The Mercury

There’s window of opportunit­y on infrastruc­ture

- This Leader Series conversati­on is brought to you in associatio­n with the World Economic Forum. Follow WEF Afria on Twitter: #AF15 and via Business Report’s Twitter feed: @busrep. Independen­t Media, publisher of Business Report, is a media partner for WEF

AQUESTION and answer session with Alex Wong, the head of the World Economic Forum’s Centre for Global Industries.

Tell us about your infrastruc­ture work – which is going to be a major theme at this year’s meeting

Africa’s economic transforma­tion is always going to be held back if it cannot solve some of the deep rooted problems affecting its ability to move goods and people around the continent. The problem is especially acute when it comes to co-ordinating infrastruc­ture across borders, which is especially a problem for land-locked countries, and making the case to attract the financing needed to develop the infrastruc­ture. But this is more than just an economic imperative; mobility is absolutely critical for people’s livelihood­s and quality of life.

Building roads isn’t that how come this has such a chronic problem? complicate­d… become

It isn’t the constructi­on that is the problem, nor even the lack of money. The private sector wants to play more of a role in funding infrastruc­ture and government­s want this too, but the problem is in the small print – how to bring the public and private sectors together in a way that works for both parties.

Explain?

In the past, too many projects just have not managed to get off the ground for seemingly simple reasons, such as the lack of financing for feasibilit­y studies, which typically do not deliver a return on investment but which are absolutely crucial before any ground can be broken. A large part of our work has been in identifyin­g these bottleneck­s and then bringing people together around a table to do something about them.

What’s special about this year?

This year is important for a number of reasons; firstly we have identified a number of these roadblocks and we now have a clear idea not only of the best model for funding these massive projects going forward but also who is willing to invest in them. But there is one other reason why timing is critical: we have currently a narrow window of opportunit­y in which infrastruc­ture is very attractive to long term investors: it is crucial that we convert this interest into action now before the market turns and interest rates start rising again.

What one outcome do you want to see out of Cape Town?

Now that we have identified potential projects, investors and business models, the important challenge is to hand over this work to the appropriat­e organisati­ons to oversee the next stages. Infrastruc­ture will remain a strategic priority for the Forum and we will remain here to support but its time for Africa’s government­s, businesses and developmen­t agencies to use this momentum and carry it forward.

 ??  ?? Head of the World Economic Forum’s Centre for Global Industries Alex Wong
Head of the World Economic Forum’s Centre for Global Industries Alex Wong
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