Cape Times

GAUTENG HOSTS INVESTMENT FORUM

Nhlanhla Nene confident that hosting continenta­l summit will bring business to SA

- Kabelo Khumalo

SOUTH Africa yesterday pledged its readiness to host the inaugural Africa Investment Forum that aims to raise billions to plug the continent’s infrastruc­ture gap.

Finance Minister Nhlanhla Nene said the government viewed the summit as another opportunit­y to bring investment into the country.

“We have no doubt that it will have the desired developmen­t impact. South Africa is not only a gateway for investment on the continent, but it is also a leading African investor,” Nene pointed out.

Gauteng will host the African Developmen­t Bank’s (AfDB) inaugural investment forum in November. The Abidjan-based lender said the forum sought to raise funds for the continent’s mammoth infrastruc­ture gap.

Africa needs between $130 billion (R1.63 trillion) and $170bn a year to bridge its infrastruc­ture deficit, the bank said.

AfDB president Akinwumi Adesina said Africa urgently needs to industrial­ise in order to boost its economic prospects.

“Africa should invest in its own developmen­t if it wants others to do so. This will not be a political platform. There wouldn’t be speeches. It’s about transactio­ns,” Adesina said.

“Africa is not a poor continent. It has vast amounts of resources of which the potential simply has to be unlocked. We intend for this to be an investment market place to do transactio­ns with impact.”

Last year, the Boston Consulting Group/Africa Finance Corporatio­n said in a report that the infrastruc­ture gap in sub-Saharan Africa amounted to about $100bn in yearly infrastruc­ture investment.

It pointed out that countries in this region were losing 2.1 percent of their annual GDP growth due to inadequate infrastruc­ture.

The AfDB said it wanted to catalyse private-sector investment in Africa by bringing in developers, strategic investors, venture capital funds, pension funds, global sovereign wealth funds, and insurance companies to invest in the continent.

It said it had identified five priorities that are crucial for accelerati­ng Africa’s economic transforma­tion: light up and power Africa; feed Africa; industrial­ise Africa; integrate Africa; and improve the quality of life for the people of Africa.

Gauteng premier David Makhura said South Africa would need $100bn over the next 10 years for infrastruc­ture developmen­t. “The African Investment Forum will be a place where we want to bring in a pool of capital for projects. Africa has the potential.”

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? Inaugural summit organised by the African Developmen­t Bank, which is headquarte­red in Abidjan, Ivory Coast.
PHOTO: REUTERS Inaugural summit organised by the African Developmen­t Bank, which is headquarte­red in Abidjan, Ivory Coast.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa