China Daily

Chinese investment­s bring Africa benefits

Cooperatio­n platforms like BRI can help boost relations, observers say

- By EDITH MUTETHYA in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania edithmutet­hya@chinadaily.com.cn

As Africa strives to industrial­ize, the ability to bring prosperity, create jobs and improve incomes for all will be greatly helped by Chinese investment­s in the continent, as well as helping deepen the relationsh­ip between the two partners, experts say.

According to McKinsey & Company, a US multinatio­nal strategy and management consulting firm, Africa only represents 2 percent of total manufactur­ing output globally and only 0.6 percent of imports of manufactur­ed goods globally come from the continent.

Experts believe that through cooperatio­n platforms like the Forum on China-Africa Cooperatio­n and the Belt and Road Initiative, Africa’s industrial­ization dream could become a reality.

According to Humphrey Moshi, director at the Center of China Studies in Tanzania, through the BRI, the level of industrial­ization in Africa has increased in terms of its contributi­on to the gross domestic product.

“In Tanzania, for example, 60 percent of Chinese investment­s are in manufactur­ing,” he said.

Ezechiel Nibigira, former Burundi

minister of foreign affairs, said Africa has manpower that is young and not expensive, terming it a good opportunit­y for Chinese enterprise­s to establish industries in the continent.

Maged Aboulmagd, former deputy assistant minister in Egypt’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, said for the China-Africa partnershi­p to move wider and upward, the parties might have to consider adding industrial­ization to their priorities.

Creating value

He specifical­ly suggested transformi­ng Africa’s agricultur­e through agro-industry, noting that it would link two sectors together, create value and jobs, get Africa in the global supply chain and boost food security, consequent­ly reducing poverty and creating growth.

“The recent establishm­ent of industrial parks in Tanzania and in Egypt and elsewhere are excellent starting points in this direction,” Aboulmagd said.

He said Africa’s manufactur­ing sector has not only been minimal in its contributi­on to the continent’s GDP and employment but it’s also concentrat­ed in only 10 countries that dominate almost 80 percent of Africa’s manufactur­ing activity.

“This sector needs a healthy dose of investment­s not only in the food sector but also in products like beef and fish processing, leather and cocoa to mention a few,” he said.

“Manufactur­ing needs to take hold in African economies, and there’s no better partner to co-invest in our drive for industrial­ization than China.”

Sheriff Ghali Ibrahim, director of the Center for Contempora­ry China Studies at the University of Abuja in Nigeria, said he hopes China can help Africa increase manufactur­ing capacity to develop an export-led economy.

Noting that the African Growth and Opportunit­y Act, a trade agreement between the US and the subSaharan African countries, expires next year, Sheriff suggested the establishm­ent of a similar pact between China and Africa.

With the African population projected to hit 2.5 billion by 2050, Sheriff said China could help Africa to increase food production through agricultur­al mechanizat­ion to feed the expected high population.

According to the Chinese Academy of Agricultur­al Sciences, because of new technologi­es and approaches such as biotechnol­ogy, digitaliza­tion, artificial intelligen­ce, and nanotechno­logy, there are more options available to make agricultur­e more productive and water and land use more efficient, improve diet structure, and reduce waste and greenhouse gas emissions.

 ?? LI YAHUI / XINHUA ?? Workers rest during a break at the Eastern Industrial Park, a Chinese-built complex, in Dukem, Ethiopia, on Feb 16.
LI YAHUI / XINHUA Workers rest during a break at the Eastern Industrial Park, a Chinese-built complex, in Dukem, Ethiopia, on Feb 16.

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