World Bank President Says African Poor Still Vulnerable to Crisis, Important to Create Basis for Future Growth

Published: 3 February 2010 y., Wednesday

 
Pasaulio banko vadovas Robertas Zelikas (Robert Zoellick)
The effects of the global food, fuel and economic crisis would be felt by Africa’s people for some time yet and it was important to persist with efforts to protect the most vulnerable while laying the foundations for future productivity and growth, World Bank Group President Robert B. Zoellick said Tuesday.

Ending an eight-day, three-nation trip to Africa, Zoellick said success would depend on making the continent a more attractive destination for investment, on donors providing adequate support, notably to countries emerging from conflict, and working with Africans to ensure that each dollar spent has an impact on overcoming poverty.

We still face considerable risks in 2010 and must work to repair the damage to human lives from the global economic crisis,” Zoellick said, as he ended a visit which took him to Sierra Leone, Cote d’Ivoire and Ethiopia. “At the same time we must ensure that Africa’s robust growth rates of the past two decades are not a one-off event and that the basis for future productivity and growth are put in place to help overcome poverty on the continent.”

Zoellick said the World Bank had helped countries, working with partners at the U.N. and elsewhere, with targeted social safety nets such as school feeding programs and cash for work programs. To address longer term challenges, he appealed for investments across Africa to expand its share of global and intra-African trade while fostering regional integration and building crucial infrastructure in energy, transport and irrigation needed to promote agriculture and manufacturing.

“I leave Africa impressed by the  actions many governments have taken to cope with the global economic crisis but also aware that governments and their partners, like the World Bank Group and others, must work harder  to expand opportunities and improve prospects for economic growth. The progress I have seen across the region, but also in fragile and post-conflict countries, has confirmed my belief in Africa’s potential to become another source of growth for the world economy,” Zoellick said.

During a breakfast forum hosted jointly on the sidelines of the AU summit by Zoellick and the African Development Bank President Donald Kaberuka, African leaders agreed on the need to do more not only to lift the many barriers to more private sector investment in the Information and Communications (ICTs) sector, but to expand the opportunities more generally for the private sector in their countries. The private sector has driven technological progress across the continent, investing about $60 billion from 1998-2008 in ICTs. Sixty-five percent of Africans have access to wireless voice networks and some 400 million mobile phones are now in use. 

The World Bank signed a Memorandum of Understanding with Microsoft in Addis Ababa to help Africa keep pace with fast-changing technology systems, increase access by African small businesses to ICTs, and expand support for affordable remittance transfers to Africa.

African leaders attending their biannual summit meeting in Addis Ababa received reassurances of the World Bank Group’s continued support to initiatives they are taking to stimulate their economies and take advantage of a rebound in global growth and trade. Support would also be provided to projects aimed at providing reliable, clean and affordable electricity to homes and enterprises, while harnessing renewable forms of energy like hydro, solar, and wind, and improving efficiency in thermal generation and addressing climate change.

Zoellick told leaders the World Bank was pioneering new ways to draw private investors to Africa. IFC’s Asset Management Company was raising and managing private equity funds to co-invest on the continent.  IFC was expecting in the next months to close on a $500 million sub-Saharan Africa, Latin America, and Caribbean Fund that will take equity positions in companies in these regions. It was also expecting to close on a $200 million Africa Capitalization Fund that invests in systemically important banks.

Zoellick, who was accompanied by the World Bank Africa Region Vice President Obiageli Ezekwesili, said his trip was to listen and learn from African leaders,  and a cross-section of African parliamentarians, representatives of local governments, the private sector, civil society, women and youth groups. Throughout the trip, members of government, representatives of the private sector, other donor agencies and civil society stressed the need to create jobs especially for youth and women; to build capacity for entrepreneurship; to foster reconciliation and help encourage stable and capable institutions. This was especially needed in post-conflict settings, where more inclusive political, social and economic initiatives are key to expanding opportunities for overcoming poverty.

The World Bank Group has committed a record $88 billion worldwide in loans, grants, equity investments, and guarantees since the global economic crisis hit in the middle of 2008.  IDA, which provides grants and low-interest loans to the world’s 79 poorest countries, half of which are in Africa, committed $7.8 billion to sub-Saharan African countries in the fiscal 2009 year, a 36 percent increase over the year before. The Bank’s private sector arm, IFC, which provides investments and advisory services to build the private sector in developing countries, has seen its commitments in Africa grow to $1.82 billion in 2009 from $445 million in 2005.

 

 

Šaltinis: www.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

Green jobs the key to a sustainable economy

The EU needs a strategy by 2011 to encourage the creation of green jobs, says a draft resolution by the Employment and Social Affairs Committee that was adopted on Wednesday. more »

Gas supply crises: better protection for householders

Householders should not have to go without gas due to a gas-supply crisis, and such crises should be better managed, thanks to EU-wide co-ordination procedures and interconnection requirements laid down in draft legislation agreed informally with the Council at the end of June and approved by the Industry Committee on Tuesday. more »

Estonia joins the euro-family

Today the Council has taken the formal decision which will pave the way for the introduction of the euro in Estonia as of 1 January 2011 and will become the 17th European Union country to share the euro currency. more »

Deposit guarantee schemes – part 2

Proposals to improve protection for bank account holders and retail investors, and set up similar schemes for insurance policies. more »

Greener, more competitive farming after 2013

How should the EU's farm policy be reshaped and how should it be funded after 2013? more »

European Parliament ushers in a new era for bankers' bonuses

MEPs on Wednesday approved some of the strictest rules in the world on bankers' bonuses. more »

The European Parliament's position on financial supervision

Long before the financial crisis the European Parliament regularly pointed out the significant failures in the EU’s supervision of ever more integrated financial markets. more »

Magnetic Europe: Big plans for tourism industry

New strategy for stimulating tourism in Europe – to realise the full potential of an industry that already plays an important role in the economy. more »

Commission gives details of who received EU funds in 2009

The European Commission has disclosed who in 2009 received EU funds in policy areas like research, education and culture, energy and transport or external aid. more »

€ 30 million EU support for the promotion of agricultural products

The European Commission has approved 19 programmes in 14 Member States (Austria, Belgium, Czech Republic, Denmark, Germany, France, Greece, Italy, Ireland, the Netherlands, Poland, Slovenia, Spain and the United Kingdom) to provide information on and to promote agricultural products in the European Union. more »