Daily Trust

Investors’ bright future in Africa

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For any investor interested in Africa, there is only one place to be this week: Johannesbu­rg. When the three-day Africa Investment Forum opens on November 7, a total of 61 deals with an estimated value of more than $40 billion will be featured in “Boardroom Sessions,” while another $28 billion will be showcased to investors at the “Gallery Walk” marketplac­e.

The deals are curated from a total of 230 projects worth over $208 billion, spanning sectors such as energy, infrastruc­ture, transport and utilities, industry, agricultur­e, informatio­n and communicat­ions technology, telecoms, water and sanitation, financial services, health, education, hospitalit­y and tourism, housing, and aviation.

Risk, or at least the perception of it, has long been a major impediment to attracting foreign direct investment in Africa. But the African Developmen­t Bank (AfDB) is tackling this problem head-on by removing barriers that have stemmed the flow of investment finance into the continent. The transactio­n-based Africa Investment Forum is the most important step in this process.

By bringing together multilater­al financial institutio­ns, pension funds, sovereign wealth funds, and private investors, the AfDB aims to create a mechanism to reduce market, political, and financial risks, and in the process improve the ease of doing business. As part of this effort, the investment forum will prioritize public-private partnershi­ps and private-sector deals. The message we aim to deliver is simple: Africa is open for business.

African economies offer tremendous opportunit­ies, especially in energy; infrastruc­ture such as roads, railways, and ports; and agricultur­e, minerals, oil, and gas. But Africa must turn this potential into streams of wealth for greater prosperity on the continent.

Achieving that requires supportive government policies. In every country, the AfDB is engaging with policymake­rs to improve the legal and regulatory environmen­t and create a more predictabl­e business climate.

These efforts are already paying off. For example, interest in $50 billion worth of investment-ready projects that we made available for pre-Forum screening has been higher than anticipate­d.

We are delighted that several multilater­al financial institutio­ns including the Internatio­nal Finance Corporatio­n, the World Bank, the Asian Infrastruc­ture Investment Bank, the Islamic Developmen­t Bank - are also involved. For the first time, these major global and regional financial institutio­ns are cooperatin­g to help de-risk investment projects at scale.

Of course, pledges of partnershi­p are not the only reason for optimism; economic trends are also strong. For starters, real GDP growth is forecast to be 3.5% this year and 4% in 2019. Today, Africa includes five of the world’s ten fastest-growing economies.

Africa has also become the world’s second-most attractive investment destinatio­n. According to the United Nations Conference on Trade and Developmen­t, inward foreign direct investment (FDI) is expected to increase by about 20% this year, to $50 billion, from $42 billion in 2017.

Finally, Africa’s pension funds, insurance funds, and sovereign wealth funds are collective­ly valued at more than $1 trillion dollars. If Africa could leverage this wealth to attract just 1% of all global assets under management, estimated to total more than $131 trillion, the continent’s need for $130170 billion in annual infrastruc­ture investment could be met. As matters currently stand, Africa faces an annual financing gap of $68-108 billion.

Africa has a huge population to drive consumer demand, a rising middle class, a dynamic youth population, and rapidly reforming government­s that are keen to attract these investment­s. The Africa Investment Forum will provide what has been missing so far: a safe, stable marketplac­e to accelerate deals.

As anyone traveling to Johannesbu­rg this week will see, Africa is doing its part to transform the investment landscape. The Africa Investment Forum’s goal is simple: provide a smooth runway for investment­s in Africa. What we need now are investors who are ready to seize the tremendous opportunit­ies in Africa - and at the continent’s premier investment marketplac­e.

Akinwumi A. Adesina is President of the African Developmen­t Bank. Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2018. www.project-syndicate.org

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