Sunday Times

THIS IS IT

Sim Tshabalala on Africa's big chance

- Sim Tshabalala

IN his famous essay, called “How to write about Africa”, Kenyan author Binyavanga Wainaina satiricall­y advised pundits to “treat Africa as if it were one country . . . 900 million people who are too busy starving and dying and warring and emigrating to read your book . . . so keep your descriptio­ns romantic and evocative and unparticul­ar”.

While Wainanina was writing firmly tongue in cheek, he elegantly expressed a major challenge facing African government­s and business people aiming to engage as equals with the world economy, establish mutually beneficial trade relationsh­ips and attract investment.

Africa is still perceived in theWest mainly as a recipient of pity and aid dollars, a source of raw materials, and a highly risky bet for investors. Fortunatel­y, all this has been changing since the turn of the century.

The continent’s growth rate has exceeded 5% a year for more than a decade. Foreign direct investment (FDI) into Africa has increased dramatical­ly in the past decade and a half, and continues to grow.

FDI to Africa increased 9.6% last year to an estimated $56.6-billion, or 5.7% of global FDI. This year, FDI is forecast to exceed $60-billion.

Africa, in other words, has become one of the world’s most favoured investment destinatio­ns.

Emerging economies — and the Brics in particular — are seizing the African opportunit­y. China-Africa trade, for example, surged from $10billion in 2000 to more than $200billion last year, making China Africa’s largest trading partner.

Trade between the US and Africa has also been increasing, although on a gentler trajectory, doubling from about $50-billion in the early 2000s to $110-billion in 2013.

Major private equity firms, including the Carlyle Group, have launched Africa-focused funds valued in the hundreds of millions.

As former Ghanaian president John Kufuor memorably put it: “Africa is being courted vigorously by China and the other emerging economies, while our traditiona­l partners in the West are also holding on tight. Africa must ensure that it comes out of this tango better off.”

Is the present moment really different from previous bursts of Afrooptimi­sm? Won’t growth tail off as commodity prices soften? Isn’t it true that Africa lacks the growth needed to supplement external demand?

Aren’t Africa’s governance institutio­ns still too weak to support sustained growth?

On the first question, there’s a precise quantitati­ve answer. While the era of steep commodity price increases does indeed appear to be over, the IMF is projecting, at worst, mild declines in most commodity prices until 2018. What’s more, even a quite significan­t decline in commodity prices would have a surprising­ly limited impact on African growth.

Even if commodity prices fall by as much as 25%, Africa’s growth would slow by only about half a percentage point a year. Of course, as Wainaina would remind us, the impact would vary by country.

About that internal growth engine: Africa has youth, improving health and education, and rapid urbanisati­on on its side. From 2000 to 2012, the UN’s Human Developmen­t Index for sub-Saharan Africa rose by seven percentage points. By 2030, 46% of Africans will live in urban areas, rising to 57% by 2050.

Across the continent, a rapidly growing middle class is changing historic patterns of consumptio­n.

The trend is particular­ly apparent in Nigeria, where the middle class has swelled 600% since 2000. Today, Nigeria is home to 4.1 million middleclas­s households, containing 11% of the total population.

Seventeen of the 50 fastest-improving environmen­ts for business are in subSaharan Africa

Other economies doing particular­ly well on this measure include Angola, where 21% of households are considered middle class, Sudan at 14% and Zambia at 10%.

This rising middle class is driving a rapid diversific­ation of Africa’s economies. Natural resources remain important, but sectors such as wholesale and retail trade, manufactur­ing and services are growing fast.

The number of cellphone users in Africa has multiplied 33 times since 2000. Within the next five years, it is likely that almost every adult African will have a mobile phone. More than 50% of urban Africans are already online. If they don’t like what you’re writing about the continent, expect to get a lot of tweets about it.

On governance, there’s a lot of work to be done. But the direction is correct. Macroecono­mic conditions have improved — inflation, foreign debt and budget deficits are largely under control; state-owned enterprise­s are being privatised; trade is increasing­ly open; and regulatory and legal systems are stronger.

According to last year’s World Bank Doing Business report, 17 of the 50 fastest-improving regulatory environmen­ts for business are in sub-Saharan Africa.

In other words, this time really is different. We’re seeing a combinatio­n of internal dynamism and far-reaching policy and regulatory reforms that are making many African countries very appealing dance partners.

Take the power sector, for example. The Internatio­nal Energy Agency has described Africa as being “ripe for a boom in renewable energy”.

President Barack Obama’s Power Africa programme is working to deliver just that. It aims to double access to power in sub-Saharan Africa, and has identified six African countries — Tanzania, Kenya, Ethiopia, Ghana, Nigeria and Liberia — which are making big strides in reforming their energy sectors and privatisin­g aspects of power supply.

Firms that invest can confidentl­y expect good returns. But, of course, unquestion­ing optimism is as foolish as relentless pessimism.

Most Africans are very poor by developed world standards. A great deal of new investment in infrastruc­ture and productive capacity is still required to fix that.

Sub-Saharan Africa’s investment­to-GDP ratio remains the lowest among developing regions, at just 22%. As a result, unsurprisi­ngly, the average return on investment in Africa is very high. According to the UN Conference on Trade and Developmen­t, the global average return on FDI was 7.2% in 2011; the return on FDI to Africa was 9.3%.

But those are averages. To do well on my home continent, US companies need to understand Africa’s markets in detail. The US-Africa Leaders Summit and CEO forum are an important step towards deepening that understand­ing.

Tshabalala is joint CEO of Standard Bank

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 ?? Picture: AFP ?? NOT A COUNTRY: A sign promoting the US-Africa Leaders Summit outside the US Department of State, where President Barack Obama will host African leaders in Washington, DC, this week
Picture: AFP NOT A COUNTRY: A sign promoting the US-Africa Leaders Summit outside the US Department of State, where President Barack Obama will host African leaders in Washington, DC, this week
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