By MICHAEL PIKE
In Summary
- This year’s agenda is to take advantage of this steady economic growth and focus on structural transformations that lead to jobs which are more productive than informal agriculture.
As far planning goes, 2015 is a crucial year for Africa’s economic development.
Summits in Nairobi, Addis Ababa, Paris and New York will
facilitate international cooperation, with Africa and its partners
playing critical roles in shaping the continent’s economic future.
In September, at the United Nations General
Assembly, global leaders are presumed to sanction Sustainable
Development Goals (SDGs) to replace the Millennium Development Goals
(MDGs). Africa is at the forefront of these modifications and has been
pivotal in shaping the new SDGs.
Moreover, this year’s financial projections are
even higher than the 2000 forecasts. African economies grew steadily by 6
per cents in 2013, rivalling East Asia, according to the African
Progress Panel.
This growth is fuelled by Africa’s natural
resources, dynamic services sector, increasing investments, expansion of
exports, and improved agricultural production.
However, Africa’s nascent economic growth has not
generated enough well-paid occupations. UNDP states that over the past
decade, Africa’s labour force grew by 91 million, but only 37 million of
these people participated in jobs in wage-paying sectors.
Growth
This year’s agenda is to take advantage of this
steady economic growth and focus on structural transformations that lead
to jobs which are more productive than informal agriculture.
Africa’s recent growth is heavily powered by the
development of a vibrant services sector, mostly in telecommunications,
retail, transportation and tourism, which provided 62 per cent of
Africa’s cumulative GDP growth between 1995 and 2011, according to the
World Bank.
This shift has stimulated demand for a new kind of
expertise. Companies in the information, communications and technology
sector – such as Google, Microsoft, and Huawei – have already begun to
implement educational programmes.
Naturally, the need to fill leadership positions
within these advancing industries is also vital, and is a focal point in
creating sustainable corporations throughout the continent.
Ghana, once seen as an example of economic
stability in the region, has again sought financial aid from IMF to
strengthen its currency.
South Africa has proven to be a thriving assembly
hub for the automotive industry, and has also found some success in
becoming a global automotive product supplier.
Moreover, South Africa’s retail sector and
financial services industry are the most developed on the entire
continent, and both have a dynamic regional presence.
Mr Pike is the managing director of Sub-Saharan Africa region at Pedersen & Partners
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