Sunday Tribune

Challenges facing the ruling MPLA 50 years on

- CRISTINA UDELSMANN RODRIGUES Senior researcher at the Nordic Africa Institute This article was published first by The Conversati­on (theconvers­ation.com).

ANGOLAN President João Lourenço, who has been returned to power with a greatly reduced majority, faces the challengin­g task of turning around the economy and improving the living conditions of the majority, particular­ly young people.

The Angolan economy has been in bad shape since 2014 when oil prices declined. Oil looms large over the economy, accounting for more than 90% of exports, 56% of government revenues and almost 35% of overall economic output.

Even some of its non-oil sectors such as constructi­on and agricultur­e move in tandem with the oil sector, according to the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund. This makes the country’s efforts to diversify the economy that much more challengin­g. The poor economic outcomes are visible in increasing levels of unemployme­nt, especially among young people and in the urban areas. This has pushed most Angolans – particular­ly women – into low-productive informal jobs. More than 80% of the Angolan population relies fully or partially on the informal economy. Angola’s economic performanc­e loomed large over the election, explaining why young people have become the symbol of the destitute citizens. Angola has a youthful population with a median age of 16.7 years.

Angolan youth have borne the brunt of the 30 years’ civil war which ended in 2002. Most of the half a million who died were young fighters. The civil war left those who survived it with no education, no social or economic structures. The oil-based economy has created only residual employment opportunit­ies to the lowskilled young people. Forced migration to urban areas during the war meant breaking social ties.

Young voters, who now represent about 60% of the voting population under 24, would have played an important role in shifting the electoral balance away from the People’s Movement for the Liberation of Angola (MPLA), which has run the country since independen­ce in 1975.

The call for change in these elections mobilised the younger urban voters more than any other, with visible interventi­ons on the streets and in social media.

The MPLA won 51.17% of the vote and its historical rival, National Union for the Total Independen­ce of Angola (Unita), got 43.9%. In the 2017 elections the distributi­on was 61.1% for the MPLA and 26.7% for Unita.

Significan­tly, the latest poll saw the MPLA lose the nearly two-thirds majority it had enjoyed in the three previous elections since the end of the civil war in 2002. Explanatio­ns are mainly concentrat­ed on discontent­ment with the economy and living conditions.

The prolonged economic recession triggered in 2015-16 by falling oil prices and aggravated by the Covid pandemic and declining oil production, deeply affected the everyday lives of Angolans. With the majority of the population depending on low-profit, unprotecte­d informal activities, the crisis affected a high number of families, who had to cut down on expenses such as education and health.

Now that the MPLA has been returned to power, it will have to deal with this particular­ly challengin­g situation. It will have to work hard and seriously commit to reversing the negative trends. What was difficult to improve in the last mandate will

certainly be even more difficult in the next five years.

On the positive side, despite the difficulti­es, oil prices are on the rise again, and investors may be coming back to the country. Covid, which practicall­y suspended the economy, in particular the urban informal traders, is slowly disappeari­ng from people’s minds and daily lives. This will mean working harder but in a better economic context.

It is a challenge, in the coming five years, to satisfy the large, youthful part of the voting population, who are more active and can move around and mobilise using new, less controlled means of communicat­ion.

Their most urgent need is employment and a perspectiv­e of life beyond the precarity of the informal economy.

Unemployme­nt among the youth (1524 years) was at nearly 60% in 2021. Women are particular­ly left behind in this economic context, with a very low rate of participat­ion in industry, and mostly relegated to agricultur­e (62.5%) and services (36.2%) .

Generally with low education and skills, young men and women have little chance of getting their ideal job – normally, employment in the public sector, as civil servants. Finding these ideal jobs in Luanda, the capital city, is an even harder quest.

The frustratio­ns resulting from this combinatio­n of serious challenges will not be resolved within the five years’ mandate of the party that has won the election.

The future of the Angolan youth was mortgaged a long time ago. In

my view, it will take at least another two or three rounds of elections, with all efforts pointed at the youth and the improvemen­t of their social, economic and educationa­l conditions, for matters to improve. It is a longterm horizon, which may not be well accepted by the youth and lead more to leave the country.

If all goes well, if the winners of the next two or three elections can assure an intensive non-stop effort to educate and qualify the youth, they can conquer these key supporters. Until then, they will have to make sure that investment­s in social, economic and education areas are reaching them primarily.

 ?? AFP ?? WOMEN sell goods in the fishing neighbourh­ood of Samba in Luanda last week. The Angolan economy has been in bad shape since 2014 and President João Lourenço faces a challenge in turning around the economy and improving the living conditions of the majority, particular­ly young people, says the writer. |
AFP WOMEN sell goods in the fishing neighbourh­ood of Samba in Luanda last week. The Angolan economy has been in bad shape since 2014 and President João Lourenço faces a challenge in turning around the economy and improving the living conditions of the majority, particular­ly young people, says the writer. |
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