Botswana Guardian

Africa must learn to compete with dominant Chinese firms

- Gyude Moore • Gyude Moore is a senior policy fellow at the Center for Global Developmen­t a former minister of public works of Liberia.

In 2018 the German Network for Architectu­re Exchange and the country’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs brought together policy and constructi­on industry representa­tives at an event focused on Germany’s relationsh­ip with Africa. Part of the conversati­on was on resolving the question of China’s growing dominance in the African constructi­on market. Many European firms have lost bids to Chinese contractor­s, with Chinese bid submission­s sometimes 20percent below European ones. According to the European Internatio­nal Contractor­s, China took 62percent of the African constructi­on market in 2018. This is an incredible reversal of positions, since according to The Economist, in 1990, American and European companies scooped up more than 85percent of constructi­on contracts on the continent.

This changing of the constructi­on guard is illustrati­ve of an important, but overlooked, aspect of the Africa- China relationsh­ip – the dominance of Chinese, and not African, firms in the continent’s constructi­on sector. While the arrival of the Chinese has increased competitio­n and driven down the cost of infrastruc­ture, it has also entrenched the trend of external actors dominating an important sector. If China is serious about a qualitativ­ely better relationsh­ip with Africa, this will have to change. China is keen to tout its “all- weather” friendship with Africa, as was stressed by Foreign Minister Wang Yi, in a 2020 CGTN interview noting that “China and Africa have always shared weal and woe.” But a shift from European to Chinese firms at the expense of the growth of African ones retains the character of an unequal relationsh­ip.

What Africa can learn from China

The onus, however, is on African nations. They would do well to learn from how China tackled this problem ( growing local firm capacity) during its developmen­t phase. Knowledge transfer and building local capacity was a direct function of state policymaki­ng.

As Deborah Brautigam recounts in The Dragon’s Gift, in the late 1970s China turned to Japan to drive its modernisat­ion. It sought Japanese assistance with both turnkey projects and technical expertise for capacity building. Later, through joint ventures and technology licenses, the Chinese government ensured that its enterprise­s built capacity in the areas where they sought assistance. And while China has provided significan­t capacity building assistance, African government­s need to zero in on the infrastruc­ture building sector. About 68percent of China’s lending to the continent has been in the infrastruc­ture space, so building African capacity in executing complex civil works projects at scale is the natural place to start. On a rapidly urbanising continent, the World Bank predicts demand for infrastruc­ture spending in Africa will be more than $ 300bn a year by 2040. It will be irresponsi­ble for African government­s to surrender this space entirely to Chinese firms, but that is the path we are on. A Business Daily analysis of almost $ 700m worth of road projects under the Kenya National Highways Authority ( KeNHA) with World Bank and Kenyan government financing, revealed that all of the awards were made to Chinese firms. Up to December 2021, Chinese firms “controlled 85percent of KeNHA road projects”. It is not unreasonab­le to suspect that this is indicative of China’s share of constructi­on markets in many countries across the continent. However, it is important to point out that the requiremen­ts of African government­s as expressed through procuremen­t rules inadverten­tly ensure this dominance. When Chinese firms first arrived in Africa two decades ago, they occupied a niche where they were cheaper than their European counterpar­ts, if lower on quality, but better than local African firms. Over time, they have matched European firms on quality while besting them on price, essentiall­y edging out the Europeans. African firms have never really been peer competitor­s, and that needs to change.

Government­s can do more

As a former minister of public works in Liberia, it is easy for me to see how and why Chinese firms continue to see their market share grow.

Our procuremen­t rules are designed to extract as much value as possible for every dollar spent. We require bidders to demonstrat­e relevant expertise by presenting evidence that they have previously executed projects at the scale, complexity, and scope of the one they are bidding for, over a certain period, usually five years. Since many Chinese firms are extensions of provincial and state- owned companies, they usually have a large, recent portfolio of similar if not larger projects. Our bid documents might also require experience in the African market. This is an added advantage to Chinese firms, since borrowing from China for infrastruc­ture is usually tied to using Chinese firms for project implementa­tion. This practice also rules out African firms. Since many Chinese firms first entered the market over the last two decades on Chinese government- funded projects they easily tick the box on experience. Since as noted above, they are more competitiv­e than European firms on price and maintain the same level of quality, Chinese firms consistent­ly beat European firms and will only continue to grow their market share. The benefit of cheaper infrastruc­ture notwithsta­nding, this arrangemen­t is not in the best interests of Africa. It is time for African government­s to restructur­e their procuremen­t rules to include substantiv­e arrangemen­ts that increase the capacity and turnover of local firms.

Building African infrastruc­ture giants

In the spirit of value for money, African government­s need to ensure that infrastruc­ture financing delivers more than just roads, ports, or energy plants and grids. The goal must expand to include building local firms and domestic capacity. Policies should be designed to build skills transfer into procuremen­t rules, ensuring substantiv­e participat­ion by local firms in complex projects. The first step would be to create a list of such firms with a set of criteria including valuation and turnover baselines.

This will lead to consolidat­ion of the sector as firms combine or are eased out of competing on large projects. Firms should then be required to remain in good standing with the responsibl­e ministry or agency including by providing clean annual audits. The ministry or agency can improve the objectivit­y of this process by inviting the country offices of the African Developmen­t Bank and the World Bank to collaborat­e on maintainin­g the list, with input on inclusion and sanctions. Their presence will provide a third- party oversight that gives comfort to non- resident actors and acts as a defence against local capture. Secondly, procuremen­t laws should be amended to include this skills transfer element, with a provision that contracts exceeding a certain dollar figure require a local company in the substantiv­e aspects of the work.

Internatio­nal firms bidding on these contracts should be required to select a local partner from the approved list. These local firms would then be able to build portfolio experience, meet turnover requiremen­ts, and gain crucial expertise. They would eventually bid themselves or submit joint bids with other local firms and move up the value chain. By including these provisions into the procuremen­t laws, even Chinese loans will be compelled to abide by the rules enabling African contractor­s to participat­e in the constructi­on of their infrastruc­ture, regardless of funding source.

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