African Business

Mozambique looks to road project to boost growth

Mozambique’s economy has been buffeted not only by the Covid-19 pandemic but also cyclones and flooding. Gordon Feller reports on a project that seeks to restore and improve the country’s infrastruc­ture

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Despite sustained economic growth since 2005, rural poverty in Mozambique persists. Low agricultur­al productivi­ty, particular­ly in the northern and central provinces, is exacerbate­d by poor physical connectivi­ty, including limited access to agricultur­al extension services, credit markets, and market informatio­n.

Limited transport infrastruc­ture means that economic activity is effectivel­y segmented into three geographic­al regions – north, south, and central - creating conditions for regional price swings that are not smoothed by integrated trade.

A new initiative, the Integrated Feeder Roads Project (IFRDP), is being financed by the World Bank. It focuses on the rehabilita­tion and maintenanc­e of tertiary roads, with a large percentage of the investment­s targeting the constructi­on and repair of bridges and culverts to improve accessibil­ity, particular­ly during periods of heavy rain or flooding. The IFRDP will utilise $185m to rehabilita­te and upgrade existing roads in four key provinces: Sofala, Manica, Tete, and Zambezia.

Mozambique suffers from an exposure to extreme rainfall and flooding that may become even more frequent due to global climate change. Its geography and long coastline, coupled with changing land use patterns and the impact of climate change, mean that it is regularly affected by extreme weather events. Catastroph­ic flooding occurs almost annually during the rainy season and is largely influenced by the La Niña weather system and the Intertropi­cal Convergenc­e Zone. Climate change projection­s indicate that rainfall patterns may become less certain for the country as a whole and vary by region. Since 1960 the proportion of days with heavy rainfall events have increased by 2.6% per decade or an estimated 25 days per year in total.

In 2019, Cyclone Idai damaged or destroyed an estimated 240,000 houses while Cyclone Kenneth damaged or destroyed an additional 50,000. Cyclone Idai alone caused an estimated $115m damage to the private sector. Prior to those devastatin­g events, floods in 2015 affected 326,000 people, killed 140, and caused damage estimated at $371m in parts of Zambezia, Nampula, and Niassa. The road and rail networks have suffered extensive damage over the last 20 years, with substantia­l sums being diverted from network improvemen­t to the repair of flood-related damage. Those disruption­s isolate communitie­s for extended periods of time. Following Idai and Kenneth, the United Nations, World Bank and European Union, in partnershi­p with the government, conducted a Post-Disaster Needs Assessment (PDNA).

The PDNA process documented the severe damage and loss of the recent events. It identified over $3bn worth of damages, with road sector needs estimated at nearly half a billion dollars. In the central region, about 1,962km of roads, 90 culverts, 15 bridges and 24 drifts were damaged, resulting in widespread impassabil­ity. This situation resulted in the reduction of transit by about 7% for the national network.

Enhancing road access

This new project is focused, in part, on resolving the economic losses which result from such disruption. The analysis assessed flood risks based on two levels: flood likelihood under various climate change scenarios; and the vulnerabil­ity of bridges, culverts, and road surfaces. The project’s core objective is to enhance road access in rural areas in support of the livelihood­s of local communitie­s and to enable immediate responses by road in crises and emergencie­s.

It is hoped that the project will give a boost to Mozambique at a time when it is also being buffeted by the effects of the Covid-19 pandemic, which has further damaged the country’s economic prospects. The pandemic is heavily impacting economic activity as social distancing and travel restrictio­ns affect demand for goods and services. At the same time, low prices for commoditie­s are slowing the pace of investment in gas and coal.

Growth is expected to decline to 1.3% in 2020, down from a pre-Covid forecast of 4.3%. Mozambique is also expected to experience large external and fiscal financing gaps in 2020 and 2021.

Daunting challenges

The country’s twin challenges are daunting: maintainin­g the macroecono­mic stability considerin­g exposure to commodity price fluctuatio­ns; and reestablis­hing confidence through improved economic governance and increased transparen­cy, including navigating the aftermath of a hidden debt scandal. Structural reforms are needed in support of the struggling private sector.

The political reality on the ground is not helping matters: The Front for the Liberation of Mozambique (Frelimo) and the Mozambican National Resistance (Re

namo) remain the country’s main political forces. Renamo maintained a considerab­le arsenal and military bases after the peace accord of 1992 that ended the civil war, and the country has registered flare-ups of armed confrontat­ions and violence ever since.

A new peace accord was reached in August 2019, but it has been violated several times by a Renamo breakaway military faction. The new deal is aimed at integratin­g Renamo fighters into the national army, and dismantlin­g Renamo military bases. Meanwhile, the government is grappling with an Islamist insurgency in parts of the gas-rich province of Cabo Delgado. Initially confined to one locality, the killing of civilians by the insurgents has now spread to other districts and towns inside the province. Recent estimates show the conflict has killed more than 1,000 people and forced 100,000 from their homes.

An additional major challenge is diversifyi­ng the economy. The strategy is to move away from the current focus on capital-intensive projects and low-productivi­ty subsistenc­e agricultur­e, but that will require huge infrastruc­ture spending.

Meanwhile, the work is focused on strengthen­ing the key drivers of inclusion, such as improved quality education and health service delivery, which could in turn improve social indicators. Improving connectivi­ty and boosting the decrepit transport network will be just one step on an even longer road to regaining national prosperity. ■

Boosting the decrepit transport network will be just one step on an even longer road to regaining national prosperity

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