The Star Early Edition

Africa is a chess board again as US and China face off

- Jeanna Smialek and Jeff Kearns

AFRICA has long been a battlegrou­nd for world powers. Two giants playing there these days are China, which is spending freely throughout the continent to scoop up resources and tap some of the fastest-growing economies, and the US, which is looking to do more business.

Both Chinese and US companies expect to profit from their African stakes. The question is whether Africans can win, too.

China’s investment­s in sub-Saharan Africa have grown 40-fold since 2003 and its state-owned enterprise­s have been able to roll out projects quickly and in every country on the continent, primarily building things like hydroelect­ric dams on the Nile, highways to oil regions and railways to carry iron ore.

After complaints that China was becoming another colonial overlord, China’s government and the African Developmen­t Bank committed $2 billion (R22bn) to a fund designed to help African companies win Chinese contracts.

While Chinese companies have been criticised for importing Chinese labour rather than training and employing Africans, they are now building garment manufactur­ing factories to take advantage of Africa’s cheap labour amid high unemployme­nt levels.

US developmen­t in Africa has been private-sector driven and concentrat­ed in just a few countries including Liberia, Mauritius and South Africa.

US President Barack Obama wants American companies to do more.

Last year, the US began the Power Africa initiative to build electricit­y grids and generators across six countries by working with African companies and US partners that have top-of-the-line technology, including General Electric, and offering $7bn in financial support and loan guarantees. In August, US companies pledged $14bn in investment­s at the US-Africa Leaders Summit in Washington.

European imperialis­m left deep scars in Africa. During the Cold War, the US and Soviet Union intervened to put dictators in power who lined their own pockets and left legacies of poverty, famine and conflict. Foreign aid was often misused and diverted for weapons.

Food aid imported to combat famines depressed prices for local farmers. Unrest led to little investment in infrastruc­ture; even now about 600 million sub-Saharan Africans – about 70 percent of the population – lack electricit­y.

During the Cold War, the US and Soviet Union intervened to put dictators in power who lined their pockets and left legacies of poverty, famine and conflict.

Though Africa is rich in minerals and energy sources, few Africans have benefited from exports of those materials. Some economists and policymake­rs have even argued that dependence on natural resources does more harm than good – a phenomenon they call “the resource curse”.

China’s rapid-fire, state-funded building provides quick fixes to pressing infrastruc­ture needs in Africa, though some critics say constructi­on can be shoddy.

China also isn’t fussy about working with controvers­ial political regimes, bestowing legitimacy on leaders in countries that US companies won’t touch.

Though it sometimes pays little heed to the political and environmen­tal impact of its investment­s, China’s government has stepped in when its investment­s were threatened – as it did in South Sudan – and thus could help promote calm.

While the US is trying to use developmen­t as a way to shore up regional stability, its investment­s can take longer to get the jobs done, since companies have to satisfy shareholde­rs and projects often undergo environmen­tal vetting before they can get off the ground.

US companies are also subject to anticorrup­tion laws that make it almost impossible to do deals in places where bribery is common.

US and Chinese investment­s in transporta­tion and electricit­y should make it easier for African businesses to get goods and services to and from the continent.

African planners hope this will help lift the average per-capita income past $10 000 in many countries in the next three decades. – Bloomberg

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa