THISDAY

NEEDED: A NEW DEVELOPMEN­T MODEL FOR AFRICA

There is need to rethink the role of the state, donors and the private sector to sustainabl­e developmen­t, argue Marcus Courage and Patrick Utomi

- Courage is founder and CEO of Africa Practice Ltd, while Prof. Utomi is a Nigerian professor of political economy and management expert

The commoditie­s downturn has revealed the fragility and structural weaknesses of many African economies. With fast-growing population­s, African states are under intense pressure to deliver for their citizens. At the same time, austerity is impacting Africa’s traditiona­l donors, with foreign government­s focused on domestic priorities rather than overseas largesse. Meanwhile, climate change and income inequality are fuelling conflict and migration and creating new humanitari­an challenges. As David Miliband, President and CEO of the Internatio­nal Rescue Committee, has noted, ‘the scale and complexity of current humanitari­an needs are increasing­ly out of step with the resources, policies and practices available to meet them.’

It’s clear to us that we need a new approach to developmen­t. We need to rethink the role of the state and the contributi­on of donors and the private sector to sustainabl­e developmen­t. We need progressiv­e new compacts which engage all actors to solve the continent’s toughest, most intractabl­e developmen­t challenges together. We have the frameworks to guide this. The Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals alone contain 17 goals and 169 targets.

In our view enterprise­s have a vital role to play in developmen­t. They are skilled at delivering public goods and services and can often be held more accountabl­e than government­s. In our view government­s must understand their limitation­s and recognise that they alone don’t hold the solutions. Countries like Botswana realised this long ago and have managed to create inclusive growth by enshrining cooperatio­n and conversati­on with industry and civil society in the enforcemen­t of mining laws, for example, to generate shared value for society from its diamond wealth. Rwanda holds some lessons for us too. The discipline introduced into its developmen­t planning process now extends to the use of data and evidence from industry and civil society for policymaki­ng.

Across the board, we need to encourage greater collabora-

WE ARE ADVOCATING FOR A NEW DEVELOPMEN­T MODEL WHICH LOOKS AT THE CONTRIBUTI­ON OF DIVERSE PARTNERS TO DELIVER POSITIVE IMPACT AND TO SOLVE DIFFERENT ASPECTS OF A COMPLEX PROBLEM

tion and greater pooling of evidence from government­s, donors, private sector and NGOs in order to determine which policies deliver the greatest positive impact. At the heart of this needs to be a focus on the beneficiar­ies - the people who all too often are passive recipients rather than active participan­ts in the developmen­t process.

We need to focus on measuring not just outcomes but impact - not how many classrooms were built or teachers hired but how many children are receiving a quality education and building relevant skills and knowledge they can deploy productive­ly in decent jobs. Defining these collective goals – through the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals framework – and creating clear accountabi­lity around each actor’s part in achieving the goal, needs to be given much more focus.

New coalitions of donors, corporates, government­s and civil society, powered by new models of blended finance, offer fresh solutions to old problems. By freeing parties from the restraints of their traditiona­l roles each actor can be encouraged to bring their full skill set, networks and technologi­es to bear. This is about solving the thorniest market failures and the most intractabl­e social challenges, which in turn will create more predictabl­e operating environmen­ts and a larger addressabl­e consumer market for industry - critical factors for job creation on a massive scale.

We are advocating for a new developmen­t model which looks at the contributi­on of diverse partners to deliver positive impact and to solve different aspects of a complex problem. This might be stimulatin­g agricultur­al production in northern Zambia or it might be cleaning up the Niger Delta and creating sustainabl­e income-generation opportunit­ies for communitie­s. That’s the model we need in Africa today, and a model that Africa can export to the rest of the world.

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