As more people move to urban areas in Africa, the United Nations
wants governments to use the numbers to drive industrialisation.
In
its 2017 Economic Report on Africa launched in Kigali recently, the UN
Economic Commission for Africa (ECA) notes that while rising
urbanisation in Africa creates growing challenges in terms of
infrastructure and services, it can also drive industrial development
under the right policies.
“A key conclusion is that
under the right policy framework, anchored in national development
planning, African countries can leverage the momentum of urbanisation to
accelerate industrialisation for a more prosperous and equitable
future,” said ECA executive secretary Abdalla Hamdok.
The
report also emphasised that reconnecting urban and industrial
development in Africa is a priority for the sustainability of both
cities and industries.
“Cities require better performing industrialisation and industrialisation requires better functioning cities,” said Mr Hamdok. “Systematic efforts are needed to link urban and industrial development in the context of national development planning.”
“Cities require better performing industrialisation and industrialisation requires better functioning cities,” said Mr Hamdok. “Systematic efforts are needed to link urban and industrial development in the context of national development planning.”
While urbanisation has been a key economic
driver with new businesses attracting both industry workers and
professionals who then fuel consumption and grow the economy in Western
countries, rural to urban migration in Africa has largely been
characterised by unskilled workers.
“African
urbanisation has not been driven by improving agricultural productivity
or increased industrial output, as has been the case elsewhere,” said
ECA deputy executive secretary Giovanie Biha.
“On the contrary, it has been dominated by the expansion of the informal sector — often services.”
According
to the study, nearly half of Africa’s population will be living in
urban areas by 2035, presenting rising demand for employment, services
and infrastructure, but creating advantages for economic growth.
To
unlock the full potential of urbanisation for industrialisation, the
report said, synergistic opportunities arising from the two need to be
articulated in national development plans.
Job creation
The report also urges policy makers to diversify job creation by boosting local manufacturing and for industrial development across different secondary cities to leverage on regional strengths.
The report also urges policy makers to diversify job creation by boosting local manufacturing and for industrial development across different secondary cities to leverage on regional strengths.
Rwanda,
Ethiopia and Uganda have been singled out as being among countries that
have focused on growing smaller secondary cities, while Kenya, Egypt
and South Africa have prioritised building new cities with modern
infrastructure, to ease congestion in megacities.
According
to the African Development Bank, 40 per cent of Africans live in urban
areas, up from 15 per cent in 1950, and the number is expected to rise
to 56 per cent by 2050.
Nigeria’s Lagos, Egypt’s Cairo
and the Democratic Republic of Congo’s Kinshasa with 21 million, 20.4
million and 13.3 million people respectively, are Africa’s most populous
cities according to the World Atlas.
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