China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Key to recover continent’s robust growth

Africa’s manufactur­ing industry urgently needs global solidarity and partnershi­ps

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The novel coronaviru­s has hit Africa and set back its pace of manufactur­ing developmen­t. According to the World Bank, the pandemic could possibly cause a loss of $37 billion to $79 billion output in 2020 alone in Africa and result in major disruption­s to its manufactur­ing supply chains. A resilient manufactur­ing sector has a bearing on people’s livelihood­s and social harmony.

Scaling-up its manufactur­ing sector would reinforce Africa’s economy which has been severely affected by the pandemic by meeting the demand for basic necessitie­s and fueling consumptio­n. Altogether, 43 African countries have closed their borders, seven countries have canceled internatio­nal flights and three countries have imposed strict entry-exit controls, which has led to huge losses for the tourism and service industries and limited other business activities. Some African economies, such as South Africa and Egypt, are heavily dependent on their tourism and the hospitalit­y industries, which are suffering because of the pandemic. Data of the African Union (AU) reveal that the virus may cause a loss of $50 billion or more for the tourism and travel industries in Africa. Through the readjustme­nt of production chains, African manufactur­ing industries have significan­t potential to reduce poverty and makeup for the contractio­n of other industries.

Since the establishm­ent of the Forum on

China-Africa Cooperatio­n (FOCAC), manufactur­ing has become a critical area and the first priority for the collaborat­ion between China and Africa. Industrial promotion was one of the eight major initiative­s proposed by President Xi Jinping at the FOCAC Summit in Beijing in 2018.

Over the past decade, China’s direct investment­s in Africa’s manufactur­ing sector have maintained rapid growth. According to the Chinese Ministry of Commerce, China’s investment flows to Africa grew at an average annual rate of more than 45 percent from 2003 to 2018, and China became the fourth-largest investor in Africa in 2018. Through the Belt and Road Initiative, many Chinese State-owned and private enterprise­s are not only investing in infrastruc­ture in African countries, but also building factories to produce textiles, constructi­on materials, home appliances and pharmaceut­icals. These Chinese companies are rich in manufactur­ing production experience and making a significan­t contributi­on to Africa’s economic developmen­t.

During the pandemic, in attempts to avoid along period of downtime, many employees of Chinese enterprise­s in Africa have either stick to their posts or taken charted planes to return to African countries to resume production. For example, the China Communicat­ions Constructi­on Company in Mombasa and the China Railway 20th Bureau Group in Cabinda are engaged in building key infrastruc­ture projects in Africa. China’s direct investment­s in manufactur­ing industry and infrastruc­ture constructi­on has increased Africa’s resiliency in the face of the pandemic.

China’s continuous economic and trade activities, and various exchanges through digital platforms have reinforced Africa’s economic recovery potential. Hunan province, for example, has establishe­d a forum in 2014 to speed up the cooperatio­n between Hunan and African countries on agricultur­al production processing, farming machines, apparel and other manufactur­ing subsectors. In the first half of this year, Hunan’s import volume from Africa reached $770 million, up 36 percent year-on-year despite the pandemic, having increased its imports of coffee, cocoa and other non-resource products from African countries.

China-Africa cooperatio­n on manufactur­ing creates more local employment opportunit­ies, helping African societies maintain stability during the pandemic. The youth population in Africa is more than 200 million, and boosting youth employment in manufactur­ing has helped keep youth crime rates down. The findings of the AU emphasized that 20 million jobs in the formal and informal sectors could be lost this year. The unemployed of all industries are rushing into the same tight job market. Since the majority of African manufactur­ing industries are labor intensive, the revival of manufactur­ing could absorb the large number of unemployed.

China’s experience of human resource management and training can also help Africa form a talent pool. During the pandemic, the manufactur­ers in the Sino-Uganda Mbale Industrial Park in Kampala maintained steady manufactur­ing production by adopting strict personal protective measures, which guaranteed stable jobs for local communitie­s, elevated young workers’ technical skills and safeguarde­d local workers’ livelihood­s. Some small and mediumsize­d African manufactur­ing enterprise­s also extended youth employment by an e-commerce project proposed by the UN Economic Commission for Africa (ECA) and Ant Financial of Alibaba, headquarte­red in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province.

The global COVID-19 pandemic has become a new normal, but the process of industrial­ization and urbanizati­on in Africa cannot be suspended. At the present, Africa stands at a turning point in the Third Industrial Developmen­t Decade for Africa (2016-25) and the continent should catch this opportunit­y to achieve endogenous economic growth in the post-pandemic period. With global solidarity and partnershi­ps, African countries can realize their industrial dream and achieve the AU’s Agenda 2063 on their own.

The author is an assistant research fellow of the China-Africa Institute and the Institute of West Asian and African Studies at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. The author contribute­d this article to China Watch, a think tank powered by China Daily. The views do not necessaril­y reflect those of China Daily.

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CHINA XUEJING MA

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