Africa needs bold economic reforms – says seventh African Economic Conference

5 November 2012

The seventh African Economic Conference ended on the 2nd November, 2012 in Kigali, Rwanda, after prominent speakers including economic policy experts called for a change in the shape and direction of economic development policies in Africa.

 

According to APO, participants at the closing session of the seventh African Economic Conference urged African leaders to put in place bold economic reforms, aimed at sustaining growth and boosting human development.

The four-day conference highlighted the need for policy-makers to create diversified economies – capable of generating employment, implementing better social policies and inclusive growth.

Participants agreed that good governance and fair competition will help Africa meet its sustainable development agenda.

Carefully calibrated government support can help fulfill Africa’s economic potential, reducing political risks and bolstering financial accountability to open new markets, says APO.

Africa has become the world’s second-fastest growing region. Hosting the AEC for the first time, Rwandan President Paul Kagame said that in this era of economic uncertainty, the world has high expectations for the African continent.

According to the African Economic Outlook 2012, economic growth across the African continent is expected to rebound from 3.4% in 2011 and accelerate to 4.5% in 2012 and 4.8% in 2013.

“Some countries have even done better than these statistics depict. And because some countries from other continents show signs of economic stagnation, commentators have been inclined to think that this is Africa’s time,” said Kagame.

However the continent’s poverty rates have remained stubbornly high, and progress on health, education and job creation have been too slow to accommodate its fast-growing population.

These challenges are likely to become more difficult to tackle in the current global economic environment.

“Rich countries are very much concentrated on their own immediate problems to fix,” said Donald Kaberuka, President of the African Development Bank. “As we can see from the trade and climate negotiations, there is limited appetite for the multilateral solutions, so we need to trade our way out of poverty and deal with the impact of climate change.”

During the closing press conference, Mthuli Ncube, Chief Economist and Vice President of the African Development Bank, said that “Africa can have a brighter future, and has the potential to become the next emerging market by the end of this decade if political, social protection, quality education, private sector and regional integration are implemented.”

Ncube urged each and every one “to see inclusive growth in action in Africa.”

He also affirmed that the continent’s long-term growth prospects are strong, propelled by both external trends in the global economy and internal changes in the continent’s societies and economies.

He also said investment in infrastructure will promote regional integration and trade, creating an environment that is more conducive to economic growth, the development of markets and paving the way for acceleration in human development.

“Deliberate policy measures and targeted investments are needed to make growth not just fast, but also inclusive and sustainable,” said UNDP Administrator Helen Clark, who opened the conference along with Kaberuka on October 30.

She added that “the rising tide is capable of lifting every boat.”

One of the running threads of the conference was how to use natural resources to create economic benefits for ordinary citizens.

Speakers at the conference said African countries can raise money by negotiating international contracts from a position of strength, using proceeds from land and mineral deals to invest in rural infrastructure, diversify the economy and boost human capital. 

“If politically the leadership is right, there is no doubt that leadership will focus on inclusion in almost everything it does,” said the former President of Nigeria, Olusegun Obasanjo.

The 2012 AEC conference was also marked by an award for the best paper of the conference submitted by an African under the age of 40. Forty-three papers were shortlisted out of 500 submissions.

Dick Nuwamanya Kamuganga’s paper, titled, “Does Intra-Africa Regional Trade Cooperation Enhance Export Survival?” met the selection criteria set out by the African Economic Research Consortium, in terms of methodology and policy relevance.

Organized each year by the Economic Commission for Africa (ECA), the African Development Bank (AfDB) and the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), the conference brought together some 500 participants under the theme “Inclusive and Sustainable Development in an Age of Economic Uncertainty”.

Earlier in the week, at the opening of the conference,  Rwandese leader – President Paul Kagame  refer to the conference as an opportunity for leading African economists to look beyond purely economic factors for solutions to Africa’s developmental problems.

He said that analysts might point to issues of governance and lack of sufficient transformational leaders, but “the real problem is that our economists must be ready to come up with new ideas for economic models that meet the needs of African people”.

President Kagame made a joke of Africa’s persistent economic woes despite the huge number of economist that the continent counts, saying “I think African economist have become politicians”.

“To be fair, if the economic progress of our countries were to depend only on sound economic planning, I think we would have made tremendous progress in Africa”, he said.

Frequently speaking off prepared notes, he made a hardly veiled attempt to address the issue of recent sanctions imposed by some countries on Rwanda for its perceived role in the political instability that has bedevilled the Democratic Republic of Congo for over a decade.

He shed light on Rwanda’s progress and explained those achievements in the areas of women empowerment, information, communication and technology, food sufficiency and good governance as the fruit of deliberate planning,  careful implementation and shared ownership of all programmes by the people of Rwanda.

President of the African Development Bank – Dr. Kaberuka, argued that inclusive growth is both possible and indeed, a good investment for Africa, but insisted on the need for its leaders to believe in the future of the continent.

He said that for real development to occur, Africa must chart its course. The AfDB boss revealed that Africa, as a continent actually has more money than India, but questioned why it continues to seek assistance from the Asian country.

 

 

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