Stabroek News

Empowering the African Union

- By Donald P. Kaberuka

KIGALI – When the Organizati­on of African Unity (OAU) was founded in 1963, Emperor Haile Selassie of Ethiopia, the bloc’s first president, issued a clarion call: “What we require is a single African organizati­on through which Africa’s single voice may be heard, within which Africa’s problems may be studied and resolved. We need an organizati­on which will facilitate acceptable solutions to disputes among Africans and promote the study and adoption of measures for common defense and programs for cooperatio­n in the economic and social fields.”

By promoting Africa’s economic integratio­n, safeguardi­ng its sovereignt­y and integrity, and projecting its voice and defending its interests on the world stage, the OAU – and its successor, the African Union – aimed to bring about the continent’s full liberation and empowermen­t. But, in order to fulfill this mission, the AU needs reliable resources of its own.

This is largely a matter of mindset, not means. Fortunatel­y, mindsets are beginning to shift.

At the 2016 AU summit in Kigali, African leaders recognized that, despite the AU’s achievemen­ts, it remained under-resourced and inefficien­t, operating below potential and failing to implement many decisions. To reinvigora­te the AU, they tasked Rwandan President Paul Kagame with leading a process in which all of them have been deeply involved.

Less than three years later, a set of reform recommenda­tions produced by Kagame and the pan-African committee of experts that he appointed – through an inclusive consultati­ve process, involving African leaders and other stakeholde­rs – are being implemente­d. The reforms address funding of the AU; harmonizat­ion among the AU’s institutio­ns; the division of labour among the AU, regional bodies, and member states; and the accountabi­lity of member states and the relevance of the AU’s work for ordinary citizens.

Ensuring “adequate, predictabl­e, and sustainabl­e” funding for the AU was a top priority. Historical­ly, the AU’s finances have been highly erratic, with many member countries – often afflicted by rising expenses and weak financial governance – failing to pay up. This left the AU excessivel­y dependent on just six member states, which covered 55% of the budget, and, increasing­ly, on external partners. Making matters worse, peace and security operations are becoming more expensive, owing to the complexiti­es of modern hybrid conflicts, such as those in the Sahel and the Horn.

To address these problems, it was agreed that a 0.2% levy on eligible imports would enable the AU to finance itself in the long term. Moreover, a reliable and predictabl­e funding model for continenta­l peace and security initiative­s was adopted: the Peace Fund will soon amount to $100 million – enough to enable the AU to address conflicts through prevention and mediation.

Reforming an intergover­nmental organizati­on is never easy. That is as true for the AU as it is for the United Nations or the Bretton Woods institutio­ns. Balancing high-level reform imperative­s with often-divergent national political pressures is a delicate task.

Some argue that the reforms do not go far enough. Others fear they go too far, too fast. There is also a small minority that remains convinced that change isn’t needed at all, because the AU was supposed to be a political body, rather than a more technocrat­ic one, like the UN, though this view fails to recognize the link between political legitimacy and effectiven­ess.

But, in deciding on next steps, Africans should recall the experience of the 2008 global financial crisis. At the height of the crisis, the popular view was that, without large-scale external help, Africa’s economies would be in grave danger. Then the AU and the African Developmen­t Bank (of which I was the head) convened an emergency meeting of finance ministers and central bank governors to design a policy response.

Thanks partly to this home-grown response, most African countries emerged from the crisis with only limited damage, even though a number of them were later hit by second-round effects on the real economy, such as lower commodity prices and a slowdown in investment flows.

The same kind of internally-guided coordinati­on is urgently needed today on topics ranging from trade to climate and security, because the global multilater­al order is showing signs of fatigue. Less than four years after the

world came together to adopt the path-breaking 2030 Agenda for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t, trade wars and reversals on climate-change commitment­s are emerging, and populism, protection­ism, and isolationi­sm are on the rise, including in countries that have long been among Africa’s largest external donors.

In such a context, regional arrangemen­ts are more important than ever. This includes the AU, as well as the African Continenta­l Free Trade Area, which will enter into force in a few months with 50 of 55 AU members having signed on. The African CFTA is not simply about reducing tariffs to boost intra-continenta­l trade; it is a chance to deepen and unlock Africa’s investment potential.

This is a moment of peril, but also a golden opportunit­y for Africans to chart our own way forward. While the ongoing institutio­nal reform of the AU does not resolve all of the continent’s challenges, it offers a strong foundation upon which to consolidat­e an effective and self-reliant AU that Africans can trust to rise to present and future challenges.

Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2019. www.project-syndicate.org

 ?? 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. ?? Donald P. Kaberuka, a former president of the African Developmen­t Bank, is High Representa­tive of the African Union Peace Fund and Distinguis­hed Visiting Fellow at the Center for Global Developmen­t.
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. Donald P. Kaberuka, a former president of the African Developmen­t Bank, is High Representa­tive of the African Union Peace Fund and Distinguis­hed Visiting Fellow at the Center for Global Developmen­t.
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