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Summary
- Trade war prompts renewed focus on continent by both countries.
Global headlines over the past few
weeks have been awash with news on the escalating trade tensions
between China and the United States.
As usual, the commentary has been dominated by what this means for the US and China.
Refreshingly,
however, there have also been commentaries on how the trade fallout
will affect Africa. In my view, there are two core issues to consider as
one scrutinises the effects of the US-China trade war on Africa.
First,
the immediate effects will depend on the structure of the African
economy. For commodity-reliant economies, that rely on massive commodity
exports — fuels, metals and minerals — to China, the trade fallout will
be a problem.
Countries
such as South Sudan, Angola and Zimbabwe, which export raw commodities
to China and basically rely on that export route for forex earnings,
should be worried.
On the other hand, African
countries with strong agricultural commodity export capacity subject to
tariffs may stand to benefit. For example, some reports indicate that
soybeans from Africa have been in high demand and are far more lucrative
since China slapped tariffs on the commodity from the US.
Interestingly,
the US-China trade fallout is worsening what has been the long-standing
problem of reliance on raw commodity — fuel, metals and minerals —
exports by some African countries.
In others, it is creating an opportunity to deepen exports with China in agricultural commodities.
Second,
the US-China trade fallout is prompting a renewed focus on Africa for
both countries, in dockets out of their traditional areas of strength
and interest.
DIVERSIFIED RESERVES
China’s
interest in Africa has been primarily focused on commodities (metals,
fuels and minerals) and infrastructure development.
The
US’s strength has primarily been foreign direct investments (FDI) and
private sector development in Africa. Both countries seem to be actively
moving outside these areas of strengths to buffer themselves from each
other.
Last
week, news agency Reuters reported that the US Department of Defence is
in talks with rare earth miners across the globe in order to find
diversified reserves outside of China. Africa is a key party in such
talks. Because, ‘although China contains only a third of the world’s
rare earth reserves, it accounts for 80 percent of US imports of
minerals because it controls nearly all of the facilities to process the
material’.
The US
is actively diversifying away from that vulnerability and pivoting
towards Africa. With regards to China, the Chinese government has become
alive to the power of the private sector in Africa and is encouraging
Chinese investors to invest and direct FDI into Africa.
While
this was occurring already, the trade war with the US provides added
impetus for Chinese investors to direct money away from the US to other
continents such as Africa, and diversify away from the US markets by
taking African markets seriously.
The
main role for Africa governments and the private sector is to assess
the impact of the trade war given their economic structures and business
models and deliberately leverage this reality towards African
development and growth.
Gone are the days of being idle when elephants are fighting. Africa must be proactive.
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