Botswana Guardian

Africa’s recovery relies on manufactur­ed exports – former SA trade minister

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The pandemic’s disruption of global supply chains and the race for a vaccine, has added new urgency to the need for African economies to become more productive, South Africa’s former trade and industry minister Rob Davies says. The African Continenta­l Free Trade Agreement ( AfCFTA) is a golden opportunit­y for economies on the continent to transform their supply chains and reverse the economic degenerati­on caused by the pandemic.

he African Continenta­l Free Trade Agreement ( AfCFTA) is a golden opportunit­y for economies on the continent to transform their supply chains and reverse the economic degenerati­on caused by the pandemic.

This was the message of the Adebayo Adedeji Memorial Lecture held on the side- lines of a meeting of African finance ministers in Ethiopia on Monday. Hailed as the “prophet of regional integratio­n,” Adedeji’s legacy holds important lessons for the continent’s industrial revolution and re- emergence from the ashes of Covid- 19, says Davies. A pipe- smoking Nigerian economist and public servant, Adedji diagnosed the continent’s key vulnerabil­ity as its underdevel­opment, springing from a weak productive base that relies on subsistenc­e and producing raw exported goods.

“Africa has to break the apron strings of structural and relational dependence on producing a limited number of cheap primary commoditie­s for export,” said Davies, quoting Adedji’s landmark treatise, the African Alternativ­e Framework to Structural Adjustment Programmes for socio- economic recovery and transforma­tion ( AAF SAP) written in 1990. become rich African nations need to diversify their economies by replicatin­g East Asia’s aggressive focus on manufactur­ed exports. Poor countries have stayed poor because they have remained trapped in their colonially defined role as producers and exporters of some primary products – agricultur­al or mineral – used in industrial production elsewhere. For instance, the mineral used in the manufactur­e of the iPhone 6, mined from the rich coltan seams of the Democratic Republic of Congo, is sold to Chinese manufactur­ers for a paltry $ 1.06, a sum just 0.16 percent of the cost of the finished product, which markets for $ 649 in the US. But

as the value of raw materials declines, the revenues to African countries are dwindling too, he warns, making unprocesse­d goods an unsustaina­ble means for generating future wealth. The global race for a vaccine highlights the perils of African countries being consumers and not producers of medical supplies. While the disruption of the global supply chain has fuelled calls for the production of essential goods, Davies said.

As the continent makes the slow rise to its feet from “the Great Lockdown Recession,” Davies urges African nations to look to Adedji’s policies for guidance. “African integratio­n must ‘… involve three mutually interdepen­dent dimensions: the integratio­n of the physical, social and institutio­nal infrastruc­ture; the integratio­n of production structures; and the integratio­n of the African markets”, he said quoting the manifesto’s text. The AfCFTA’s real prize will be creating regional value chains that produce higher value goods and services, that imprint their own ‘ Made in Africa’ brand. In order to unleash the potential of zero- tariff trade, African countries need to be given the same policy space as other early industrial­isers, and not pressured into accepting “unfair trade rules,” Davies added.

Sub- Saharan Africa’s collective GDP shrank by an average of 3.7 percent last year, with growth in 2021 projected to be 2 percent, according to World Bank estimates.

 ??  ?? Former trade minister, Rob Davies
Former trade minister, Rob Davies

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