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Africa|Botswana|Energy|Road|Roads|SECURITY|Sustainable|Infrastructure
Africa|Botswana|Energy|Road|Roads|SECURITY|Sustainable|Infrastructure
africa|botswana|energy|road|roads|security|sustainable|infrastructure

African governance flatlining

3rd February 2023

By: Martin Zhuwakinyu

Creamer Media Senior Deputy Editor

     

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Sudanese philanthropist Mo Ibrahim is someone all of us should be proud of; among other things, he uses part of his vast wealth, made from investments in telecommunications, to incentivise African heads of State to uphold good governance standards through his namesake foundation’s Leadership Prize. The foundation also tracks African countries’ progress on various governance metrics, and the latest report, for the period 2012 to 2021, makes a few worrying findings.

One of the key takeaways from the report, dubbed the Ibrahim Index of African Governance (IIAG) 2022 and released late last month, is that overall governance on the continent, which was on an upward trend from 2012 to 2019, has flatlined during the past three years.

The stagnation is largely driven by a deterioration in the Security and Rule of Law, as well as Participation, Rights and Inclusion, categories of the index, owing to an uptick in armed conflict, violence against civilians and what the report’s authors term a “democratic backsliding across growing parts of the continent”. While these worrying trends had been evident before the outbreak of Covid-19, they were exacerbated by the restrictive measures and emergency provisions that governments introduced to tackle the pandemic. The upshot was a shrinking of the civil society space, a clampdown on dissent and avoidance of democratic scrutiny.

However, African countries’ performance with respect to the IIAG’s other two categories – Human Development and Foundations for Economic Opportunity – is a cause for optimism, having improved over the ten-year period. This is particularly so for human development, with more than 90% of Africans now living in a country where progress has been made since 2012. With respect to foundations for economic opportunity, the report notes that this is the only category to have continued to make progress since 2019, despite the seismic shocks caused by the Covid-19 pandemic.

This is mostly due to improvements in infrastructure, particularly digital infrastructure, with citizens in every country on the continent now having greater access to the Internet and computers than in 2012. Moreover, all countries except South Sudan recorded an increase in mobile connectivity and communications. There were also notable improvements in energy access.

However, there are infrastructure subsectors that either stagnated or retrogressed from the beginning of 2012 to the end of 2021. The road sector is a case in point, with both the sizes of the road networks and the percentage of paved roads per capita having declined in most countries. Shipping facilities have also deteriorated and, as the report points out, if the Africa Continental Free Trade Area is to succeed in fostering intra-continental trade, this is one area where attention is needed as a matter of urgency.

The highest-ranked country in terms of overall governance is Mauritius, followed by Seychelles, Tunisia, Carbo Verde and Botswana. South Africa is sixth, while South Sudan is the lowest ranked, with Somalia second from last.

However, South Africa slips further down the packing order when it comes to the individual categories of the IIAG. It is ranked fifth with respect to foundations for economic opportunity, ninth in the human development stakes, fourth when it comes to participation, rights and inclusion, and sixth regarding security and the rule of law.

Based on the data in the IIAG 2022, Ibrahim calls on African leaders to quickly address the flatlining in governance over the past three years, lest the continent fails to reach the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals or the African Union’s Agenda 2063.

He also highlights the continent’s vulnerability to the impact of climate change, Covid-19 and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. His parting shot: “More than ever, commitment to strengthen governance must be renewed.”

Edited by Martin Zhuwakinyu
Creamer Media Senior Deputy Editor

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