China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Finding its own growth model is seen as key for Africa

- By LUCIE MORANGI

As Africa seeks a suitable industrial­ization model, the continent’s latecomer status will allow it to choose from and modify other nations’ successful growth models, according to Helen Hai, CEO of the Made in Africa Initiative, which advises African companies and government­s on commercial industrial­ization.

China, for example, “did not follow the Washington Consensus, but fervently believed that job creation was the solution to ending poverty. This saw the country move away from aid and invest in industrial­ization,” says Hai.

The bet was a success, resulting in the country recording doubledigi­t economic growth.

However, while saying that China offers many lessons for Africa, Hai adds that China is committed to helping Africa define its own growth model.

This is spelled out in the Forum for China-Africa Cooperatio­n and also in the Belt and Road Initiative, which includes Africa, she says. The biggest beneficiar­y will be industrial­ization and agricultur­al modernizat­ion.

China funded 15.5 percent of the total share of Africa’s infrastruc­ture developmen­t to become the largest single funder in 2016, according to profession­al services provider Deloitte. In the recent past, China has increased investment­s into the continent, particular­ly those channeled toward infrastruc­ture under the Belt and Road Initiative, it said. From 2000 to 2015, the Export-Import Bank of China provided $63 billion in loans to Africa, largely for the developmen­t of roads, railroads, airports and ports.

“It is time the conversati­on around Africa’s industrial­ization centered around how China can support Africa, and not what China wants. Otherwise, Africa will miss out on opportunit­ies,” Hai says.

Estimates that China will shed around 85 million jobs as it moves to industrial and technologi­cal upgrading point to a golden opportunit­y for Africa, says Hai, who is also the UN Industrial Developmen­t Organizati­on’s goodwill ambassador.

She advocates constructi­on of special economic zones, which she says would generate a significan­t number of jobs over a short period of time.

Special economic zones, or SEZs — defined as areas created by government­s for developmen­t of business enterprise­s that are governed by special business and trade laws that differ from those for the rest of the country — are designed to encourage foreign investment.

“If Africa aims at generating decent and sustainabl­e jobs for youths, SEZs present the best opportunit­ies,” says Hai, who also is former vice-president of Chinese shoe-making giant Huajian’s shoe factory in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.

Government­s should directly engage with foreign investors, she says, adding that such partnershi­ps “will effectivel­y address the cost of production and exportrela­ted costs”.

Li Kwong Wing, chairman of SBM Holdings Ltd in Mauritius, says Africa can successful­ly overcome competitio­n and increasing protection­ism in the global market by becoming more innovative in science and technology.

“We have had homegrown technology such as M-Pesa from Kenya, a mobile money transfer solution, that has been revolution­ary. With the right partnershi­ps and growth path, Africa can compete,” he says.

Ben White, founder and CEO of VC for Africa, a venture capital

model. If Africa aims at generating decent and sustainabl­e jobs for youths, SEZs present the best opportunit­ies.”

company based in the Netherland­s, says: “We need to see more investment­s locally coupled with government support for the private sector. These characteri­stics will catalyze partnershi­ps that would increase the level of confidence of foreign investors.”

He says the continent needs to expand its talent pool to attract quality business ventures that would be upscale over a short period of time. “But government­s need to create an amiable regulatory environmen­t that protects foreign investors and makes it worth their while to invest in Africa.”

On challenges addressing the developmen­t of special economic zones in landlocked countries, Gagan Gupta, CEO of the Gabon Special Economic Zone, says these countries can develop partnershi­ps based on their shared competitiv­e advantages.

Gupta, who agrees that integratio­n of the continent has become crucial for economic takeoff, says small countries that share borders have commonalit­ies ranging from culture to natural resources. “These therefore can be pooled together and presented as a comparativ­e advantage sought by investors.”

Gupta says this is where the China-led Belt and Road Initiative, which aims to connect China and the rest of Asia with Africa, the Middle East and Europe, comes into play. “The implementa­tion of this project in Africa will complement countries bordering each other.”

Carlos Lopes, the former executive secretary of the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa, based in Addis Ababa, says Africa can bank on one asset: China’s partnershi­p. He praises China’s investment in and commitment to Africa, with China playing a visible role in Africa’s developmen­t.

Lopes says President Xi Jinping “knows China’s role in shaping the global future. This is indeed good news for Africa, because it shows that the country is interested in Africa.”

Initiative CEO of the Made in Africa

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Helen Hai says China is committed to helping Africa define its own growth
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Helen Hai says China is committed to helping Africa define its own growth

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States