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Home Business Business News Africa: Dealing with the global economic and financial storm

Africa: Dealing with the global economic and financial storm

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Last week in Addis Ababa, African leaders agreed on the need to develop and improve Africa's infrastructure. Better infrastructure" water, transport, electricity" can increase growth rates in Africa by more than 2 percent, raise productivity by 40 percent, and create jobs for its burgeoning youth population. This summit was also an occasion for leaders to discuss their growing worries on the impact on their people of the global financial meltdown, coming so soon after the food and fuel crises.

Only a year ago, the prospects for Sub-Saharan Africa seemed so bright. For the first time in two decades, the region was growing at the same rate as the rest of the developing world, except China and India.

Years of tough choices" to mobilize more domestic resources, redirect wasteful spending, invest in basic education and health, reform public utilities, reduce protectionist policies, introduce interest rate and exchange rate flexibility and encourage competition - had finally begun to yield dividends, and to translate into growing incomes. Private capital flows to Africa were nearing $55 billion. GDP grew by 5.7 percent in 2006 and 6.1 percent in 2007. Foreign aid in the form of new money and debt forgiveness was rising.

But then, the financial crisis hit, and the global economy went into a tailspin. It did not take long for Africans to begin feeling the pinch. Tourism earnings, remittances and export earnings slipped. Foreign investments rapidly receded. African stock markets, like Uganda's, fell by over 40 percent. Ghana and Kenya had to postpone sovereign bond offerings worth over $800 million, delaying the construction of toll-roads and gas pipelines. For oil exporters, the decline in oil prices meant a potential loss of 15 percent of GDP in 2009.

There is a human toll behind these major shifts. With the worsening of economic performance, infant and child mortality is bound to increase, and primary school completion rates to fall. Most African countries were already falling short of the Millennium Development Goals, including halving poverty by 2015. This crisis will make attaining MDGs even harder. The more advanced African countries are also suffering. South Africa is estimated to have lost about 64,000 mining jobs just over the last few months.

The global economic crisis bears the risk of becoming a full blown political and social crisis. This is a time when African governments must engage their citizens in an open dialogue about the challenges ahead and the difficult options for dealing with them. Citizens will be part of any solution. What can and should be done?

A sound management of public finances will be key to a faster recovery after the crisis. African leaders must avoid populist choices that would leave their people even more vulnerable in the longer run. Subsidies and safety nets should target the vulnerable populations who need them most. Extending these to people who could afford the services will only worsen the public finance situation, hindering Government's capacity to invest in areas that are critical for the poor.

During these times, well managed fiscal stimulus programs, financed with external resources, could avoid a sharp fall in growth in African countries. Investment in safety nets and infrastructure spending, notably in maintenance, will cushion the fall and position Africa to take advantage of the rebound of the global economy when it occurs. This is the thinking behind the recent proposal of Mr. Robert Zoellick, President of the World Bank Group, that each developed country should pledge 0.7 percent of its stimulus package to a Vulnerability Fund to help developing countries weather the crisis.

Market-based principles enabled 64 percent of Africa's population to experience economic growth of between 5.9 and 8.1percent per year during 1997-2007. The revolution in the telecom sector in many African countries is just one example of how market principles have changed lives of citizens for the better. There should be no turning back from such market-based reforms because without growth there can be no sustainable poverty alleviation. But governments must do a better job at regulating these markets effectively, creating a level playing field for all economic agents, staying abreast of financial innovations and their risks, and tapping the immense resourcefulness and creativity of their people. This can only be achieved through a major effort at strengthening capacity of governmental institutions.

Foreign investors will return after the crisis has ebbed. But they will be cautious and invest first in those countries that kept to the reforms they had initiated, demonstrating a willingness to strengthen governance, embrace the rule of law, and modernize local capital markets.

For mineral rich countries, the crisis is an urgent call for them to redouble their efforts to set up systems that can ensure that resources are managed transparently and that these translate into tangible benefits for the poor.

Despite the uncertainties, Africa must maintain the momentum for a transformation that carries the promise of improvement in the day to day life of its citizens.

Obiageli Ezekwesili is the Vice-President for the Africa Region at the World Bank.

Comments (1)Add Comment
Media to blame also ith Financial crisis
written by david hill, February 25, 2009
Both the solutions and the reasons why we are in this fine mess is because we do not go any further than the perceived wisdom that got us all into these disastrous affairs. In this respect we try to fix the problem by going back every time to the very people who actually got us into this whole debacle in the first place. Even Einstein said in as many words that we couldn’t solve our problems by the very means that caused our dilemma. Therefore why is it that the Media are not brought into the blame game as well as they are still even today, after all has been laid bare, pandering completely to the ill-informed wisdom of those who were and still are the culprits of this whole financial and economic disaster.


This thinking of going back to those every time who have brought the world to its knees (which will happen over the next two years I am sure) is complete madness. Indeed, what is really required is new innovative thinking and outside the 'box'. In this respect, it is a well documented situation in the history of science and technology that main stream thinking was never the reason why major technological breakthroughs happened. In this respect it has been estimated that 75% of all the inventions that have made the modern world what is it is today emanated outside advanced thinkers and from the minds of independent inventors. The TV (Baird, an amateur radio ham), Jet Engine Whittle an RAF officer), the chip (KIlby had a personal private interest not ordered by the company to invent the chip as they were totally involved with tube/valve making - now the basis and driving a $1.5 trillion global annual industry), the car (Daimler a mechanic), the airplane (Wright Bros. who were mechanics), email(Tomlinson invented it for himself not the company) , WWW(Tim Berners-Lee's thinking not CERNs'), etc, etc are examples of a non-ending list.


Therefore the media has to start being innovative and not be just stuck in the mud with the old guard that has got us all into this 'mother' of all messes.
The sooner they grasp this and let independent thinkers put their views across the sooner we shall solve the present situation. Is the media listening, I wonder? Probably not and where they will perpetuate the whole situation by not doing so.


Therefore the villains in this whole affair are,
1. Politicians
2. The Bankers
3. The Media

and in that order, and why, the G20 Summit in April 09 will fail also. :X

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