African Business

Angola eyes reform despite Covid shock

Angola’s already struggling economy was hit hard by the fall in crude oil prices brought about by Covid-19, but the authoritie­s have responded robustly and the country’s reform programme is still moving forward.

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At the beginning of last year, there was palpable internatio­nal optimism around the future of Angola. President João Lourenço, the party insider who replaced ageing strongman José Eduardo dos Santos in 2017, surprised observers by relaxing civil liberties and pursuing anti-corruption cases against regime figures and family members alleged to have illegally benefited from nearly 40 years of dos Santos rule.

Lourenço pledged to diversify one of the most oil-dependent economies in Africa, and began the process of privatisin­g over 190 state-owned companies and reforming oil giant Sonangol. In February 2020, he welcomed German chancellor Angela Merkel to Luanda, who praised his anti-corruption efforts and discussed commercial deals.

Just months later, the global impact of Covid-19 hit home. Crude prices fell from $60 a barrel in December 2019 to lows of $19 by April 2020, and have only now recovered. The Angolan economy – heavily dependent on a declining, underfunde­d oil sector – shrank by a further 4% in 2020 and has not grown since 2015, prompting sporadic anti-government protests.

“One of the impacts of Covid has been severe damage to the economy,” says Justin Pearce, an Angola expert at the University of Sussex’s School of Global Studies. “In Angola this is coming on the back of a crisis which really began in 2014 when the oil price collapsed and which Angola hasn’t found its way out of. Moving against corrupt figures from the old regime plus opening up civil liberties could only take Lourenço so far. Many of the demonstrat­ions that took place in the last years of the dos Santos regime were also about unemployme­nt, wages, and standards of living. He really hasn’t had the financial means to address those kind of questions”.

The World Bank warns that the pandemic puts macroecono­mic stability and the transition to a more sustainabl­e and inclusive growth model at risk. Yet while the government faces immediate challenges, some observers say it has not abandoned its longterm reforms, including the privatisat­ion programme. Indeed, there are hopes that the difficulti­es prompted by Covid-19 will reassert the necessity of change.

“Once this pandemic is over I think the government will go all in with making this [privatisat­ion] programme a success,” says Nuno Cabeçadas, partner at law firm Miranda & Associados. “People want this to be a success but are very aware of the challenges it will face.”

A robust policy response

In January, Lourenço received a valuable boost from the IMF, which praised the government’s Covid-19 policy response as “robust”. The fund confirmed that the government’s strong commitment and “satisfacto­ry implementa­tion” of previous pledges allowed for the immediate disburseme­nt of $487.5m, the latest tranche of a $3.7bn support package agreed in 2018.

“The authoritie­s’ robust policy response has enabled Angola to weather large external shocks, most notably lower oil revenues, and mitigate their macroecono­mic impact while protecting the most vulnerable... The authoritie­s achieved strong fiscal adjustment in 2020. Their 2021 budget consolidat­es the non-oil revenue gains and expenditur­e restraint of the 2020 budget, while protecting priority health and social spending,” said Antoinette Sayeh, IMF deputy managing director and acting chair.

Non-oil growth and diversific­ation from a dwindling crude sector have become the leading priorities (see pages 58-59). Caroline Miller, partner at law firm White & Case, says that government has made its diversific­ation intentions clear when seeking to access internatio­nal capital markets.

A crucial part of its diversific­ation agenda is the 2019-22 Privatisat­ion Programme (PROPRIV), which plans to transfer more than 190 state companies and assets in sectors including mineral resources, transporta­tion, telecommun­ications, health, agricultur­e and constructi­on to the private sector.

The government had approved a roadmap and a timeline, which included details about tenders and public offers. Middle Eastern private and sovereign entities have shown an interest, as have European and US investors. But progress has been delayed as the government fights Covid-19 and private companies scale back investment.

“Things have been developing slowly, with Covid having an impact, says Cabeçadas. “This type of process takes a long time in Angola, regardless of the pandemic. The programme was put together a few months ago and provides for a general framework. There were some companies in the insurance and financial sectors which had begun the process. Those programmes started and there was general documentat­ion made available, but there has not been much progress since September.”

Some plans appear dead in the water. Plans to begin the privatisat­ion of Angola Airlines and Sonair, an air transporta­tion services subsidiary of Sonangol, will inevitably be disrupted by the pandemic’s destructiv­e impact on the global aviation sector. Other

The Angolan economy – heavily dependent on a declining, underfunde­d oil sector – shrank by 4% in 2020 and has not grown since 2015, prompting sporadic antigovern­ment protests

deals, especially in the resources sector, may be delayed until the government believes it can maximise the value of its stakes. The programme is predicated on the liquidity of capital markets and the favourable evolution of the macroecono­mic environmen­t, factors distinctly lacking today.

“In those sectors which have been more affected by Covid, I think they would need to scale back and reduce the participat­ion put forward for private shareholde­rs or just reschedule the beginning of the privatisat­ion,” says Cabeçadas.

While frustratin­g, the pandemic gives the government the chance to take stock of the situation and communicat­e its plans to investors, says Bruna Beloso, associate at White & Case.

“I have the feeling they are taking the time to structure things better for investors, because if you go to the privatisat­ion website you can find all the informatio­n there... I was very impressed and my perception is that they are putting in the time to structure it better.”

Long road forward

But success will depend on more than legislatio­n. The country is ranked 177th in the World Bank’s Doing Business index, and has almost no track record of successful public-private partnershi­ps.

The economy has long been dominated by monopolist­ic concerns closely intertwine­d with the interests of a narrow ruling elite. Further reforms are essential to create a genuinely competitiv­e market economy, as is continued progress in the fight against corruption.

“The question is whether the programme will be followed by the actual implementa­tion of the reform in the regulatory framework (for example, applicatio­n and enforcemen­t of the new Competitio­n Law) which will increase competitio­n and force companies dependent on a monopoly to adapt to a more competitiv­e environmen­t. The interest of the private sector will be dependent on the structural reforms that the government will need to implement in parallel with privatisat­ion,” Cabeçadas says.

Given the delaying effect of Covid-19, observers counsel patience when judging the reform efforts, which involve nothing less than a fundamenta­l reshaping of the Angolan state and its place in the global economy. Whether citizens can also stay patient remains to be seen.

“When you have a country whose integratio­n into the global economy for many years has been on the basis of exporting crude, and when within Angola you have a business culture which has been about using its connection­s to the regime in order to cream off whatever one can from petroleum revenues, those are two institutio­nal factors that simply the actions of a new regime can’t resolve in the space of a few years,” says Sussex’s Pearce.

“If for example Angola is going to move towards secondary industry and manufactur­ing, where are the markets for that, how do you find Angola’s niche within a global economy? It’s about reorientin­g its position in the global economy and having people who can think along those lines. It’s going to take several years to work that out, even in the most favourable of circumstan­ces.” ■

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 ??  ?? Left: Workers are transporte­d off the fields for lunch by a tractor in a banana farm close to the town of Caxito.
Left: Workers are transporte­d off the fields for lunch by a tractor in a banana farm close to the town of Caxito.
 ??  ?? Above: Employees move freshly caught fish to be used for oil and meal at a factory in the Angolan coastal city of Benguela.
Above: Employees move freshly caught fish to be used for oil and meal at a factory in the Angolan coastal city of Benguela.

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