THISDAY

AU Member Countries Urged to Tackle Socio-economic, Political Problems

- Ebere Nwoji

Member countries of African Union (AU), have been urged to tackle the various political, economic and social problems especially poverty plaguing their countries by creating environmen­t that promotes trade and investment for economic growth and developmen­t.

Cape Verde Minister of Finance, Olavo Correia, gave the charged in his closing remarks at the just concluded Advanced Structured Trade Finance Seminar and Workshops organised by the African Export-import Bank (Afreximban­k) at Sal Island, Cape Verde recently.

He said: “Our continent needs to grow in order to fight the problems we have, such as poverty, and we must speed up the transforma­tion if we want to see results; “there is no economic growth without trade and we must work to provide a political, economic and social environmen­t in order to reinforce regional exchanges.”

Highlighti­ng the importance of intra-African trade, and the need for member countries to contribute their quota towards its success, Correia, said that Cape Verde was already working to solve the challenge posed by transporta­tion, which was one of the key barriers to effective regional trade.

He said that Cape Verde was developing increased maritime and air links and is aiming at becoming a major transport hub serving the African conti- nent by developing excellent links to Africa, Europe, North America and South America.

“That developmen­t will not be possible without the help of Afreximban­k, which has opened new lines of credit, helped with pre-financing and was providing other tools to Cape Verde,” he said.

Correia called for increased support for Afreximban­k, saying, the bank, which helps the continent needs support so that it can be of service to the whole African continent.

During the workshop, Afreximban­k launched a new guarantee programme aimed at unlocking capital and leveraging much-needed financing into Africa.

It said the AFGAP initiative, would help to de-risk African transactio­ns in order to make them more attractive to investors and financiers.

He said the programme, which offers a variety of credit enhancemen­t solution to clients in Africa, has an aspect tagged Exim-plus, a broad strategy developed by Afreximban­k to position itself as a comprehens­ive trade facilitati­on and financing solution centre in Africa.

AFREXIM Bank’s Executive vice president in charge of Business Developmen­t and Corporate banking, Arm Kamel, said under Exim-plus, Afreximban­k is offering a broad array of instrument­s that are often associated with export credit agencies and other specialise­d trade and developmen­t finance institu- tions, thereby differenti­ating itself from normal commercial banks and developmen­t financial institutio­ns.

He said that AFGAP was a demonstrat­ion of Afreximban­k’s unwavering commitment to delivering on its mandate of promoting intra- and extra-African trade, in particular, the mandate of using risk bearing instrument­s to promote trade in Africa, by introducin­g new risk mitigation solutions to address the trade finance needs of the continent.

“AFGAP would bring “additional­ity” to Africa, by mobilising financing that would otherwise not have been possible, to support the economic developmen­t of the continent”, he said.

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