. A time bomb for a continent where social upheaval remains a real danger if millions of unemployed youth find it more rewarding to turn to crime or armed rebellion to earn their livelihoods.

Everything must be done to avoid what Ezekwesili described as “the creative dissatisfaction of citizens”—gun in hand—asking their governments “what have you done for us of late”.

Investments in five key areas could help, she explained. Africa must do more to expand income-generating opportunities in agriculture; to improve education, skills training and the empowerment of women and girls; to improve infrastructure; to expand access to credit; and to boost intra-African trade and regional integration.

Already under-funded, agriculture which is the source of livelihoods for more than 60 percent of Africans, notably girls and women, needs significant injections of capital to modernize, expand productivity, create jobs, and stem the threat it faces from weather vulnerability, which in some crops slashes yield by 50 percent.

Although Africa already competes favorably with China and India at factory floor level, it continues to miss out on the two percent increase in GDP growth and the 40 percent increase in productivity that would have accrued had it adequate infrastructure. Building skills and providing the kind of education that frees the creative genius of Africans would accelerate the shift of the continent to a knowledge economy.

Interest rates averaging eight percent across the continent—with some countries charging an exorbitant 25 percent—make investments an awfully expensive enterprise, especially for indigenous African entrepreneurs, reliant on local banks for funding. They indirectly offer a major advantage to investors coming from other regions, where the cost of interest is more in line with the global average of 4.8 percent. Additional investment and reforms are needed to help lower interest rates.

Most of Africa’s 18 land-locked countries are heavily reliant on successful regional solutions, including intra-African trade, to boost growth.

Africa’s Energy Deficit

Resolving Africa’s energy deficit must also remain a top priority, Ezekwesili stressed, pointing out that only one in four Africans has access to energy. The averages are low: five in every 100 Liberians, and six in every 100 Ugandans. While South Africa is generally better off, its energy crisis is no less dramatic.

“South Africa, which was already experiencing rolling black-outs as its economy overheated, was in fact saved by the global economic crisis,” Ezekwesili said, explaining that had growth continued uninterrupted, that country’s power supply would have never held up.

The World Bank is proud, she said, to be working with the South African government to resolve the problem through an upcoming loan to the country’s power utility, Eskom. “We will continue to do this in a responsible manner, combining renewable energy as the technology becomes increasingly available, affordable and tested.”

With six Southern African countries entirely dependent on South Africa for their energy supply and with every one percentage growth in South Africa having an external effect of 0.5 percent on the continent, it is not only a South African problem that the Eskom project resolves, but a major problem for all of Africa.
 
 
 

Šaltinis: web.worldbank.org
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

EU27 deficit in trade in goods with China of 170 bn euro in 2008

Between 2000 and 2008 EU27 trade in goods with China more than tripled in value, with EU27 exports to China rising to 78 billion euro in 2008 compared with 26 bn in 2000, and imports rising to 248 bn from 75 bn. more »

Euro area external trade surplus 0.4 bn euro

The first estimate for the euro area (EA16) trade balance with the rest of the world in March 2009 gave a 0.4 bn euro surplus, compared with -2.3 bn in March 2008. more »

AB Bank SNORAS distributes two emissions of the fixed interest bonds

On May 18 this year, AB Bank SNORAS begins to distribute two emissions of one-year fixed interest bonds. more »

DnB NORD Bankas revises deposit rates

Taking into account changes on international and domestic money markets AB DnB NORD Bankas, a member of international financial group, has changed time deposit rates for individual customers. more »

Sri Lankan army claims victory

The 25-year Sri Lankan civil war looks to be in its final throes. more »

UK lawmakers in claims row

The sheer scale and nature of taxpayers' cash claimed as allowances by Britain's lawmakers has stunned the nation. more »

Commission sends formal request to Lithuania concerning contract for modernisation of railway radio communication system

The European Commission has decided to send a formal request to Lithuania regarding the award of a works contract by Lithuania Railways for the modernisation of the railway radio communication system through the introduction of a GSM-R system. more »

Economic crisis: the European Parliament's response

The speed and depth of the financial crisis has been brutal and over the last year MEPs have been hard at work on a two-fold approach to the crisis. more »

UniCredit announces its “Green Deal”

The Group commits to reducing its CO2 emissions by 30% by 2020 supporting the “20-20-20” goal set by the EU. more »

SNORAS Spyker Squadron team was the fifth to finish Le Mans Series

This weekend, in the second round of Le Mans Series championship on SPA track, in Belgium, SNORAS Spyker Squadron team that participated there took the fifth high position. more »