Gulf Times

Investing in Africans’ health

- Carl Manlan, a 2016 New Voices Fellow at the Aspen Institute, is Chief Operating Officer at the Ecobank Foundation. By Carl Manlan

Africa’s health sector represents a massive investment opportunit­y, estimated by the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa to be worth $66bn annually. Yet African leaders and donors continue to discuss Africa’s healthcare systems in terms of funding gaps. In fact, those gaps will close only when Africa is viewed as an investment destinatio­n, not a foreign-aid recipient.

A strong healthcare system is a prerequisi­te for economic developmen­t. But the developmen­t aid to Africa that is designated for health is not predictabl­e enough to sustain the kinds of long-term investment­s that are needed.

Importing pharmaceut­icals, for example, costs Africa an estimated $14bn annually. Creating the conditions for local pharmaceut­ical manufactur­ing would not only slash that bill; it would also result in the creation of 16mn jobs. (This is yet another reason to support the African Continenta­l Free Trade Area, AfCFTA.) Yet aid is often promised according to three-year timelines, with no guarantee that it will actually be delivered when needed to fund planned programmes.

Of course, domestic public

resources could be used for this purpose. But low economic growth and high debt-servicing costs have left many African government­s with limited fiscal space. Yet, with a greater focus on improving tax collection, Africans stand a better chance of increasing their domestic revenues. And budgets are often subject to shifting political leadership and priorities, which can preclude consistent, long-term investment.

The result is that healthcare spending in Africa is woefully inadequate. In 2015, the continent accounted for just 2% of the $9.7tn in global healthcare spending, even though it represents 16% of the global population and 26% of the global disease burden.

Increasing healthcare spending in Africa is not a matter of ramping up aid; the limits of external generosity are clearly already being reached. Rather, it is about getting private actors – especially Africans – to seize the relevant business opportunit­ies.

The scale of those opportunit­ies should not be underestim­ated. Rapid population growth, coupled with longer life expectancy, means that countries’ healthcare needs will skyrocket in the coming years. By 2030, 14% of business opportunit­ies in global health are expected to be in Africa, and the continent’s health and well-being markets will be worth $259bn.

Meeting the healthcare needs of a growing African population – and thereby ensuring that the continent has a healthy workforce to drive economic transforma­tion – will require funding that is more predictabl­e and sustainabl­e, guided by reliable long-term strategies. Here, the African diaspora should take the lead.

As it stands, healthcare spending funded by money from the African diaspora is more likely to be used to pay the medical bills of a sick relative (or, more broadly, on consumptio­n) than to be invested in strengthen­ing the system. Such investment would require pooling and channellin­g resources (via trusted intermedia­ries) toward projects that can meet the needs of entire communitie­s at any given moment. And this presuppose­s a shift in focus from top-down solutions to the developmen­t of resilient systems that start at the community level.

For example, 2mn community health workers will be needed by 2020 to ensure that every African has access to quality care. This is not a new solution; community health workers were key to the healthcare received by my own parents in Cote d’Ivoire in the 1950s. But predictabl­e funding is needed to build a system that can meet today’s health-care needs, while creating 2mn jobs. Other targeted investment­s include disease management, a market estimated to be worth $14bn, and remote patient monitoring, estimated to be worth $15bn.

The more stable the investment environmen­t is, the more willing private-sector actors will be to fund the kinds of large-scale interventi­ons needed to unlock Africa’s productive potential. Establishi­ng special economic zones, which have been successful in countries like Ethiopia, will further boost predictabi­lity and confidence, driving further progress.

As leaders gear up for the World Health Organisati­on’s 72nd World Health Assembly in Geneva this month, it is worth highlighti­ng the limits of donor-driven developmen­t in Africa. To lay the foundation­s for economic transforma­tion – including by implementi­ng AfCFTA – Africans at home and abroad must step up.

In the long term, the economist John Maynard Keynes reminded us, we are all dead. But long-term health investment is for the living. It means that those whose lives are just beginning will be able to build a more prosperous future and ensure that future generation­s, too, enjoy longer, healthier, more productive lives. – Project Syndicate

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