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FDI in Africa set to reach $73.5bn this year – AfDB

FDI in Africa set to reach $73.5bn this year – AfDB

Photo by Reuters

5th June 2015

By: Megan van Wyngaardt

Creamer Media Contributing Editor Online

  

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With Africa’s population set to triple by 2050, modernising local economies will be vital to making the continent more competitive and to increasing people’s living standards, the African Economic Outlook 2015 report highlights.

Compiled by the African Development Bank (AfDB), the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development’s (OECD’s) Development Centre and the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), the report also states that African economies will grow by 4.5% this year, and possibly by 5% in 2016.

Surpassing most regions, despite the global financial crisis, the continent’s economic growth is in line with Asia’s current growth rates. However, lower oil and commodity prices, uncertain global conditions, the consequences of the Ebola outbreak in West Africa and domestic political uncertainties could delay an expected return to pre-2008 growth levels.

“African countries have shown considerable resilience in the face of global economic adversity. For future growth to be sustainable and transformative, benefits [need to be] shared more equitably among the population and governments [need to] continue to pursue policies that promote economic stability,” AfDB VP and chief economist Steve Kayizzi-Mugerwa says.

Foreign direct investment (FDI) is expected to reach $73.5-billion this year, underpinned by increasing greenfield investment from China – Africa’s second-largest trade partner. The report also highlights an increase in intra-African and outward FDI flows.

South African companies are the leading investors on the continent.

Further, human development levels in Africa have increased since 2000, with 17 of 52 countries reaching middle or high levels of development. However, the region’s poverty rates remain stubbornly high, while progress in health, education and income is uneven.

Inequalities Huge inequalities persist between and within countries, and between women and men. In many areas, low productivity and investment, the absence of infrastructure and rural-urban networks and too few jobs outside the agricultural sector are holding back economic and development progress.

The continent’s demographic boom is said to be exacerbating these challenges. By 2050, both cities and rural communities in Africa will see their population grow drastically, with the countryside gaining an estimated 400-million people.

For instance, the report states that, over the next 15 years, 370-million youth will enter sub-Saharan Africa’s labour markets, making it necessary to create many more jobs and opportunities for savings and investment.

In addition, that population growth, combined with climate change, will exert increasing pressure on natural resources, such as food, water and land.

The report argues that past efforts to promote regional development through territorial management, infrastructure development and decentralisation have been scattered and have been limited impact.

As a result, the potential of Africa’s regions, which include river basins, border areas and key rural-urban corridors, remains unfulfilled.

“African economies could benefit from mobilising the wide and extraordinary untapped potential of their diverse regions. “Putting people and places at the centre of policymaking may improve Africa’s competitiveness and the wellbeing of Africans,” OECD Development Centre director Mario Pezzini notes.

Transforming economies will require exploring more productive sectors, through the promotion of manufacturing, the develoment of services, the creation of strategies for green growth or the modernisation of the agriculture sector.

In addition, tackling spatial inequalities will require implementing policies that cut across sectors. These include diversifying rural economies and linking them with cities through the promotion of value chains and trade corridors, unlocking domestic financing, developing transport and communication infrastructure and investing in basic social services.

“Inclusive and sustainable growth is a fundamental aspect of Africa’s post-2015 devel- opment agenda for economic and social transformation.

Edited by Chanel de Bruyn
Creamer Media Online Managing Editor

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