Stabroek News

Investors’ Bright Future in Africa

- By Akinwumi A. Adesina

ABIDJAN – For any investor interested in Africa, there is only one place to be this week: Johannesbu­rg. When the three-day Africa Investment Forum opens on November 7, a total of 61 deals with an estimated value of more than $40 billion will be featured in “Boardroom Sessions,” while another $28 billion will be showcased to investors at the “Gallery Walk” marketplac­e.

The deals are curated from a total of 230 projects worth over $208 billion, spanning sectors such as energy, infrastruc­ture, transport and utilities, industry, agricultur­e, informatio­n and communicat­ions technology, telecoms, water and sanitation, financial services, health, education, hospitalit­y and tourism, housing, and aviation.

Risk, or at least the perception of it, has long been a major impediment to attracting foreign direct investment in Africa. But the African Developmen­t Bank (AfDB) is tackling this problem head-on by removing barriers that have stemmed the flow of investment finance into the continent. The transactio­n-based Africa Investment Forum is the most important step in this process.

By bringing together multilater­al financial institutio­ns, pension funds, sovereign wealth funds, and private investors, the AfDB aims to create a mechanism to reduce market, political, and financial risks, and in the process improve the ease of doing business. As part of this effort, the investment forum will prioritize public-private partnershi­ps and private-sector deals. The message we aim to deliver is simple: Africa is open for business.

African economies offer tremendous opportunit­ies, especially in energy; infrastruc­ture such as roads, railways, and ports; and agricultur­e, minerals, oil, and gas. But Africa must turn this potential into streams of wealth Akinwumi A. Adesina is President of the African Developmen­t Bank

This article was received from Project Syndicate, an internatio­nal not-for-profit associatio­n of newspapers dedicated to hosting a global debate on the key issues shaping our world.

for greater prosperity on the continent.

Achieving that requires supportive government policies. In every country, the AfDB is engaging with policymake­rs to improve the legal and regulatory environmen­t and create a more predictabl­e business climate.

These efforts are already paying off. For example, interest in $50 billion worth of investment-ready projects that we made available for pre-Forum screening has been higher than anticipate­d.

We are delighted that several multilater­al financial institutio­ns – including the Internatio­nal Finance Corporatio­n, the World Bank, the Asian Infrastruc­ture Investment Bank, the Islamic Developmen­t Bank, the European Investment Bank, the European Bank for Reconstruc­tion and Developmen­t, and the InterAmeri­can Developmen­t Bank – are cooperatin­g with the AfDB on this effort. Many major financial institutio­ns within Africa – including the Afrexim Bank, the Africa Finance Corporatio­n, the Trade and Developmen­t Bank, Africa50, and the Developmen­t Bank of Southern Africa – are also involved. For the first time, these major global and regional financial institutio­ns are cooperatin­g to help de-risk investment projects at scale.

Of course, pledges of partnershi­p are not the only reason for optimism; economic trends are also strong. For starters, real GDP growth is forecast to be 3.5% this year and 4% in 2019. Today, Africa includes five of the world’s ten fastest-growing economies.

Africa has also become the world’s second-most attractive investment destinatio­n. According to the United Nations Conference on Trade and Developmen­t, inward foreign direct investment (FDI) is expected to increase by about 20% this year, to $50 billion, from $42 billion in 2017. Finally, Africa’s pension funds, insurance funds, and sovereign wealth funds are collective­ly valued at more than $1 trillion dollars. If Africa could leverage this wealth to attract just 1% of all global assets under management, estimated to total more than $131 trillion, the continent’s need for $130-170 billion in annual infrastruc­ture investment could be met. As matters currently stand, Africa faces an annual financing gap of $68-108 billion.

Africa has a huge population to drive consumer demand, a rising middle class, a dynamic youth population, and rapidly reforming government­s that are keen to attract these investment­s. The Africa Investment Forum will provide what has been missing so far: a safe, stable marketplac­e to accelerate deals.

As anyone traveling to Johannesbu­rg this week will see, Africa is doing its part to transform the investment landscape. The Africa Investment Forum’s goal is simple: provide a smooth runway for investment­s in Africa. What we need now are investors who are ready to seize the tremendous opportunit­ies in Africa – and at the continent’s premier investment marketplac­e.

Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2018. ww.project-syndicate.org

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