Africa’s rise is in danger of faltering. After years during which the continent’s economy grew at an average annual rate of 5%, global uncertainty, depressed commodity prices, and jittery external conditions are threatening to undermine decades of much-needed progress. Ensuring the wealth and wellbeing of the continent’s residents will not be easy; but there is much that policymakers can do to put Africa back on an upward trajectory
.
First and foremost, policymakers must secure the financing needed to pursue sustainable development in an uncertain global environment. The World Bank estimates that Africa will require at least $93 billion a year to fund its infrastructure needs alone. Climate-friendly, sustainable infrastructure will cost even more. And yet, as long as global growth remains weak, Africans cannot count on developed countries to fully honour their commitments to help attain the Sustainable Development Goals. Support Project Syndicate’s mission Project Syndicate needs your help to provide readers everywhere equal access to the ideas and debates shaping their lives. Learn more Africa must rapidly develop its own resources, beginning by nearly doubling tax revenues. Across Sub-Saharan Africa, tax revenues account for less than one-fifth of GDP, compared to more than one-third in OECD countries. This means there is plenty of room for improvement. From 1990 to 2004, for example, Ghana reformed its tax system and raised revenues from 11% to 22% of GDP. Admittedly, such progress is difficult; in Nigeria, we saw an opportunity in raising non-oil tax revenues, but struggled to seize it. Another source of domestic resources is the roughly $380 billion in pension assets held by just ten African countries. Policymakers should be leveraging these considerable sums. At the same time, African countries will have to find a way to diversify their economies. Diversification requires investment in the future, in the form of education and well-developed infrastructure, including telecommunications, power, roads, rail, and water. There are plenty of models to follow: Dubai, Singapore, Thailand, Malaysia, Mexico, Indonesia, and South Korea are all admired by Africans as economies that managed to transform themselves. Dubai, for example, set out more than three decades ago to prepare for a future without oil. The government implemented a step-by-step transformation of the country into a service economy, putting in place the infrastructure and incentives necessary to build up financial services, tourism, medical services, real estate, media, arts, and culture. South Korea and Singapore, which had few natural resources on which to rely, are no less inspiring. The secret behind these countries’ success is relentlessly focused leaders, whether entrenched but benign dictators or democratically elected politicians with a shared vision of a broad-based economy. Sub-Saharan Africa has paths for diversified growth that many of the trailblazers did not: value-added agriculture and agro industry, the processing of mineral resources, petrochemical complexes, manufacturing of durable and consumer goods, tourism and entertainment, and an emerging information-technology sector. As the necessary measures for diversification are implemented, policymakers must ensure that the economic growth they are pursuing creates jobs. Sadly, this has not always been the case. Much of the recent growth has benefited only a few, leaving many behind – most notably young people and women. From 2006 to 2013, inequality rose in many of the continent’s most important economies, including South Africa, Nigeria, Ghana, Tanzania, and Rwanda. These were challenges that we were starting to address in Nigeria when I was finance minister. We knew that we needed not just to secure growth, but also to improve the quality of that growth. To that end, policymakers must ensure that growth is channeled into sectors that create jobs, such as agriculture, manufacturing, and services. They may also have to redistribute income and strengthen social safety nets to protect better those at the bottom of the ladder. Matching skills to job opportunities will be crucial. Some 70% of Africa’s population is under 30, and the continent is home to half the world’s primary-school-age children who have been deprived of the opportunity to study. Offering Africa’s children basic reading, writing, and technology skills, as well as vocational, technical, and entrepreneurial training, must be a top priority. Weak health-care systems must also be strengthened in order to tackle the endemic diseases that sap productivity, such as malaria, as well as improving preparedness for outbreaks of deadly epidemics. The stakes are high. The World Bank estimates the Ebola outbreak shrank the economies of Sierra Leone, Guinea, and Liberia by 16%. As the world economy sputters, African countries will have to develop trade with one another. In 2013, African goods and services accounted for just 16% of trade within the continent, and just over 3% of world trade. One problem is that most African countries produce the same type of commodities and trade them with very little value-added. Policymakers must encourage greater specialization; differentiated goods and services will add value and volume to trade. Logistics pose another obstacle to intra-African trade. Policymakers must make it easier to move goods across borders, by improving connectivity between countries and reducing bureaucratic hurdles and administrative costs. For example, road transport tariffs across Africa are estimated at $0.05-$0.13 per ton-kilometer, compared to the average of $0.01-$0.05 for all developing countries. The Rift Valley Railway project, which will eventually link Mombasa on the Kenyan coast to Kampala in Uganda, is a good example of the benefits that investments in transportation could provide. The African Development Bank estimates that it will double the volume of trade between the two countries, while reducing marginal costs by 30%. As they make these investments, policymakers must not forget that much of Africa’s recent growth can be credited to good macroeconomic policies and sound economic management. Extending the continent’s rise will require strengthening the continent’s economic fundamentals. This means ensuring that prices in the economy are correct, starting with the exchange rate. Some countries may need temporary controls to curb damaging capital outflows, but policymakers should aim for a market-based exchange rate and a solid plan for governing inflation, debt, foreign-exchange reserves, current accounts, and fiscal balances. Africa’s potential can hardly be overstated. The continent is well placed to build diversified economies based on low-carbon, sustainable infrastructure. But policymakers cannot simply assume that Africa’s rise will continue. They must take the right steps to ensure that it does.
Pages
Tuesday, 15 March 2016
How policymakers can put Africa back on upward trajectory, by Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala
by mervyn | 
in NEWS
at 04:30:00
- Photo Of Shekau Walking Freely In Abuja Cause Internet Stir
- $700 Million Raw Cash Found In Petroleum Minister’s Home
- BAD BOY! See What John Dumelo Is Doing With Yvonne Nelson On Set (Photos)
- 25 Diseases And Medical Conditions That Can Be Cured By Simply Having Sex
- Texas soldier beat toddler to death for soiling diaper: police
- Buhari Shed Tears As 90-Yr-Old Woman Waits 9Hrs For Him.
- 9 Year Old Girl, Nicole Officially Donates Her Lunch Money to Buhar. (N5,785)
- WAEC RESULT 2015/2016 | Released
- Train kills man (cuts him into pieces) in Oshodi
- Angry Naijapal Exposes Ebonyi State Lawmaker, Maria Ude Nwachi As A Porn Actress In The US
Popular Posts
Blog Archive
-
▼
2016
-
▼
March
- ABDUCTED SCHOOL GIRLS: Suspect asked us for forgiv...
- ‘Water scarcity to last for next 11 months in Niger’
- USAID spends $240m on IDPs in North-East
- RIVERS RE-RUN: Nobody can accuse Police of complic...
- Alleged N1trn fraud: Court stops Senate, IGP from ...
- FG to establish container weigh-stations to beat I...
- How hot peppersoup caused panic over Iwobi
- NASS slashes, passes N6.06trn 2016 budget
- Umahi laments death of 9 in auto crash
- Constitution restructuring’ll revive Nigeria’s eco...
- FOREX crisis: Food, beverage sector to sack 3m wor...
- Presidency: No vacancy in 2019 — APC
- NNPC didn’t remit N3.2tn to FG in 2014 –Auditor Ge...
- Cultists behead students, use heads as goalposts
- Tuns Farms: Court of Appeal strikes out Skye Bank’...
- I was scared meeting Terry, Drogba, Shevchenko — M...
- PSquare: Tearful Paul reports brothers to late par...
- At Ibadan Poly, students live in bushes of fear
- EPILEPTIC POWER SUPPLY: FG gives marching orders t...
- Tompolo seeks change of Judge in N45.9bn fraud case
- ITF/CAT: Osewa beats top seed
- Kaduna pupils desert schools after eating free meals
- Buhari gets Equatorial Guinea’s highest national h...
- FG to establish technology development bank
- Dollar scarcity: Manufacturers turn to local raw m...
- Senate accuses NDDC of conniving with contractor t...
- How policymakers can put Africa back on upward tra...
- North won’t tolerate any extremist group again- Go...
- EFCC arraigns Oronsaye for N190m fraud
- Our Soyinka has gone wrong again
- Is this Military training? Nigerian Airforce offic...
- Let's be fair on the MD of Lekki Homes- AY the com...
- Adam Johnson holds all night party ten days before...
- Mamador Cook & Cruise Promo Produces 3 Car Owners ...
- Desist from criticizing President Buhari's foreign...
- Photos: Fashola inspects Thermal Power Station Oji...
- Mariah Carey's brother talks about her again, call...
- Photos: Nigeria Police Force reinstates officer wh...
- Photos: Buhari departs for Equatorial Guinea
- Photos from singer Yemi Alade's birthday party in ...
- Ocholi's driver: FRSC insist fake driver's licence...
- Photo: Vice President Yemi Osinbajo prays with sur...
- Malia Obama gives sister Sasha thumbs up for getti...
- Photos: Olu of Warri, Prince Godfrey Ikenwoli pays...
- Ogun 2019: Gov Amosun, Sen Yayi lock horns
- Photos of the beheaded Abia State University students
- Two Abia State University students beheaded (very ...
- Lai Mohammed denies saying FG has lost control of ...
- Gov. Wike appoints Goodluck Jonathan's lookalike c...
- Photos: Omotola Jalade-Ekeinde back home after she...
- Chris Brown's former friend accuses him of kidnapp...
- Amazing!!! see Flavour, Kcee, Harry song dance to ...
- New music: Merit - Jaiye
- Revoke your anti-preaching bill or die- Pastor Sul...
- Ibe Kachikwu apologizes to Nigerians over lingerin...
- Photos: Aisha Buhari hosts Nigerian women and wive...
- Kourtney Kardashian shares photo of herself in a t...
- See these kids rocking their Mercedes Benz sports ...
- Ibinabo Fiberesima's son writes emotional open let...
- Lol. Old people Tshirts
- Horror in Cameroon as dead woman's sister is force...
- Photo: These white students are students of Yoruba...
- Ne-Yo shares photo of himself cradling his heavily...
- Photos: One dead in a 4-vehicle crash in Abuja (ph...
- Photos of Ooni of Ife with his new wife at their t...
- Yummy Mums: Tiwa Savage and South African DJ Zinhl...
- Read Femi Adesina's powerful piece on the death of...
- Traders at Mile 12 market relocate to Lagos/Ibadan...
- Photos of the day!
- Solidstar post details of DNA test to prove he is ...
- We'll never cover up Corruption- Saraki
- FG to stabilise price of rice by April
- What Is Your Take On The Recent Fuel Scarcity In N...
- NDLEA Discover Methamphetamine Lab In Asaba, Delta...
- Video Vixen, Khloepatra Clapbacks At Internet Trol...
-
▼
March
Popular Posts
-
The picture you see above of a man taking a walk with security personnel behind him in Abuja has gone viral.
-
The type of stealing and corruption going on in the Federal Government of Nigeria is mind boggling. Information available to our correspond...
-
Actress Yvonne Nelson and actor John Dumelo was sighted on set doing these. I know John Dumelo will so much like that part......BAD BO...
-
Sex often leads to deadly diseases and subsequent death if done wrongly, however, when a faithful couple e...
-
By Lisa Maria Garza DALLAS (Reuters) - A Fort Bliss, Texas, soldier beat his 2-year-old daughter to death after he became upset that she s...
-
Meet this 90-year-old woman named Hajia Fadimatu Mai Talle Tara who reportedly waited 9 hours for the presidential candidate of the All P...
-
A Nine year old girl, Nicole Eniiyi Benson, has publicly read the letter she wrote to the All Progressive Congress (APC) on the sum of abo...
-
Some eyewitnesses said the man threw himself in front of the train, some said he was just walking across the railway track with his friends...
-
According to Naijapal named Emeka John Onyema who sent this to us. Maria Ude Nwachi aka Madam Whacky Sex Ring. Quote A prostitute is a...
Proudly Powered by Blogger.
0 comments: