Lagos. The
Covid-19 pandemic presents an opportunity for Africa to pull its
economies together and come up with a growth strategy that goes beyond
saving lives; Chairman of the United Bank for Africa (UBA) Plc, Mr. Tony
Elumelu.
Speaking during
the UBA Africa Day conversation session, Mr Elumelu said Africa needed a
martial plan on a new deal for growth, jobs and sustainable
development.
“We must do more
than just lifesaving. If we work together, collaboratively, in the new
world of multilateralism, we will succeed,” said Mr Elumelu.
Titled: Growth,
Jobs, Sustainable Development Amidst a Global Pandemic: panellists
included Liberian President H.E George Weah; US Senator and Member of
the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Mr Chris Coons; President of the
Africa Export-Import Bank (Afreximbank), Prof Okey Oramah; President of
Africa CEO Forum, Amir Ben and Secretary General of the African,
Caribbean and Pacific Group of States, Ambassador Georges Chicoti among
others.
In his initial
remarks, Mr Elumelu said, UBA understands that Africa as a continent was
already united by the struggle for independence and that the
post-independence unity of the continent was purely on the struggle for
economic independence.
While supporting
Mr Elumelu, who moderated the session, Prof Oramah specifically urged
African governments to implement the African Continental Free Trade Area
(AfCFTA) as a way of uniting the continent’s economies together for a
brighter future.
“The priority of
governments should be put on implementing the African Continental Free
Trade Area without delay. The Covid-19 has shown us that this is the way
to go. We have to put away all the reservations and build all supply
chains across Africa and start a dynamic growth for the continent. If we
do not do that, we will remain perpetual commodity exporter. “he said.
He said with the
Covid-19, there was no market for Africa’s commodities. Some metals also
suffered the same fate. “The AfCTA is the answer and we must waste no
time. We must use this opportunity to overcome whatever challenges we
may have at country level and collectively as a continent. That is how
we will be able to build the infrastructure, the manufacturing base that
will connect us so that whenever we are confronted with such
challenges, we will defeat them. That way, we will create bigger banks
and bigger continental institutions,” he said.
Africa has a population of 1.2 billion people and a $2.5 trillion GDP.
However, the
largest development financial institution on the continent has less than
$80 billion in assets which is less than five percent of the
continent’s GDP. This compares poorly with the Asian Development Bank
alone which has total assets of about $200 billion.
“Unless we create
the infrastructure, the market that will make it possible for us to
have financial institutions that will finance the growth and development
we need, we will remain vulnerable to crisis conditions,” he said.
He said in 2006,
Africa’s total debt was around $200 billion but currently, it has gone
up to about $1 trillion. The rise in debts, he said, also started with
the commodity crisis of 2015.
The commodity
crisis saw many African countries running into current account and
fiscal deficits, forcing them to going back to borrowing. Since most of
them had access to commercial and bond markets and other forms of
borrowing including syndicate borrowing, the debt ballooned. “In short,
the debt has the commodity origin. Since the commodity market crashed,
countries started borrowing. To go around it, you need to create a
situation whereby you no longer depend on commodities. You have to build
a dynamic economy that is less dependent on commodities but on goods
and services,” he said.
He proposed for
the creation of a domestic capital markets in Africa that could see the
continent depending less on international markets.
In his remarks,
Mr Ben concurred with Mr Elumelu and with Prof Oramah and insisted that
Covid-19 has proved to Africa that the commodity driven model has failed
to create jobs and prosperity for all citizens.
He said it was
unfortunate that Africa manufactures only two percent of what it
produces but imports almost everything that it consumes.
“It is not a
question of money but rather a question of will. A country like
Bangladesh, which is a low income country, produces 97 percent of all
its consumption,” he said, calling for massive investments in
agriculture to double the productivity of an African farmer.
“These are the
issues that we must move as the private sector. As said by Prof Oramah,
the AfCFTA must get moving. It is unfortunate that it is delaying. Apart
from Covid-19 some politics were also slowing the AfCFTA,” he said.
Liberia
President H.E GeorgeWeah detailed a number of initiatives that his
country had undertaken to mitigate the impact of Covid-19 on the
economy.
He said the
pandemic slowed almost everything and people lost their businesses and
therefore, the need for government’s help. Liberia, he said did not have
total lockdown because it understands the size of the economy and the
dangers that total lockdown would pose to the economy.
Mr Coons said he was in support for the provision of robust support for Africa’s growth.
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