By DANIEL KALINAKI
In Summary
- Many economists say economies on the continent, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa, need to sustain double-digit growth over many years if they are to emulate the success stories of China, Brazil, India and other emerging economies.
- The telecoms and the airlines sectors offer insights into some of these barriers; they show where there has been progress as well as areas for regulators and policy makers to break down barriers and catalyse growth within the continent.
To telephone Kinshasa, the capital of the
Democratic Republic of Congo, residents of Brazzaville, the capital of
the Congo Republic, for many years had to pay international call rates.
The calls would be routed via satellite link to
Paris, Brussels, and then back across the River Congo to either capital.
In 2002, officials of MSI telephone company, which had operations in
both countries, decided to shorten the route.
They installed a microwave link across the 7km
stretch of the River Congo that separates the two capitals. Overnight,
international calls became local calls. The cost of a telephone call
dropped by 80 per cent. Two years later, the service was rolled out to
pre-paid customers, too.
More than a century after the partition of Africa,
the telephone company officials had succeeded in building a virtual
bridge over the river.
After a century of endemic war, poverty and
disease, things are finally looking up for Africa. According to the
African Development Bank (AfDB), economic growth is expected to hold at
just under five per cent over the next year, and many countries have
recorded more than a decade of year-on-year growth albeit from low
starting points.
Some 100 million African households are expected
to have annual incomes of more than $3,000 by next year, according to
research from Standard Bank. Foreign direct investment into the
continent overtook aid in 2003, and has been growing since.
According to the AfDB, there are now 350 million
Africans in the middle class (defined as earning between $2 to $20 per
day), representing 34 per cent of the continent’s total population.
This is more than double the number from 1980, and four out of every 10 Africans are projected to be middle class by 2060.
However, many economists say economies on the
continent, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa, need to sustain
double-digit growth over many years if they are to emulate the success
stories of China, Brazil, India and other emerging economies.
While a lot of emphasis is put on Africa’s
relations with the rest of the world, little attention is paid to the
internal barriers to trade and growth within the continent.
There is much public debate about access to
foreign markets by African firms and countries, but little discussion
about access to African markets by Africans themselves.
Where such access exists, it is often mired in bureaucracy, incompetence, protectionism, or sheer lack of common sense.
The telecoms and the airlines sectors offer
insights into some of these barriers; they show where there has been
progress as well as areas for regulators and policy makers to break down
barriers and catalyse growth within the continent.
After its breakthrough in the DRC and Congo
Republic, MSI, which had then become Celtel and then Zain through
changes in ownership (and is now Airtel), experimented with bringing
down barriers on a larger scale.
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