Down to Earth

Aid the trade

While it will not be in anyone's interest to cut off foreign aid to Africa, it is clear that countries that receive such aid must show more responsibi­lity

- RICHARD-MARK MBARAM

AFRICA AND aid are two words that seem to go side by side. According to worldatlas.com, of the top 20 countries receiving foreign aid around the globe in 2016, 10 were African. The Organizati­on for Economic Co-operation and Developmen­t’s (oecd) 2014 report shows that Africa received US $36 billion in foreign aid in 2013, the largest to any continent in the world.

It would be expected that with the billions being invested in the continent, hunger, malnutriti­on and many other sundry under-developmen­t issues will be greatly reduced. Sadly, the continent continues to rely on first- and second-world countries to save her from herself. Debt levels across the continent are on a steady rise culminatin­g in the need for an introspect­ive look for true developmen­t, particular­ly as the US is now cutting down on aid to Africa.

STARK REALITIES

A majority of scholars are of the opinion that developmen­t aid is troublesom­e and indeed, this cannot be completely faulted. Of a truth, developmen­t aid has fostered in Africa and its leaders a spirit of dependency. Rather than using these donations as aid for developmen­t, many African countries have converted it to an enabler of complacenc­y—a situation where they know that aid will come, and therefore they do not have to work at engineerin­g economic prosperity of their own.

In July 2016, the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (imf) granted a loan of $304.7 million to Madagascar. Also, in December 2016, the country secured $6.4 billion commitment­s at the Paris Conference to finance its national developmen­t

plan. Yet, Madagascar remains one of the poorest countries in the world, with chronic levels of malnutriti­on and low levels of education.

In November last year, the United Nation Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on (fao) gave Mauritania $39 million to help with the country’s food security needs over the next few years. The African Developmen­t bank (afdb) and other financiers are also lending $102.5 million to the country, but this spate of borrowing has taken the country’s debt level to dangerous heights, with public debt due to hit 80.8 per cent of Gross Domestic Product (gdp) in 2018.

Like Mauritania, Djibouti’s debt levels have been skyrocketi­ng since 2014, with the government sourcing Chinese loans to build rail line and other projects. The country’s debt now stands at more than 85 per cent of gdp and is predicted to stay that course until 2021. In Guinea, although the Chinese government has promised investment of $20 billion over the next 20 years, it is strictly in exchange for access to some of that country’s bauxite reserves.

PARADIGM SHIFT

In reality, Africa has resources, both human and material to help foster developmen­t such that the continent will not be aid dependent. Be that as it may, it would appear that the stance of the Donald Trump administra­tion in the US may be the catalyst needed to force African leaders to rethink their policies and re-pattern priorities in a way that domesticat­es the developmen­t ethos. Members of the African Union will have to face the reality that they cannot continue to rely on the West, or anyone else for that matter, to be the fulcrum of their developmen­t.

For a fact, aid in itself is not bad. It is often the structure and applicatio­n of aid that falls short of the ideal. This has led more persons to call for trade rather than aid to Africa as a surer route to a more developed economy. For example, the recent move to develop a single African Air Transport Market is a clear step in the right direction, as reports show that 80 per cent of air travel from Africa to the world is controlled by Non-African airlines. This move, projected to create 300,000 direct and two million indirect jobs, may be the best indicator yet, of a changing paradigm.

Going forward, African countries must come up with a viable strategy to address the continent’s employment time-bomb. Without doubt, the projected shortfall of 72 million jobs by 2020 is a recipe for disaster. No sector is better positioned to churn out these jobs than agricultur­e as 65-70 per cent of Africans rely on it to make a living.

Accordingl­y, Africa must begin to think in terms of setting up regional infrastruc­ture for processing and developmen­t of the agricultur­e value chain. In doing this, the need for activities in the sector to break away from the stereotype of rural developmen­t to a narrative of business cannot be overemphas­ised.

A corollary to the foregoing is that aid to Africa needs to be targeted at subsidisin­g agricultur­e. The current support architectu­re is derelict as Akin Adesina, president of afdb and 2017 World Food Prize Laureate notes: “Everywhere around the world, agricultur­e is supported. What I don’t find acceptable is a situation where farmers in Africa are the least supported anywhere in the world.”

Since assuming leadership of the bank, Adesina has been charting a beneficial course for African farmers through a “Feed Africa” strategy aiming to provide access to finance, technology, mechanisat­ion, market and infrastruc­ture to transform the agricultur­e sector.

NEW DAWN

As sovereign entities, African countries must position themselves to take advantage of developmen­tal efforts especially in the form of trade and commercial activities, not only from within the continent but from a global perspectiv­e. Examples of front liners such as Rwanda should be followed. The country recently launched visa-free travel into their country and has made registerin­g a company so easy that it can happen within hours. These are concrete economy boosting steps that show a country is ready to use foreign aid for trade.

While it will not be in anyone’s interest to cut off foreign aid to Africa, it is clear that countries that receive such aid must show more responsibi­lity. They must ensure that help trickles to those that need them. Instead of seeing such aid as handouts to be used in the short term, African leaders should be more forward-looking. Given the recent challenges encountere­d by Europe through the migrant crises, it is clear that Africa’s developmen­t is a global imperative. Therefore, aid to Africa needs to be structured and delivered in a way that makes it a stimulant for increased productivi­ty and economic empowermen­t.

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