Craig Eisele on …..

July 13, 2011

What is a non-traditional Strategic Planner?

What is a nontraditional Strategic Planner?

The easy answer is one that does not use the same format as Boston Consulting Group or Booz Allen. But that is too easy. See the large firms are often brought in to help boost someone else’s plan or to Design and implement a Management Information System. But who challenges the Top Management of Major Companies today. The short answer is almost nobody. And the reasons are as obvious as fear and as subtle as brown nosing.

A NON traditional Strategic Planner can come in many forms but for the sake of this post… and of course to bolster my own work,,, I would like to share with you my approach to Strategic Planning.

Let’s start with a simple idea. Often the problem that a person or company thinks they are facing is not really the problem but a symptom. There are other times that the problem is misstated. But realizing that the core issues are not being addressed is an afterthought most of the time.

Then there is the failure to see the future with greater accuracy. A bold statement given that NO ONE can see the future but we can predict with greater accuracy the further we extend our information sources outside of the Core Business.

In deciding a future for a company it is always important to identify issues affecting the employees, the Supplies and the Customers.

The Non traditional approach will see what is happening in these entities world and what is the potential that their business or behavior will be affected. Not just stopping there but going even further as to what may be happening in the Communities from Local to National to International and then what is happening in Technology outside of your core.

The purpose of this extensive network information gathering is to provide not only data for current operations but to see where the future may  be affected by those external forces.

One need only look at Facebook’s phenomenal growth and now Facebook is facing n uncertain future in how to grow as the number of subscribers is flattening out and they look to Apps to grow or to change the paradigm in how their growth is measured.

Changing the paradigm is always an interesting way to change the future of a company… the Companies that are most successful do this on a regular basis and are leaders. The rest are followers and will grow or decline in response to how quickly they can adapt.

But there is another approach that is often over looked. When companies/ organizations or even societies face uncertain futures the Questions that are posed are usually a knee jerk reaction to a change in environment. WE HAVE A PROBLEM they say… but as I said above the problem they state is usually just a symptom and if treated as the sole problem does not address what is really going happening.

Sometime the problems are “unsolvable” in the context that they are presented. This is where my favorite technique is used the most and to the greatest advantage,

“IF YOU CANT SOLVE THE PROBLEM YOU ARE FACING YOU ARE FACING THE WRONG PROBLEM”

The second part of this is also appropriate in evaluating if the supposed problem is really a problem or just a symptom

“CHANGE THE DEFINITION OF THE PROBLEM TO COME UP WITH WORKABLE SOLUTION”  

This also opens the door to not only being an industry leader but ancillary business with limited windows of opportunity and fabulous returns on investment.

A Practical Example;

Egypt: a Country of 80+ million people that depend on the Nile River.. There is a nearly a century old Treaty brokered by the British that dictated the amount of water that must flow to Egypt from the riparian Countries (those upstream and on the Blue and White Nile Rivers). This was not just for the use of the Egyptian people but to prevent the salty water of the Mediterranean from moving up the Nile River and contaminating Fresh water (potable water) supplies.

Most of these countries are breaking the treaty for various reasons. The most egregious of these is Ethiopia which claims the water as its own for purposes of Industrial, Hydro Electric, Dams, Commercial, Agricultural and human consumption without regard to Egypt’s critical needs. Adding to this siphoning off of water is the study by Egypt that even with all the water previously guaranteed by the treaty it would have water shortage problems by 2016.

The PROBLEM that is stated is that these riparian countries must release the water to Egypt. In all frankness that will not happen. Egypt has said it vies the taking of this necessary water as an act of war, and they appear to be justified. But WAR in a conventional manner is not a resolution to the problems Egypt really faces.

Some have suggested that Egypt use Desalinization plants that consume power that is still in short supply in Egypt and if Fossil Fuel is used then the huge cost is difficult to bear for the industrial nations of Europe and North America let alone Egypt Egypt has authorized a nuclear power plant they hope will help but it does not sole the REAL PROBLEM.

From my statements above you know that I have attempted to redefine the problem. The problem is how much water flows through the Nile River. You may at first say that is obvious and given the current attempts to resolve the problem as most see it (that being the Riparian countries excessive use) that there is little hope of getting more water to the Nile. But you would be wrong in assuming that the above listed actions are the ONLY methods of getting water to flow in the Nile.

There is another way to bring water to the Nile… and yes I have found it… but I will not give it away at this time. This is how I do strategic planning… not only can I bring more water to the Nile for less than 500 million US Dollars but I can create and sustain 10’s of thousands of new jobs in the process. These jobs go a long way to improve the economy of Egypt and to foster greater stability as well. Basically this plan addresses several of Egypt’s needs at the same time.

How can Egypt pay for this… that answer is simple as well. With the exception of maybe 5 million dollars upfront the Entire project can be paid for with no other funds from Egypt or loans Guaranteed by Egypt or even by giving away things to outsiders. Others will pay if for no other reason than peace

This is the type of strategic planning I do. Find issues that appear to have no solution redefine those problems, devise a strategy that will not only address that particular problem but also other problems in the environment, incorporate other “benefits” into the solutions presented, and just as important find the economic benefit that pays for the solutions as implemented. It is a NON traditional manner of Strategic Planning… but something I think should be more main stream in all areas of business, government and society.

To be a truly effective Strategic Planner we must look beyond the reality presented to see if that is truly the reality. Challenge the conventional thinking and come up with creative but executable methods that incorporate benefits that are far reaching assure a future positive outcome.  It is not easy although it may appear to be. It takes a mindset that is not rigid, is flexible, and a think tank type approach. Simply it takes thought and creativity which few have today.

I am not soliciting business as I turn down 50 times more projects then I take on because most who seek my skills are not really looking for ideas they are looking for approval for their own. I am very very selective and of course expensive… but I generate returns far greater than most as I believe the economic realities demand profits in one way or another.

I am better in explaining things in person then I am in writing… as is the case for many my mind is usually faster than my fingers but I hope I was able to at least give you food for your thought processes

Craig Eisele

April 27, 2008

African Aid… Is It Really Aid Or Just Makes Us Feel Good??

African Aid… a study in inefficiency

OK… maybe I am not going to actually do a study… most of my data is allegoric (from stories). But it is a reality that Aid to Africa is not efficient for many reasons that are solvable.

When aid is given with strings attached such as the mandated use of the donor counties personnel or equipment and supplies then it is not aid to Africa it is aid to the Donor Countries’ manufacturing or consulting firms. Expert costs can be triple or even quadruple the cost of the same services in the Donor Countries because of travel, housing (to the donor countries standards) and high salaries of Donor country employees sent to Africa.

I have traveled to Africa frequently and have been in approximately 20 countries in the continent. While Greed, fraud and corruption do exist, it is the cost of goods and services that donor countries provide that takes a great deal of the AID that is supposedly given. Cash sent to most African Countries is subject to redistribution because of other more pressing needs. And sometimes the Strings on the aid have profound negative effects on other parts of the recipient African Countries economy and existing farming or manufacturing enterprises. There is an article in this blog about Namibia and Angola and the Cattle ranching that has been devastated by some of those strings to aid there.

I understand that Donor Countries want to try and maximize benefits to their domestic enterprises when giving aid… but competition for those aid funds can significantly reduce costs and maximize the benefit of the AID to the recipient countries.

Let me move to a different part of this issue… the raising of funds for Aid Organizations. Former President Bill Clinton has stated (paraphrased) that if there was profit to be made in solving global poverty then there would be no global poverty…. But that statement is based upon a false premise… that global poverty can be solved… I am adamant on this.. GLOBAL POVERTY CANNOT BE SOLVED…. Not in my life time… and not even in this century… poverty will always be with us as long as we are a society that functions on money… someone will always be at the bottom of the scale and hence we will always have poverty. This is a fact of life that cannot be dismissed out of hand. (Please note I am not tackling the issue of the measurement of poverty or its definition at this time… maybe later)

What we can do is significantly reduce poverty by revamping and reorganizing the AID that is given and the manner in which it is given.

People think that AID is free… it is not… every aid organization has to raise funds.. that take time, personnel and money… however we can make guidelines on how much of the aid given is actually used for those ongoing fund raising and strategizing efforts as well as the Organizations basic operations and expenses.. For this I am in favor of a sliding scale ranging from 3.5% to 20% depending on the total amount raised per year. This is not include the actual administration of the project (for which I feel not more than 20 % should be allocated to non-resident administration of the ACTUAL Project)

From personal experience:

I have been forming a new NGO (Non-Government Organization) and NPO (Not for Profit Organization) called the Africa Genesis Project. The mission is to “rehabilitate” the sub Saharan “trade routs” in this region. The studies have already been done showing the benefit in trade for the respective countries (a cost benefit analysis). But it does not even begin to show the increase in employment, local economies and the attraction to FDI (Foreign Direct Investment) that would accompany such a project.

The Cost for this is fast approaching 50 BILLION US Dollars. Is that a lot of money?? Yes it is… but in comparison to the 60 Billion dollars in aid for AIDS in Africa than this is smaller and brings more advantages (in my opinion) and allows the aid for AIDS to be delivered more effectively and efficiently to a greater number of people. I agree with the need for AIDS assistance… but I also know that the people of Africa need more.When it costs only 1,000 dollars to send a container to a Kenya Port but 10,000 dollars to take it inland at twice the time and takes 5 days to repair the truck afterwards,… this is an abomination and the extra costs are something the Africans cannot afford.

Roads bring JOBS, and jobs bring economic prosperity and that in turn brings peace and stability to Africa!!!

But how can we raise such amount of funds for the overall rehabilitation of Africa?? If ANYONE expects that Africa can finance this with its current economic situation and with the Debt that it already has, then that person is not fathoming the realities of the condition of Africa and worse is dismissing the prolonged suffering of hundreds of millions of people in Africa. Further it has allowed countries like China to take advantage of this situation to give “no string” loans that continue to exacerbate the problems in Africa.

The ONLY way to really help Africa is one MASSIVE injection of Aid that can transform most of Africa into a productive society. That aid can ONLY come from Governments around the world. That raises a major problem in how to even start such a fund raising effort to implement this project.

My calculations indicate I need 50 million dollars to START this project and 500 Million Dollars to continue to promote and administer the Africa genesis Project over 7 years.

Why so much?? One word answer… POLITICS!!!

I cannot even get an appointment with my own congressional or senate representative in the United States to present this project… and the form in which I presented is not in “proper form” with the relevant brochures and packages needed to promote such a massive project. Multiply that effort with my need to approach the governments of the United Kingdom, France and the rest of the EU, Japan. Australia, Canada, and the Middle East as well as many other countries, (as this is a global issue requiring a global solution) then you start to see not only the massive size of the Africa Project in Rehabilitating these trade routes, but the Global Efforts needed to see it though. And the ONLY way is to hire (at a significant cost) “Consultants” (lobbyists) who can effectively get this project into the hands of those who can make it happen in their respective Governments.

The Africa genesis Project will Guarantee that 96% of ALL money raised for the project will be spent directly on the project and not on fundraising, promotion or administrative expenses of the organization itself. Further that NO Distribution will be to any government organization UNLESS that Organization has actually performed or is performing real work on this roads project. Simply ONLY those actually working on the Road Project will be paid and 80 percent of ALL work must be by Local African Companies and using African employees.

We realize that a lot of Equipment must be purchased for this project. It is expected that Caterpillar and John Deer will receive about 500 million dollars each for equipment and spare part orders… HOWEVER WE MUST be able to negotiate process to reduce costs and maximize benefits to AFRICA. We will NOT tolerate paying even list, let alone OVER list as Caterpillar and John Deer have indicated in my limited discussions with them. The same for every other manufacture and supplier of other equipment, materials and supplies… COSTS will be PARAMOUNT in our vigilance to assure that this work can be done UNDER BUDGET. It is though our “lobbying” efforts that we will make sure that any “strings” attached to the aid given by donor countries for domestic purchases allow us to make bidding and negotiations fair practice in our efforts to supply this project. We cannot allow unfair profits (windfalls) to accrue to anyone on the backs of Africa and its people.

And yes, even I need to get paid, as I am not independently wealthy. So for those of you questioning that, I assure you I am NOT working for free and expect compensation that is reasonable for a project of this size. However I will note that I already know that there are many problems and issues that will need to be addressed on a project this size that will NOT be in the budget … hence my “compensation” will mostly be used for the resolution of those issues and to support the Africa Genesis Organization in its endeavors. Fist Aide Stations, water well drilling, education assistance and the like are just some of those things that are NOT in the Budget for this project and need to be taken care of but NOT from the 96% of the funds that were donated and are to be used ONLY for the Road rehabilitation project as already identified.

If you are a regular reader of this blog you know I have proposed creating a “backbone” infrastructure project that would transverse Africa as well as circumnavigate the Entire Continent, that would end up being approximately 70,000 Kilometers in length. This “backbone would have a 4 to 6 lane modern highway, an Electric Power line transmission, a railroad, and Fiber Optics and Oil and Gas and water pipelines, ALL TO BE FINANCED AND OPERATED BY PRIVATE (non governmental) INVESTMENT. This Investment could approach 1 trillion dollars over 10 to 15 years.

My plans for Africa my be grandiose to some… but a real vision was needed to solidify the continent for economic, and political and peace issues and the overall heath and welfare of the people of Africa… this is my mission… to transform Africa into a place where aid is not needed as much as it is now, and to improve the human sprit of all Africans.

Craig Eisele

March 31, 2008

Caterpillar Video on the Benefits of Road Construction in Africa

This may be a PR piece by Caterpillar for their benefit… nonetheless it is also a good PR piece for those who espouse the Highway building as necessary infrastructure for Africa. Madagascar may be an island but it is the same story on the Continent of Africa.

Click here: 

Caterpillar Madagascar Video

or cut and paste:

http://www.cat.com/cda/layout?m=8703&x=7&f=177263#/madagascar/

March 30, 2008

Outragous Costs of Domestic transport in Africa Shows Needs that Can Be Addressed by Private Enterprise.

The two arms of Coega, South Africa’s newest port, extend into the Indian Ocean in graceful arcs. These breakwaters — one is 2.6 km long, the other 1.3 km — are built from thousands of dolosse, huge, oddly-shaped, 30-ton concrete blocks that interlock. They are designed to protect the vessels that, when the port is fully operational in 2007, will use this facility to ship manganese, iron ore and other South African products to China, India and the rest of the world. The government-funded Coega Development Corporation (CDC), which is building an industrial zone on 11,000 hectares of farmland next to the port, likes to think of the massive complex on South Africa’s southeast coast, 20 km from Port Elizabeth, as a symbol of industrial Africa flexing its muscles. “If you want to change lives and the history of this continent, you need to develop infrastructure,” says Vuyelwa Qinga-Vika, spokeswoman for the cdc. “We’re not going to advance if we don’t even have the roads to bring medicine to the rural areas. We’ve got to start building.”

The call to construction is ringing out across Africa. Infrastructure is the new buzzword, pushed by leaders from South Africa’s Thabo Mbeki to Senegal’s Abdulaye Wade. It’s also a key topic at this week’s World Economic Forum (WEF) meeting in Cape Town, where political and business leaders from Africa will meet with heads of some of the world’s biggest companies to discuss, among other things, how Africa’s priority infrastructure projects can boost growth. According to a Gallup International survey commissioned by the WEF, Africans “focus more heavily on economic issues than do citizens in other parts of the world.” One in three Africans fear a failure of the economy compared to just one in five globally.

Despite a commodity boom that pushed growth to 5% in Africa last year, the continent’s leaders want better infrastructure to win more business. The New Partnership for Africa’s Development (NEPAD), an African initiative that aims to lure $64 billion in annual investment by tackling bad governance, ending conflicts and making the continent more business-friendly, has put improved infrastructure near the top of its to-do list. “There can be no meaningful development without trade,” reads NEPAD‘s infrastructure action plan. “And there can be no trade without adequate and reliable infrastructure.”

The need is as obvious as it is urgent. Africa’s roads and railway lines, ports and power grids are neither adequate nor reliable. Outside of southern Africa and Mauritius, much of the continent’s infrastructure is crumbling or nonexistent. Consider the Democratic Republic of Congo. You could fit France, Germany, Italy, Norway, Spain and Britain inside it, and the country is packed with timber and minerals, yet it has only a few thousand kilometers of paved road and 10,000 fixed telephone lines, and produces about the same amount of power as Albania. In other war-torn countries, such as Somalia and Sierra Leone, public buildings have been destroyed by years of fighting. Corruption and mismanagement have left public utilities in places such as Cameroon and Nigeria run down and inefficient.

The lack of infrastructure deters many companies from investing — and drives up costs for those that do. The World Bank estimates that to ship a container from Baltimore in the U.S. to Tanzania costs about $1,000, but to transport that same container from Tanzania to neighboring Burundi costs $10,000. “In many countries, companies have to generate their own power, dig for water, pay heavy distribution and telephone charges,” says David Hampshire, chairman of Diageo Africa, one of the continent’s biggest marketers of beer and spirits. “All these costs add up, and they end up being paid for by the consumer.”

To attract more investment, Africa has drawn up plans to spend billions over the next few decades. Zambia and Burkina Faso, both landlocked, want to build new rail lines through neighboring states to improve their connections to the sea. In East Africa, the Kenyan government and the rebel movement in southern Sudan plan to build a new railway track — at an estimated cost of more than $4 billion — from Sudan more than 1,000 km south to Rongai, Kenya, about 170 km northwest of Nairobi, where it will connect with the existing line to the Indian Ocean port of Mombasa. That notoriously inefficient harbor, along with some half a dozen others around Africa’s coast, is set to undergo a massive expansion and modernization program over the next few years.

The next decade may also finally see the completion of the Trans-Saharan Highway from Algeria to Lagos, Nigeria. Equally bold is the West African Gas Pipeline, which will tap natural gas from the Nigerian oil fields in the country’s southeast and then run almost 700 km along the coast with links to power plants in Lagos, Benin, Togo and Ghana. The most ambitious plan is for a massive dam on the lower Congo River which would eventually produce more than twice the power generated by China’s controversial Three Gorges scheme — enough to sell electricity across the continent as well as export it to Asia and Europe. But that project is at least 20 years away.

Surprisingly, funds for new projects aren’t lacking. Africa’s richest countries are eager to build. South Africa’s government, for instance, is funding the new Coega port and industrial zone. “Private business is not too keen on putting money into infrastructure, so the government has said it will take the lead,” says Lionel Billings, manager for Coega’s enterprise development and investor interaction. Rich donor nations in the West often help finance schemes in poorer countries, as does the World Bank. A growing number of private and foreign government-backed infrastructure funds based in Europe and the U.S., such as AIG African Infrastructure Fund and New Africa Infrastructure Fund, are also supplying capital.

The problem is confidence. Financiers, whether private or public, need projects that they can rely on. “We’ve got liquidity we’re embarrassed about,” says Keith Palmer, chairman of the London-based Emerging Africa Infrastructure Fund and vice chair of the U.K. investment bank NM Rothschild & Sons Ltd. “But there’s a lack of well-structured, creditworthy opportunities.” Business leaders cite numerous hurdles to investment: corruption, political instability and African governments’ lack of capacity to run huge projects and reluctance to hand over control of projects to the private sector. Richard Laing, chief executive of the Commonwealth Development Corporation, Britain’s agency for investment in the developing world, says the problem is dealing with African governments which have “an unwillingness to let go and a lot of distrust.”

There’s also a catch-22: Africa needs investment and improved infrastructure to develop, but finds it hard to attract the capital such projects need without more development. Thormählen Schweisstechnik, a German company that last year won the right to construct and operate for 25 years the planned railway line from Southern Sudan to the Kenyan coast, is already running into problems with the Kenyan government. Klaus Thormählen, head of the company, says, somewhat euphemistically, “the decision-making process [does not] maintain its dynamics during the times of our absence.” A spokesman in the Kenyan President’s office says that Kenya backs the scheme and is working with the German company to make sure the line is built.

Back at Coega port, a huge crane lifts another concrete block into position. The dock area, which was constructed behind a dam wall, has now been flooded, and is awaiting its first ship. “One of the things that will make it meaningful for South Africans is to see the first businesses set up here,” says Qinga-Vika. “It may just be concrete and steel and new roads, but this is a symbol of hope that we’re doing something to turn this city and continent around.”

Some Photos of the existing Trans-African Highway

For a good look at the condition of some of Africa’s “highways” please see the web site listed below.

“Trans-African Highway Shots” 

or cut and past the following:

http://www.virb.com/design4/photos/1103703

Road reflects why $568 billion in aid to Africa has largely failed


    

 

Wednesday, December 19, 2007

Road reflects why $568 billion in aid to Africa has largely failed

By CHRIS TOMLINSON Associated Press Writer
NAIROBI, Kenya (AP)

To judge how far aid has helped Africa along the road to prosperity, just look down at the pavement _ or the lack of it.
The most important highway in East Africa starts at the Indian Ocean port of Mombasa. Tens of thousands of trucks every year carry food, fuel and other goods to 100 million people in east and central Africa up a bone-jarring two-lane road.
Despite millions of aid dollars spent on roads, the wear and tear is so bad that journeys take weeks. And the cost makes it cheaper to have a container of corn shipped from Iowa than to truck it 500 miles (800 kilometers) to western Kenya.
In the 50 years since the first African countries won independence, the world has spent US$568 billion (euro394 billion) on Africa. Yet Africans are poorer now than a quarter century ago, and much of the money has ended up on the road to nowhere. This dismal record is sparking a vigorous debate on how best to help the world’s poorest continent, and to what degree aid is the answer.
A growing chorus of Africans is saying what they need is not handouts, but investment so they can rebuild on their own.
“Africans….are tired. They are tired of being the subject of everybody’s charity and care. And what is happening in many African countries now is the realization that nobody can do it but us,” said Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, a World Bank managing director and former finance minister of Nigeria, at a talk on a changing Africa. “We can invite partners who support us, but we have to start.”

___

Roads are the lifeblood of an economy, the delivery system for agriculture, mining, tourism and other mainstays of African industry. But roads in Africa are few and bad. When foreign companies calculate the price of doing business on the continent, they look at figures like the cost of transportation and decide to go somewhere else.
“No one would ever have 100 million people in the rich world along a broken-down, two-lane, undivided road as we do here,” said leading economist Jeffrey Sachs about Nairobi. “If the donors were thinking about what would really provide development, it’s a proper, divided highway on which truck traffic could go.”
Truth is, they did think of it _ and almost built it _ 40 years ago. But today, the east-west Trans-African Highway exists only on maps. On the ground, it turns into a muddy footpath in the jungles of eastern Congo.
The story of the highway shows why aid to Africa has largely failed in the past, and what can be learned for the future.
Back in 1969, the Japanese government proposed extending the Mombasa Highway to Lagos, Nigeria on the Atlantic Ocean. The four-lane, 4,400-mile (7,080-kilometer) paved highway would be slightly longer than Interstate 90 running from Boston to Seattle across the United States. It was to bring modern trade to six African countries.
By 1971, the deal had the support of the six countries, nine other rich countries and six international aid agencies. They hoped to have at least two lanes of all-weather road open by 1978.
It did not take long for problems to emerge. Dictator Idi Amin took control of Uganda and threatened neighboring Kenya, which then closed the highway.
The fight reflected a constant plague for foreign aid to Africa _ corrupt dictators, and donors who gave them money to protect political and economic interests. Nowhere was this exchange clearer than in Zaire, now known as Congo.
Zaire needed to build roads from scratch. But the Central African country was ruled by Mobutu Sese Seko, one of the most brutal dictators in African history.
Mobutu took power during the Cold War, at a time when the United States and the Soviet Union were scrambling for influence in Africa. In the mid-1970s, he was a funnel for arms flowing to anti-communist rebels.
And so billions of dollars poured into Zaire to keep him happy, and to maintain the flow of Zairean gold, diamonds and copper to the West. Western nations largely looked the other way as the aid money disappeared into his offshore bank accounts and into the pockets of dozens of corrupt leaders.
Mobutu stopped plans for the highway in 1974, after stealing the money Belgium gave him for initial surveys. In a well-known African joke that reflects the thinking of the time, a young African dictator calls Mobutu for advice after coming under rebel attack.
“Did they come by sea?” Mobutu asks.
“No,” the younger ruler would reply.
“Did they come by air?” Mobutu asks.
“No, they came by road,” the protege answers.
“Tsk tsk, my son, I always told you,” Mobutu says. “Never build roads.”

___

Despite Mobutu in Zaire, the highway was in good condition in Kenya. In the 1970s, the East African country’s economy was booming, with trucks filled with valuable coffee and tea running downhill from mile-high (1.6-kilometer-high) Nairobi and across breathtaking African savanna to the port of Mombasa.
But roads do not last forever. The average African highway is designed to last 15-20 years, if properly maintained, says Andrew Gitonga, the Kenya roads project officer for the European Union. Since 1983, the European Union has spent US$200 million (euro139 million) to repair Kenya’s section of the highway and has about US$120 million (euro83.2 million) more of road projects planned this year.
Gitonga says the road needs to be completely rebuilt.
“There has been no standard maintenance program for 15 years, so the roads are falling into disrepair until they collapse,” he says. “Some government contracts in the past were given in an untransparent manner to unqualified contractors without clear standards.”
The transition between good road work and bad is painfully obvious when you hit a pothole at 50 mph. A close examination of the hole will show that whoever built it skimped on the thickness of the rock bed and the asphalt surfacing, pocketing a little extra profit.
Almost every day road workers can be seen patching the holes. One man sprays in some tar, a second shovels in a little asphalt and a third goes over it twice with a compactor. Within five minutes the lane is open, with hundreds of cars every hour driving over a repair that will probably last less than six months, or until the seasonal rains wash it away.
The same neglect for maintenance has led to the slow deterioration of thousands of donor-funded projects over the years.
Just off the Mombasa highway in Nairobi, the International Committee of the Red Cross maintains its distribution hub for eastern Africa. Trucks loaded with food and supplies set off to deliver aid to some of the world’s most desperate people.
The biggest obstacle: The roads.
“The roads are in a desolate state and they are not getting any better,” says Bent Korsgaard, logistics director for the Kenya office.
A University of Minnesota study determined that big trucks cost about 43.4 cents a mile (1.6 kilometers) to operate on normal roads. In Africa, the cost for Red Cross trucks is US$2.88 (euro2) a mile (1.6 kilometers).
A truck that follows the Trans-African Highway for the 1,500 mile (2,400-kilometer), 21-day roundtrip to Butembo, Congo requires five days in the workshop when it gets back. It’s cheaper to hire a Russian cargo plane than to drive a truck to some cities within 620 miles (1,000 kilometers).
That doesn’t even count the bribes truckers have to pay on African roads. A recent survey in West Africa found they range from about US$3.33 (euro2.3) per 60 miles (97 kilometers) in Togo to US$25 (euro17) in Mali.

___

Roads are hardly the only aid fiascos. Kenya alone is littered with dozens of half-baked, half-built projects funded by wealthy countries, monuments to good intentions gone awry.
Often donors did not understand Africa or talk to Africans. The Norwegian government built a fish processing plant on Lake Turkana in the 1970s to provide jobs for nomadic cattle herders _ soon doomed in part because the local community had no fishing culture.
In a self-assessment in 1987, the World Bank found 106 out of 189 African development projects audited _ almost 60 percent _ had serious shortcomings or were complete failures. African agriculture projects failed 75 percent of the time.
The World Bank did better when it worked more closely with communities and better monitored projects. But a recent report on aid from the World Bank’s private arm, the International Finance Corporation, found only half of its Africa projects succeed.
Aid is also hampered because it is often determined not just by what poor countries need but by what rich countries want to give to boost their own economies.
Much so-called foreign aid never leaves the country that promised it, because donor governments spend it to buy domestically-produced products or hire its own citizens as consultants. The World Bank estimates that throughout the 1980s, more than half of all aid was tied to what donor countries wanted to export, often at higher prices than could be found on the market. This practice reduced the value of aid by anywhere from 11 to 30 percent.
Under the Buy American Act, the U.S. Agency for International Development must spend aid money to buy products and services from U.S. suppliers whenever possible, and then deliver them aboard expensive U.S.-flagged ships or planes.
“Foreign assistance is far from charity,” J. Brian Atwood, the USAID director under former President Bill Clinton, told Congress in 1995. “It is an investment in American jobs, American business.”
Other rich nations do the same. Japan, one of the largest donors to Africa, provides a lot of aid in the form of four-wheel-drive vehicles _ despite the roads.
Sachs, the Columbia University professor, argues past aid failed because not enough was invested at every level, in every sector. In 2004, Sachs and the United Nations started the Millennium Project experiment to supply 12 African villages with all they need, all at once, and see if they can be self-sufficient in five years.
“The speed of results is astounding and the point is that if the resources are there, the rate of improvement is wonderful,” Sachs says. “I believe that we’re at the cusp of that now.”
Sachs’ nemesis, economist William Easterly of New York University, retorts that Sachs’ results are on a very small scale. He says only a free market can lift a nation out of poverty, and wants to see far more limited aid for specific programs with good track records, such as health care.
Easterly argues that aid bureaucracies are now rewarded for giving money that never reaches those who need it.
“It’s just not possible for outsiders with their experts to create economic development and prosperity in another country,” he says. “We should say: `There are a lot of problems and as rich outsiders we can’t fix everything, but where can we do the most good for the most people?”’
The stakes are high. The outcome will decide if _ and how _ the world spends another US$568 (euro394) billion on Africa.

___

The dream of a world-class road network for Africa is still alive, at least on paper. The African Union has a plan to build it, but it would take tens of billions of dollars that could come only from rich countries.
The east-west Trans-African Highway is still missing about 1,826 miles (2,939 kilometers). But West African states are building a regional network that will run from landlocked Chad to the Western port of Dakar in Senegal, and from Mauritania to Nigeria. Kenya is also building a road to neighboring Ethiopia.
Aid to Africa is going up again to about US$37 (euro26) per capita, from a low of US$24 in 1999. But this time the world has learned something. Aid to countries with more democratic systems has tripled at the expense of those whose leaders have unchecked power, according to the World Bank.
These days, when a new road is under construction in Kenya, white cars with European Union flags on the doors visit every day to make sure every inch of the highway is built to specification.
And a maintenance contract comes with it.

 
To judge how far aid has helped Africa along the road to prosperity, just look down at the pavement or the lack of it.

The most important highway in East Africa starts at the Indian Ocean port of Mombasa. Tens of thousands of trucks every year carry food, fuel and other goods to 100 million people in east and central Africa up a bone-jarring two-lane road.

Despite millions of aid dollars spent on roads, the wear and tear is so bad that journeys take weeks. And the cost makes it cheaper to have a container of corn shipped from Iowa than to truck it 500 miles to western Kenya.
————————————————–
“Africans do not want to be viewed as a charity case,” adds Okonjo-Iweala, a World Bank managing director. “Ninety-nine point nine percent of Africans are people who are getting on with their own lives. All they are asking for is….a set of tools.”

Roads are the lifeblood of an economy, the delivery system for agriculture, mining, tourism and other mainstays of African industry. But roads in Africa are few and bad. When foreign companies calculate the price of doing business on the continent, they look at figures like the cost of transportation and decide to go somewhere else.

“No one would ever have 100 million people in the rich world along a broken-down, two-lane, undivided road as we do here,” said leading economist Jeffrey Sachs about Nairobi. “If the donors were thinking about what would really provide development, it’s a proper, divided highway on which truck traffic could go.”

Truth is, they did think of it and almost built it 40 years ago. But today, the east-west Trans-African Highway exists only on maps. On the ground, it turns into a muddy footpath in the jungles of eastern Congo.

In conversations with some colleagues and a few so-called friends, I’ve often been the subject of strong criticism for my view that aid money would be better spent on infrastructure and institutions that facilitated the free flow of business and international trade as opposed to food shipments. It’s hard for non-supply chain/logistics people to understand that if you don’t have the necessary infrastructure in place it doesn’t matter how much you throw at the system, it simply isn’t going to move well and all your money is going to be eaten up in logistics costs. It’s no different than looking at international trade – countries with poor infrastructure make trade difficult and expensive. It’s no different with aid logistics. And I think this article is accurate in stating that what most Africans want is not a handout, but simply the means to stand on their own two feet and support themselves. This guy gets it. Although to get Africa’s infrastructure off the ground will take more than micro-credits the concept is still there.

 

http://www.taipeitimes.com/

Published on Taipei Times
http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/editorials/archives/2007/12/22/2003393678

Trans-African Highway mirrors failure of Africa aid

Africans are poorer now than a quarter century ago, despite the US$568 billion in aid poured into the continent in the past 50 years. Many say what is needed is investment, not more aid By Chris Tomlinson
AP, NAIROBI
Saturday, Dec 22, 2007, Page 9

http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/editorials/photo/2007/12/22/2007112964

ILLUSTRATION: MOUNTAIN PEOPLE

To judge how far aid has helped Africa along the road to prosperity, just look down at the pavement — or the lack of it.

The most important highway in East Africa starts at the Indian Ocean port of Mombasa. Tens of thousands of trucks every year carry food, fuel and other goods to 100 million people in east and central Africa up a bone-jarring two-lane road.

Despite millions of aid dollars spent on roads, the wear and tear is so bad that journeys take weeks. And the cost makes it cheaper to have a container of corn shipped from Iowa than to truck it 800km to western Kenya.

In the 50 years since the first African countries won independence, the world has spent US$568 billion on Africa. Yet Africans are poorer now than a quarter century ago, and much of the money has ended up on the road to nowhere. This dismal record is sparking a vigorous debate on how best to help the world’s poorest continent, and to what degree aid is the answer.

A growing chorus of Africans is saying what they need is not handouts, but investment so they can rebuild on their own.

“Africans … are tired. They are tired of being the subject of everybody’s charity and care. And what is happening in many African countries now is the realization that nobody can do it but us,” said Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, a World Bank managing director and former finance minister of Nigeria, at a talk on a changing Africa. “We can invite partners who support us, but we have to start.”

LIFEBLOOD

Roads are the lifeblood of an economy, the delivery system for agriculture, mining, tourism and other mainstays of African industry. But roads in Africa are few and bad. When foreign companies calculate the price of doing business on the continent, they look at figures like the cost of transportation and decide to go somewhere else.

“No one would ever have 100 million people in the rich world along a broken-down, two-lane, undivided road as we do here,” said leading economist Jeffrey Sachs about Nairobi. “If the donors were thinking about what would really provide development, it’s a proper, divided highway on which truck traffic could go.”

Truth is, they did think of it — and almost built it — 40 years ago. But today, the east-west Trans-African Highway exists only on maps. On the ground, it turns into a muddy footpath in the jungles of eastern Congo.

The story of the highway shows why aid to Africa has largely failed in the past, and what can be learned for the future.

Back in 1969, the Japanese government proposed extending the Mombasa Highway to Lagos, Nigeria on the Atlantic Ocean. The four-lane, 7,080km paved highway would be slightly longer than Interstate 90 running from Boston to Seattle across the US. It was to bring modern trade to six African countries.

By 1971, the deal had the support of the six countries, nine other rich countries and six international aid agencies. They hoped to have at least two lanes of all-weather road open by 1978.

It did not take long for problems to emerge. Dictator Idi Amin took control of Uganda and threatened neighboring Kenya, which then closed the highway.

MOBUTU

The fight reflected a constant plague for foreign aid to Africa — corrupt dictators, and donors who gave them money to protect political and economic interests. Nowhere was this exchange clearer than in Zaire, now known as Congo.

Zaire needed to build roads from scratch. But the Central African country was ruled by Mobutu Sese Seko, one of the most brutal dictators in African history.

Mobutu took power during the Cold War, at a time when the US and the Soviet Union were scrambling for influence in Africa. In the mid-1970s, he was a funnel for arms flowing to anti-communist rebels.

And so billions of dollars poured into Zaire to keep him happy, and to maintain the flow of Zairean gold, diamonds and copper to the West. Western nations largely looked the other way as the aid money disappeared into his offshore bank accounts and into the pockets of dozens of corrupt leaders.

Mobutu stopped plans for the highway in 1974, after stealing the money Belgium gave him for initial surveys. In a well-known African joke that reflects the thinking of the time, a young African dictator calls Mobutu for advice after coming under rebel attack.

“Did they come by sea?” Mobutu asks.

“No,” the younger ruler would reply.

“Did they come by air?” Mobutu asks.

“No, they came by road,” the protege answers.

“Tsk tsk, my son, I always told you,” Mobutu says. “Never build roads.”

REPAIRS, REBUILDING

Despite Mobutu in Zaire, the highway was in good condition in Kenya. In the 1970s, the East African country’s economy was booming, with trucks filled with valuable coffee and tea running downhill from 1.6km-high Nairobi and across breathtaking African savanna to the port of Mombasa.

But roads do not last forever.

The average African highway is designed to last 15 to 20 years, if properly maintained, says Andrew Gitonga, the Kenya roads project officer for the EU. Since 1983, the EU has spent US$200 million to repair Kenya’s section of the highway and has about US$120 million more of road projects planned this year.

Gitonga said the road needs to be completely rebuilt.

“There has been no standard maintenance program for 15 years, so the roads are falling into disrepair until they collapse,” he said. “Some government contracts in the past were given in an untransparent manner to unqualified contractors without clear standards.”

The transition between good road work and bad is painfully obvious when you hit a pothole at 80.5kph. A close examination of the hole will show that whoever built it skimped on the thickness of the rock bed and the asphalt surfacing, pocketing a little extra profit.

Almost every day road workers can be seen patching the holes. One man sprays in some tar, a second shovels in a little asphalt and a third goes over it twice with a compactor. Within five minutes the lane is open, with hundreds of cars every hour driving over a repair that will probably last less than six months, or until the seasonal rains wash it away.

MISGUIDED DONORS

The same neglect for maintenance has led to the slow deterioration of thousands of donor-funded projects over the years.

Just off the Mombasa highway in Nairobi, the International Committee of the Red Cross maintains its distribution hub for eastern Africa. Trucks loaded with food and supplies set off to deliver aid to some of the world’s most desperate people.

The biggest obstacle: The roads.

“The roads are in a desolate state and they are not getting any better,” says Bent Korsgaard, logistics director for the Kenya office.

A University of Minnesota study determined that big trucks cost about US$0.434 per 1.6km to operate on normal roads. In Africa, the cost for Red Cross trucks is US$2.88 per 1.6km.

A truck that follows the Trans-African Highway for the 2,400km, 21-day roundtrip to Butembo, Congo requires five days in the workshop when it gets back. It’s cheaper to hire a Russian cargo plane than to drive a truck to some cities within 1,000km.

That doesn’t even count the bribes truckers have to pay on African roads. A recent survey in West Africa found they range from about US$3.33 per 97km in Togo to US$25 in Mali.

Roads are hardly the only aid fiascos. Kenya alone is littered with dozens of half-baked, half-built projects funded by wealthy countries, monuments to good intentions gone awry.

GOOD INTENTIONS

Often donors did not understand Africa or talk to Africans. The Norwegian government built a fish processing plant on Lake Turkana in the 1970s to provide jobs for nomadic cattle herders — soon doomed in part because the local community had no fishing culture.

In a self-assessment in 1987, the World Bank found 106 out of 189 African development projects audited — almost 60 percent — had serious shortcomings or were complete failures. African agriculture projects failed 75 percent of the time.

The World Bank did better when it worked more closely with communities and better monitored projects. But a recent report on aid from the World Bank’s private arm, the International Finance Corp, found only half of its Africa projects succeed.

Aid is also hampered because it is often determined not just by what poor countries need but by what rich countries want to give to boost their own economies.

Much so-called foreign aid never leaves the country that promised it, because donor governments spend it to buy domestically-produced products or hire its own citizens as consultants. The World Bank estimates that throughout the 1980s, more than half of all aid was tied to what donor countries wanted to export, often at higher prices than could be found on the market. This practice reduced the value of aid by anywhere from 11 to 30 percent.

Under the Buy American Act, the US Agency for International Development must spend aid money to buy products and services from US suppliers whenever possible, and then deliver them aboard expensive US-flagged ships or planes.

“Foreign assistance is far from charity,” J. Brian Atwood, the USAID director under former President Bill Clinton, told Congress in 1995. “It is an investment in American jobs, American business.”

Other rich nations do the same. Japan, one of the largest donors to Africa, provides a lot of aid in the form of four-wheel-drive vehicles — despite the roads.

MILLENNIUM PROJECT

Sachs argues past aid failed because not enough was invested at every level, in every sector. In 2004, Sachs and the UN started the Millennium Project experiment to supply 12 African villages with all they need, all at once, and see if they can be self-sufficient in five years.

“The speed of results is astounding and the point is that if the resources are there, the rate of improvement is wonderful,” Sachs says. “I believe that we’re at the cusp of that now.”

Sachs’ nemesis, economist William Easterly of New York University, retorts that Sachs’ results are on a very small scale. He says only a free market can lift a nation out of poverty, and wants to see far more limited aid for specific programs with good track records, such as health care.

Easterly argues that aid bureaucracies are now rewarded for giving money that never reaches those who need it.

“It’s just not possible for outsiders with their experts to create economic development and prosperity in another country,” he said. “We should say: `There are a lot of problems and as rich outsiders we can’t fix everything, but where can we do the most good for the most people?”‘

The stakes are high. The outcome will decide if — and how — the world spends another US$568 billion on Africa.

DREAM STILL ALIVE

The dream of a world-class road network for Africa is still alive — at least on paper. The African Union has a plan to build it, but it would take tens of billions of dollars that could come only from rich countries.

The east-west Trans-African Highway is still missing about 2,939km. But West African states are building a regional network that will run from landlocked Chad to the Western port of Dakar in Senegal, and from Mauritania to Nigeria. Kenya is also building a road to neighboring Ethiopia.

Aid to Africa is going up again to about US$37per capita, from a low of US$24 in 1999. But this time the world has learned something. Aid to countries with more democratic systems has tripled at the expense of those whose leaders have unchecked power, according to the World Bank.

These days, when a new road is under construction in Kenya, white cars with EU flags on the doors visit every day to make sure every inch of the highway is built to specification.

And a maintenance contract comes with it.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trans-African_Highway_network

Capetown to Nairobi
Nairobi to Lagos
Lagos to Dakar
Dakar to Kano
Kano to Algiers
Algiers to the 21st century.

 

Would you try to off-road?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Map_of_Trans-African_Highways.PNG


http://www.expertafrica.com/



 


Andrew Maykuth, The Inquirer’s Johannesburg bureau chief, and photographer Michael Wirtz journeyed through East Africa, accompanying a food aid truck into rebel-held territory in Sudan. Their odyssey through Kenya and Uganda into Sudan is chronicled here in articles, photos, and multimedia presentations.


http://www213.pair.com/maykuth/odyssey/pages/start.html

Andrew Maykuth, The Inquirer’s Johannesburg bureau chief, and photographer Michael Wirtz journeyed through East Africa, accompanying a food aid truck into rebel-held territory in Sudan. Their odyssey through Kenya and Uganda into Sudan is chronicled here in articles, photos, and multimedia presentations.

Trans African Highway 1 on Flicker Photo Sharing: http://www.flickr.com/photos/11707386@N06/2201934782/

 



Start the year off right. Easy ways to stay in shape in the new year.

TOO Many Committies May DOOM a “Trans-African Highway” System

The below are a reason why a “TRANS-AFRICAN HIGHWAY”  is so difficult to realize. How many committees are necessary?? Would it not be better to handle ALL of these from the AU (African Union)???

  • Lagos-Mombasa Trans-African Highway Authority
  • Coordinating Committee of the Dakar-Ndjamena Highway
  • Algiers-Lagos Trans-Saharan Coordinating Committee
  • Tangiers-Lagos Trans-African Highway Coordinating Committee
  • Ndjamena-Masawa-Djibouti Trans-Sahelian Highway Coordinating Committee
  • Tripoli-Windhoek Highway Coordinating Committee
  • Beira-Lobito Trans Southern African Highway Coordinating Committee
  • Tangiers-Cairo Trans-African Highway Coordinating Committee
  • March 28, 2008

    Infrastructure Development Tops AfDB Projects in Africa

    I have read the article below and am in awe of the lack of strategic planning and the failure of appropriate methodology to bring to Africa this much needed Infrastructure. This lack of this basic “backbone” infrastructure is what hold Africa back more than any other issue that faces Africa today. Trying to develop Africa in the same way as North America or Europe is NOT feasible. There has to be a unique and special plan such as the one developed by Trans-African Development  Strategies and the sister Company Trans African Development Company to bring this “backbone” Infrastructure to fruition. The current approach will hold Africa back for at least 50 years. When I read articles like this I can honestly say I am furious at the lack of true understanding… but then I remember that organizations like AfDB are NOT inclined to think “outside the box” …. As those who know me will tell you I subscribe to the basic philosophy “If you cannot solve the problem you are facing…. then you are facing the wrong problem” If AfDB and others would redefine the problem as I have then the realistic and implementable solutions would be obvious!!! But I have tried to discuss this with AfDB and others… and to my dismay they are not interested in even considering anything but the “Status Quo” thus dooming Africa and it’s people to decades of unnecessary poverty and suffering. My offer to AfDB and others interested in truly and honestly solving these and other issues that face Africa remains open but I am NOT optimistic that closed minded individuals will ever consider other pragmatic approaches.
    Infrastructure development tops AfDB projects in Africa
     
     
    The announcement was made during a recent conference on African infrastructure held in Senegal, which brought together donors, government ministers, and representatives of regional bodies such as the African Union and its intergovernmental development initiative, NEPAD.
    An AfDB press release notes that the promised funds will come from the bank’s low-interest lending window, the African Development Fund (ADF). In December, the Bank secured commitments from donors to contribute a record $8.9 billion to replenish the ADF for the next three years.
    It has earlier been reported that the loans will finance regional infrastructure projects, including the construction of “a number of major road and rail projects aimed at crisscrossing the continent with transport corridors.”
    Proposed projects would include transcontinental transportation corridors that would require a huge outpouring of money. They would serve to benefit exporters and, by extension, transnational companies that profit the most from Africa’s commodities.Some of the more ambitious proposed projects include the construction of “Trans-African highway projects to connect Beira in Mozambique to Lobito in Angola, Dakar in Senegal to Lagos in Nigeria, and Lagos to Mombassa in Kenya.”
    While Africa suffers from an acute lack of infrastructure, it is important to consider what type of infrastructure is most needed to help alleviate poverty on the continent. By and large, transcontinental highways and railroads will require a huge outpouring of money and serve to benefit exporters and, by extension, transnational companies that profit the most from Africa’s commodities. Roads and high-quality railroads are indeed necessary to move goods to and from land-locked countries such as Uganda.
    The sheer scale of transcontinental projects, however, could distract effort and funds from these more manageable projects, and in the end the more grandiose projects have a higher likelihood of being abandoned because of unmet expectations.
    At the same time, Africa’s poor will likely remain cut off by the lack of basic local road networks and adversely affected by the intense footprint that such large-scale physical infrastructure projects often entail.
    A recent study by International Rivers and Environmental Defense also shows that large, capital-intensive infrastructure projects such as these tend to be the most prone to corruption. Questions also remain as to whether the AfDB has the requisite experience to identify and mitigate the serious potential impacts of these projects, and whether it wields sufficient leverage to ensure that its social and environmental safeguards, which are strong on paper, are enforced.
    Since it resumed regular operations after facing a financial crisis in the early 1990′s, the AfDB has sought to define itself as a lender with special expertise on infrastructure in Africa. It has consistently allocated a significant portion of its lending to the sector, and was chosen to coordinate regional infrastructure initiatives, such as NEPAD’s Infrastructure Action Plan and the Infrastructure Consortium for Africa (ICA). However, the AfDB has made limited progress in its convening role, and few of its ambitious plans to create regional energy, transportation, and water initiatives under NEPAD have come to fruition.
    While African governments appear keen to benefit from this and other regional infrastructure schemes, it remains unclear the extent to which this latest initiative is demand-driven or being pursued at the behest of donors. The lion’s share of new donor commitments at the AfDB have been earmarked for infrastructure, while a new high-level panel (see “High-level panel issues report on prospects for African Development Bank”) on the Bank recognizes that the board of the ADF is disproportionately influenced by its donors. A recent Financial Times article suggests that AfDB President Donald Kaberuka “is facing dissent from some African staff concerned that efforts to carve out an independent role for the AfDB are being undermined by some western donors.”

    March 5, 2008

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    December 6, 2007

    Surprise: Africa Needs $43 Billion to Restore Road Network

    Actually this should not be a surprise to anyone. DRC (Democratic Republic of Congo) which is the land mass size of ALL of Western Europe, is proported to have less than 500 Kilometers (300 miles) of PAVED Roads. Trans African Development Company (Not-For-Profit Company) has been attempting to establish a fund to raise 45 Billion US Dollars to rehabilitate the Sub-Saharan Trade Routes as a form of AID to Africa… This “Aid” is the type that Africa NEEDS to help sustain itself and the benefits are already well quantified!!

    Craig Eisele

    Here is the Article:

    Continent Requires $43 Billion to Restore Road Network

    Leadership (Abuja)

    NEWS

    3 November 2007

    Posted to the web 5 November 2007

    By Ofem Uket

    African states, including Nigeria, will require about $43 billion to restore the state of roads in the region, considering the long neglect and low maintenance of the highways.Such roads will require immediate rehabilitation, and this restoration can be applied on such roads that are economically justifiable, and to prevent further deterioration, would require annual expenditure over the next 10 years of at least, one per cent of regional Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

    The economics of cost of poor road maintenance are borne by road users. Refusing or differing road maintenance increases the cost of road transport, and raises the net cost on the economy. Each naira differed or saved on road maintenance increases the vehicle operating cost.

    One of the key concepts to reduce the low level of maintenance on roads is by commercialisation of roads, which of course, the federal government has embarked on through the bidding process on classified roads across the country to be given out on concession.

    Another key element of surface transportation now and in the future, will be toll roads. That is, bringing roads into the market place, and putting them on a fee for service basis. That way, the government will spend less, and roads will be more attractive to use and will be restored to its lost glorious condition of the past.

    For instance, Ghana installed an independent board to oversee the management of its road fund created in 1995, Tanzania in 1992, and Zambia in 1995, while Lesotho and Malawi are in the process of creating autonomous road funds and road boards.

    Out of the 10.711 kilometres of road (motorway) networks in France, 7.186 kilometres are owned and operated by concessionaires for a toll of half a Franc per kilometer (6 cent/mile) , which is charged to cover the cost of financing, construction, operation, maintenance and general profit. And in other countries like Chile, Santiago and South America, they charge according to the distance covered, and the charges are structured in three levels.

    Motorists in Nigeria are willing to pay for the use of roads, according to statistics on random sampling opinion, in so far as federal roads are put in a perfect motorable condition that will guarantee safety of lives and property, contrary to the death traps that exist on the highways presently.

    There has to be a clear cut distinction on maintenance and rehabilitation of federal roads handled by government, and the ones managed by the private sector under the commercialisation exercise.

    December 5, 2007

    Africa’s Development Tied to Technology

    Ugwuh Hinges Africa’s Devt On Technology
    This Day (Lagos)

    NEWS
    28 November 2007
    Posted to the web 28 November 2007
    By Funmi Peter-Omale
    Abuja
    Minister of Commerce and Industry, Charles Ugwuh, has said Africa’s industrial development must be anchored on human capacity building, investment in health, education and training.

    Ugwuh, who said this yesterday in Abuja, in commemoration of this year’s Africa Industrialisation Day, said in the current knowledge-based global economy, industrialisation is increasingly driven by science, technology and innovation.

    He said “the ability to develop, acquire, upgrade and adapt technologies, is a key element for competing effectively in the global market. Africa’s industrialisation can only be accelerated and sustained on a solid technological base, therefore, programmes and polices have to be designed and implemented to enhance science, technology and innovation capacity of African countries.

    “There must be continuous flow of scientific discoveries, development and adaptation of technologies to ensure improvement in productivity and competitive production of industrial goods in Africa,” he said.

    While describing this year’s theme, “Technology and Innovation for Industry: Investing in People is Investing in the Future,” as apt, he added that countries that have made massive investment in Research and Development and created strong national innovation system, demonstrate how a country could climb the ladder of value and participate effectively in the global value chain.

    He said “Africa cannot afford to be bystanders at the technological marvels that create economic value and transform societies, to that end, converting brain drain into brain gain is critical, to address the issue of capacity deficit and scale up capacity building in Africa.”

    United Nations Industrial Development Organisation (UNIDO) Director General, Mr Kandeh Yumkella, in a message, said African countries must reassess their relevant policies and strategies, to mainstream science and technology into national and sectoral plans and priorities, in order not to be left behind, as countries all over the world struggle to meet the Millennium Development Goals.

    Globalization on Trail for Failure to Share With Lesser Developed Nations

    Globalisation in the Dock
    Inter Press Service (Johannesburg)

    NEWS
    28 November 2007
    Posted to the web 28 November 2007

    By Francis Kokutse and Rosalia Omungo
    Dar es Salaam
    The latest conference to be held under the Helsinki Process opened in Tanzania’s commercial hub, Dar es Salaam, Tuesday, with calls for the gains of globalisation to be shared fairly amongst nations.

    “There is a widespread sense that this framework is neither complete nor balanced,” said Tanzanian Foreign Affairs Minister Bernard Membe. “Many countries lack the basic economic, technological and institutional capacities needed to benefit from globalisation, and have limited bargaining power to fully participate in global markets.”

    The Helsinki Process on Globalisation and Democracy is a joint initiative by Finland and Tanzania that got underway in 2003, to give representatives of the North and South “a new kind of equal forum…to come together to discuss common issues of concern”, according to the Helsinki website. This came against the realisation that the problems posed by globalisation require broad-based solutions.

    The first phase of the process (2003-2005) focused, in part, on developing extensive co-operation to address global problems, and concluded with a conference in the Finnish capital, Helsinki. The second leg of the initiative (2005-2007) has aimed at pushing for certain proposals made during the first chapter to be implemented; its objectives also included continuing with broad consultation on the difficulties facing the international community.

    This week’s conference (Nov. 27-29), being held under the theme ‘Inclusive Governance — Bridging Global Divides’, marks the end of the second phase of the Helsinki Process. It will review what has been achieved over the past two years.

    Membe said global institutions such as the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank and the World Trade Organisation had to become more democratic and inclusive.

    In addition, he highlighted the need for inequalities of market access to be dealt with, and noted that there was an urgent need to give social concerns equal weight with economic factors in efforts to free trade: “Trade liberalisation requires proper institutions for adjustment and social security — capital flows will dry up in times of social unrest — and international investment calls for rapid educational advancement of the labour force.”

    Delegates at the opening ceremony were also addressed by Finnish Deputy Foreign Affairs Minister Teija Tiilikainen, who echoed the call for improved global governance. This was needed, she said, to deal with “contemporary challenges related, for example, to…changes taking place in global security and the environment…”.

    Tiilikainen said the nature of globalisation required “all international actors (to) join their efforts”, and that since the launch of the Helsinki Process in 2003, “the need for dialogue among stakeholders from different regions (had) only become clearer”.

    “Bridging the divides between different states, cultures and actors seems to be more topical now than it ever has been and therefore it is important that we consider how the experience of the Helsinki Process could support us in this endeavour.”

    Tiilikainen said the Helsinki Process had been able to provide a “neutral forum for dialogue” where no single group felt “disadvantaged or prejudiced”.

    “This may not seem as a great achievement in and of itself, but we must remember that it is very difficult to build trust and new kinds of partnerships in an environment where one group or another feels underhanded.”

    The opening events of the Dar es Salaam meeting also included a panel discussion on how the experiences of the Helsinki Process could help overcome global divisions.

    Present at the discussion was Anna Tibaijuka, U.N. under-secretary-general and executive director of the United Nations Human Settlements Programme (UN-HABITAT), who said that inadequate local government was posing severe challenges to development in an era of rapid urbanisation.

    “We need to have complete devolution of power, a genuine one where we empower people with their locally elected leaders to decide their development,” she told IPS.

    “When people are moving into cities, we have to find a way for their voice to be heard in a structured manner.”

    For his part, Solomon Gichira — programmes officer at the Nairobi-based All African Conference of Churches — believes people at grass roots can come up with their own solutions for problems, and that little faith should be placed in officials.

    “Government does not act. Once you get to power you forget the people’s problems, from the potholes in the roads to bigger problems. If we go to the people, we will move; if not, we will go back to square one.”

    According to UN-HABITAT, 2007 marked a watershed in urbanisation: it was the first year in which the number of people living in cities equaled that living in rural areas. Urban growth is highest in sub-Saharan Africa.

    By 2030, some five billion people are expected to be city dwellers, against about three billion in the countryside.

    However, cities are ill-equipped to deal with this influx. Already, about a billion people — one in six persons — live in slums. In sub-Saharan Africa, more than 72 percent of urban dwellers live in informal settlements.

    Kufuor Gives Recipe for Africa’s Economic Growth

    Kufuor Gives Recipe for Region’s Economic Growth
    Vanguard (Lagos)

    NEWS
    28 November 2007
    Posted to the web 28 November 2007

    By Victor Ahiuma-Young
    Lagos
    GHANIAN President, Mr. John Kufuor, yesterday in Accra, Ghana, said the process towards economic emancipation of the African continent was getting tougher by the day in the face of globalisation.

    Mr. Kufuor noted that the continent has to forge strategic partnership with others outside it to benefit from technological transfer, attract investments for projects and enhance accessibility to global market.

    At the formal emergence of a new trade union organisation in the continent, International Trade Union Confederation AFrican Regional Organisation (ITUC-Africa), Mr. Kufuor pointed out that the daunting task of economic liberation of the continent could be achieved with government, employers and labour working at cross purposes but through a winning partnership amongst these stakeholders.

    Declaring the congress of the new ITUC-Africa open, the Ghanian President told delegates across the African continent and beyond that the greater challenge facing the continent’s economic emancipation was information technology and declared that African must be in the mainstream of ICT which is moving at a fast pace to take full advantage of globalisation.

    AFDB Seeks “Intelectuals” to Promote Africa’s Economic Growth

    AFDB’s Plan to Promote Africa’s Economic Growth
    East African Business Week (Kampala)

    NEWS
    26 November 2007
    Posted to the web 26 November 2007
    By Geoffrey Kamali

    The African Development Bank (AfDB) has for some time now been on a campaign to involve African intellectuals into dialogue on the African development agenda. Recently, the AfDB, the UN Economic Commission for Africa (UNECA) and the African Economic Consortium, convened the second African Economic conference to encourage such dialogue. East African Business Week’s Geoffrey Kamali caught up with the President of AfDB, Dr. Donald Kaberuka over the new partnership and below are the excerpts.

    The idea you initiated to involve African economists and researchers into debate on development issues affecting the continent appears to be wide, how is it going to work?

    It is working already, because the idea to widen debate on African development issues to include African economists, the think tanks has results.

    These are researchers from universities and the think-tanks and they come here to share ideas. The objective of this conference is to allow African economists and think-tanks to share scientific thinking on the development issues of the day. We were in Tunis (last year) and we have done so now. Every year, we add to our stock of knowledge on how things will work or not.

    Has the process started feeding into policy making?

    It’s still too early but there have been extensive discussions at this conference on managing the natural resources boom. Clearly now, there is positive dialogue, but this is quite bigger. If it is feeding into policy immediately, maybe not. But at least policy makers now have got a wide range of instruments that have been produced by the economists.

    When is that time coming when research findings should feed into policy making?

    Policies are made over a long period of time. Policies are not static, they evolve everyday. And my take will be that they are already getting together economists and policy makers in an understanding. On one hand you have practitioners handling issues on a daily basis, and on the other side you’ve got economists who handle things maybe on a theoretical point. Now, there are realities of both sides. As they interact, I expect the quality of policies to keep improving.

    But the thinking of African economies is mainly done outside Africa and there’s nothing wrong with that. International financial institutions and agencies have in as much driven the African agenda, but what is happening here is now an African perspective to drive that agenda. Africa’s own economists are adding in their own perspective. It is the totality of this perspective that we are talking about.

    Is this process going to work like a charter to legally compel African governments to implement such policies?

    No, African governments are democratically elected. They are accountable to parliament, not to economists. This is not about a government receiving, it’s an exchange of experiences and there is an academic, theoretic confrontation of data, objective facts, with day to day realities.

    It is the interaction of the two which improves the quality of policies. It’s a confrontation of policy realities, which enables Africa’s own thinking on Africa’s own problems.

    Please understand this, there is such a difference to continue thinking that you got governments here receiving ideas from economists only is wrong.

    There are economists in universities, in ivory towers, they have never been confronted with managing a country or managing a ministry or the Central Bank. But economists also have information, which can be useful. I expect yearly improvements. For example, next year, we will concentrate on an issue, such as growth. So, we’ll get economic growth at the centre of the agenda.

    Now, you can come to economic growth from very many angles; institutions, investments, governance, education, whatever you want. But the finality will be the growth agenda, which is issue-based.

    What’s important is that African intellectuals themselves and African policy-makers feeding into policies in Africa. It is not an exclusion of non-African ideas, far from it! It is aiding to those ideas in another perspective, by Africans and Africans in the Diaspora.

    Various issues were raised at the conference, such as corruption, infrastructural challenges and governance, aren’t these likely to affect the process of this dialogue and policymaking?

    The issues raised are numerous and they are all important. They recognise such challenges by governments and all the things you have mentioned. So here are experts, the AfDB and others to debate over them. Now, the issue is how is it done? Fighting corruption for instance is critical, getting experiences and sharing them.

    Some recommendations made, such as private sector credit support and lowering interest rates by a half, are unrealistic and likely to be disruptive…

    Okay, there is a recommendation to lower interest rates, for example. Well, let me come to it from this perspective. I expect economists to go back to their countries and look at the cost of capital, the competition in the banking sector, level of government borrowing and barriers, which influence interest.

    And then, depending upon the findings, we see if the mechanisms are efficient enough to lower interest. There might even be cases for raising interest! So a scientific subject like this cannot be made into a recommendation…it cannot be.

    Certainly, interest rates vary from economy to economy and so, we cannot declare them from here. I think the issue is that competition should be increased in the banking competition. But these are highly technical issues, such as excess liquidity in the economy… the Central Banks know what to do.

    Africa’s current economic boom is pegged on newfound and existing resources such as oil and minerals, yet you seem to disagree.

    Well, what I said on geology is not new. There is not much geology (resources that are under the ground) in India and China; there isn’t much under the soil. But they are the ones now driving the world economy. I said, use the resources from the boom to develop other resources. And among these other resources, I put talent as number one.

    What time frame have you given this process (of interaction between economists and researchers) to feed into policy?

    Each country is different, what we call initial conditions are different. Take a country like Liberia, which has just emerging from 20 years of crisis. You cannot have one formula for different countries. The important thing is to kick- start the economy to make it move.

    You said the AfDB will support African universities to promote scientific training, how will this be achieved?

    That support started before I came to the bank. It is part of a comprehensive approach and some examples of the support the Bank is doing is the Kigali Institute of Science and Technology. It has been getting this support.

    This was not because of me because I was not there yet. Now, if we could find centres of excellence like this in every region…like the Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture, it is an excellence centre. There is some idea to identify in every region, centres that have built excellence or where excellence can be built, and then we support them.

    We have limited resources, we cannot do this in every country or university but at least…in West Africa, Central Africa and East Africa, we will identify centres of excellence and go there and support them. Technicians of AfDB will identify how to support and see the missing gaps…like the Bank tha just started… the Bank has supported to build laboratories and providing equipment.

    You said AfDB has decided to adopt a particular economic approach for fragile economies. Please explain.

    Every country has got its own natural resources endowment, like Liberia. Before Liberia went to civil war, at least it was a middle-income country. It made huge profits.

    Liberia is a country rich in natural resources but it is a traumatised country in terms of institutions. Now, to help Liberia is not the same thing like helping say, Botswana…the problems are different. You need to appreciate that we cannot have a formula, which fits every country.

    There is a new policy for fragile states, any of the fragile states emerging from conflict. The Bank has in the past helped them to clear the debt arrears…that was the first step, so they can re-engage with international financial institutions.

    Once you have cleared arrears, you must now kick-starts the economy. And money alone is not always enough, you need to help them rebuild institutions. A country like Mozambique had to be helped to rebuild its institutions, especially the customs on its coast. So we are helping the to, one, clear arrears, kick -start the economy and then building capacity.

    What in the Bank’s view should the citizens of Africa expect to achieve in the next 10 years?

    Now, AfDB is one of the players, the biggest player in every country is that country itself. International organisations come in to support. We have no different agenda from other countries. Our agenda is to promote economic growth…I would hope that in 10 years, we will have attained the Millennium Development Goals and economic growth which is necessary for the MDGs. I hope that our share world trade and investment is growing everyday…now it is 2%. Asia is 8%, so I would hope our share also increases. Our dependence on foreign aid is declining. For that to happen, it means that we expect our institutions to have become stronger and governance is strengthening every day. If that happens, I think we will have contributed to what the countries themselves want to do.

    Pan African Writers’ Association Discusses African Unity

    Leaders Must Walk the AU Talk
    Public Agenda (Accra)

    NEWS
    26 November 2007
    Posted to the web 26 November 2007
    Prof. Femi Osofisan, the Pan African Writers’ Association’s (PAWA) Vice-President for West Africa says there is the need for African leaders to go beyond meetings and summits on the proposed one African state in order to see to its realization in the shortest possible time.

    He noted that, “African unity is not about meetings and cocktails by African leaders”; instead it was about taking pragmatic and realistic steps towards cultural, economic and political integration among African states.

    The occasion was the 4th PAWA Annual Lecture on the occasion of the celebration of the 15th International African Writers’ Day recently at the Naguib Mahfouz and Wole Soyinka Courtyards, PAWA House, Accra.

    Speaking on “Shifting the Gains of the Glass: The African Dictator and the making of African Unity”, Prof. Osofisan, also took on African writers and the media for not researching enough to expose the rot and negatives in the policies of African governments which have been the bane of the African continent.

    He therefore encouraged writers that, even in the wake of some African governments prosecuting and harassing some writers for expressing dissenting views on policies, they must muster all the courage they are capable of to continue to expose the negatives in government policies in order to develop the African continent.

    The idea of continental African Unity which has continued to offer itself as a viable and feasible possibility, according to Prof. Osofisan, was not because of “random political attempts but rather largely because of the works of literature that the writers produce.” Accordingly, he paid glowing tribute to celebrated African writers such as Wole Soyinka, Chinua Achebe, Kofi Awoonor, Ama Ataa Aidoo and others.

    Prof. Osofisan further noted that, one of the ironies of the history of Africa was that, as soon as the “colonialists retreated, the call for Africa Unity faded to the background”. That, he attributed to the fact that, the major players and combatants in the quest for African unity were sidelined or booted out of power early citing the overthrow of Osagyefo Dr. Kwame Nkrumah of Ghana and Sekou Toure of Guinea as examples.

    As far as the realization of African Unity is concerned, according to Prof. Osofisan, the contribution of the African writer cannot be over emphasized because it was the “African writer who contributed most to sustain the vision of the continental unity.” He further observed that, “literature is the glass of history which provides a mirror by which people see themselves” and therefore challenged African writers to make “literary interventions more conscious and more ideologically determined in the heart of African unity”.

    In his remarks, Prof. Akilagpa Sawyerr, the Secretary-General of the Association of African Universities (AAU), who chaired he lecture, congratulated African writers on their creative quality of mirroring universal truths by exposing the ills in their respective countries, and further charged the African writer to “create ideas which change other existing ideas”. Such literary works according to him, when well packaged, would bring about the desired change the African continent was crying for.

    The Secretary-General of PAWA, Prof. Atukwei Okai, in his remarks hinted that, PAWA was in talks with other institutions to organize a six-month course in playwriting for students and the general public.

    He indicated that, the 4th PAWA Annual Lecture was instituted as part of PAWA’s efforts to “sensitize the African people to the basic truism of their common destiny through literature”.

    In a reaction to a question on what PAWA intended doing on the infamous statement by the Nobel Laureate in medicine, Dr. George Watson, proclaiming that the African was genetically inferior in intelligence and hence in every other sphere of life to the white man, Dr. Festus Iyayi, the PAWA Programmes Development Advisor debunked Dr. Watson’s assertion saying that, “nothing can prove this rabid racist talk more wrong than what we (Africans) have achieved”.

    He therefore advised Africans to see the racist talk as a challenge to Africans to attain higher heights saying “if we can get our acts right and harness our potentials these racist talks would come to naught”.

    December 2, 2007

    Africa’s Integration Imperative

    Continent’s Integration Imperative
    The Reporter (Addis Ababa)

    ANALYSIS
    24 November 2007
    Posted to the web 26 November 2007
    By Sanou Mbaye

    Karl Marx predicted that states would wither away in anticipation of an idyllic communist society capable of auto regulating economic imbalances and empowering the masses.

    So he would have been flabbergasted to see his prophecy realized, not by communism, but by the globalization of Anglo-American economic liberalism. Opening up markets to the free flow of capital, not the dictatorship of the proletariat, has rendered state power obsolete.

    Today’s capital markets raise money for governments, corporate clients, and individual customers, manage pension funds’ investments, and bet on the level of interest rates or the stock market. Trading in derivatives by investment banks, hedge funds, and other market participants, reaps huge profits for traders while depriving the real economy of productive investment and job creation.

    No population in the world is spared from the harsh treatment of such a system. Some 40% of the world’s 6.5 billion people live in poverty, and a sixth live in extreme poverty. However, the world’s black populations are the prime victims. In the United States, one-eighth of all black males between the ages of 25 and 34 are in jail, and three out of five black American households with children are headed by a single mother.

    As for African countries, the politics and economics of globalization have stripped them of their assets and natural resources and left them with an unbearable debt burden. As a result, the percentage of Africa’s population living in extreme poverty increased from 41.6% in 1981 to 46.9% in 2001.

    On the other hand, in the era of globalization, regions in which internal trade exceeds external trade have better economic outlooks and stronger social cohesion. This is the case for Europe, Asia, and, increasingly, Latin America, particularly among the member states of Mercosur (Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Uruguay, and Paraguay). The opposite is true for regional groupings in Africa and in the Middle East where trade with the outside world is more important than intra-regional trade.

    As a result, any country formulating strategies to counter the destructive forces of globalisation should give overriding priority to a self-centred economic development strategy, preferably within a regional framework. This is a prerequisite to defending against market fundamentalism and avoiding the iniquitous conditions of the international marketplace.

    In this respect, the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Brunei Darussalam, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, and Vietnam) constitutes an edifying example. The ASEAN economies adopted a united front on international economic issues and accorded priority to internal economic integration and expanding linkages with major trading partners.

    Exports have remained the main driver of economic performance for the ASEAN countries, contributing to 5.8% regional GDP growth in 2006. ASEAN foreign direct investment (FDI) flows reached US$38 billion in 2005, up by 48% from the previous year. The outlook for 2006 was also bullish, with preliminary data for the first quarter indicating that FDI flows had already reached US$14 billion, up from US$7.4 billion in the year-earlier period. ASEAN’s drive to establish a fully-fledged economic community has been underlined by implementation of its Priority Integration Sector Roadmaps.

    By contrast, sub-Saharan Africa’s historical legacy of artificial and unmanageable colonial boundaries, ethnic antagonisms, its citizens’ deficit of self-respect, and an appalling record of leadership failures has hampered its quest for economic integration. But a sector-by-sector approach could mitigate these handicaps, and, given the pressing need to address demand for energy and climate change, it might be strategically advisable to start with the energy sector.

    Africa is a continent rich in energy, holding two-thirds of the world’s reserves of hydro-electric power – trillions of kilowatt-hours representing about half of total world resources. The Congo River alone holds more than 600 billion kilowatt-hours of annual reserves. The Sanaga (Cameroon) and the Ogooué (Gabon) hold half as much. Technological breakthroughs have made it feasible to transport electricity via high-voltage direct current (HVDC) over long distances without incurring great losses (only about 3% per 1,000 kilometers).

    Carbon-free hydroelectric power is the right choice as sub-Saharan Africa’s principal source of energy. Harnessing the hydroelectric power of the Congo Basin alone would be enough to meet all of Africa’s energy needs, or to light the entire continent of South America. Moreover, establishing an African grid would enable power from the Democratic Republic of Congo to be delivered to southern European countries such as Spain, Portugal, and Italy.

    However, while 90% of world reserves of hydraulic energy are concentrated in underdeveloped regions like sub-Saharan Africa, HVDC technology remains the preserve of developed countries. There is thus an imperative not only for regional integration in Africa, but also for a joint strategic vision and partnership to help build global energy and climate security.

    EU Fragmenting Regional Blocks With EPA’s

    EPA Fragmenting Regional Blocks
    Ghanaian Chronicle (Accra)

    NEWS

    26 November 2007
    Posted to the web 26 November 2007

    By Joseph Coomson

    Rather than promoting regional integration, the Economic Partnership Agreements (EPAs) is rather fragmenting Africa and breaking its front as some regional blocks are signing the agreement without key countries.

    The SADC region signed it last Friday without South Africa and Namibia whiles EU is pushing West Africa to sign without big brother Nigeria.

    Indications from East Africa indicate that five countries from the block are ready to sign the agreements whilst Central African countries are confused about the agreements.

    This situation has been described by Mr. Tetteh Hormeku of the Third World Network as chaotic and an affront to the unity of Africa both politically and economically.

    “These negotiations were to strengthen regional integration but is now ended up in chaos and regional fragmentation,” he added.

    The alleged agenda of EU to rather disintegrate Africa and the whole ACP was captured in a statement made by the Directorate General for Trade European Commission on November 12, 2007. The statement said “We fully appreciate that some countries may not feel able or ready to take this course, and at the end of the day if you don’t agree the choice is of course yours.”

    These remarks were made during the weekend when Civil Society Organizations from Africa met in Accra to discuss the topic ‘Gender and EPAs’ from November 24 to 26, 2007.

    EPAs are a scheme to create a free trade area (FTA) between the European Union and the ACP countries. They are a response to continuing criticism that the non-reciprocal and discriminating preferential trade agreements offered by the EU are incompatible with WTO rules. The EPAs are a key element of the Cotonou Agreement, the latest agreement in the history of ACP-EU Development Cooperation and are to take effect as of 2008.

    However, the negotiations for the EPAs have faced stiff opposition from Civil Society Organizations and some governments from Africa because they see it as a way of liberalizing totally the service and investment sectors of the ACP countries

    As there is strong indication that the EPAs will not be signed at the set date of 31st December 2007, several alternatives have been suggested by governments, civil society and the EU.

    Ghana and Third World Network have proposed “Generalized System of Preferences (GSP) -plus” as a temporary stop-gap solution. By resorting to the GSP+, the EU could still easily offer to all ACP countries good access to the markets for their exports at very similar levels to the access offered within the framework of the Cotonou agreement, while remaining compatible with WTO rules as long as the regime remains open to other developing countries on the basis of objective and transparent development criteria.

    However, EU has rejected the GSP+. They are considering “EPA-light” as an interesting possibility.

    An “EPA-light” means an EPA proposal which is reduced to what in substance would be acceptable for West Africa (WWA) and the EU and, in the mean time, would be compatible with WTO requirements. The “EPA-light” would be a stop-gap solution, whilst WA and the EU will continue negotiating the comprehensive pro-development EPA which remains the ultimate objective.

    But Mr. Hormeku thinks otherwise. He says, “The in built agenda of EPA Light could even be bigger than the EPAs”.

    December 1, 2007

    Paying Farmers to Protect the Environment?

    Paying Farmers to Protect the Environment?

    Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (Rome)
    PRESS RELEASE
    15 November 2007
    Posted to the web 15 November 2007
    Rome
    Carefully targeted payments to farmers could serve as an approach to protect the environment and to address growing concerns about climate change, biodiversity loss and water supply, FAO said today in its annual publication The State of Food and Agriculture.

    The report however cautions that payments for environmental services are not the best solution in all situations, and that significant implementation challenges remain.

     

    “Agriculture employs more people and uses more land and water than any other human activity,” said FAO Director-General Jacques Diouf in his foreword to the report. “It has the potential to degrade the Earth’s land, water, atmosphere and biological resources – or to enhance them – depending on the decisions made by the more than two billion people whose livelihoods depend directly on crops, livestock, fisheries or forests. Ensuring appropriate incentives for these people is essential.”

    Population growth, rapid economic development, increasing demand for biofuels and climate change are putting environmental resources under pressure throughout the world. For instance, agriculture is expected to feed a world population that will increase from six to nine billion by 2050.

    One of the important reasons for environmental degradation is the perception that many of nature’s services are free – no one owns them or is rewarded for them and farmers have little incentive to protect them. In addition, subsidies that encourage the production of marketed goods at the expense of other ecosystem services can aggravate their degradation.

    Incentives

    Current incentives tend to favour the production of food, fibre, and increasingly, biofuels, but they typically under-value other beneficial services that farmers can provide, such as carbon storage, flood control, clean water provision or biodiversity conservation.

    Farmers can provide better environmental outcomes, but they need incentives to do so. Payments for environmental services represent one way of increasing incentives to adopt improved agricultural practices–and even to offset pollution generated in other sectors.

    However, “payments may also have adverse impacts on poverty and food security in some cases, should they result in a reduction in demand for agricultural employment or increases in food prices,” noted Dr Diouf.

    Carbon sink

    Farmers will need to play an important role in mitigating the effects of climate change, the FAO report said.

    Agriculture plays an important role as a carbon “sink” through sequestering and storing greenhouse gases, especially as carbon in soils, plants and trees. Less deforestation, planting of trees, tillage reduction, soil cover increase and improved grassland management could, for example, lead to the storage of more than two billion tonnes of carbon in around 50 countries between 2003 and 2012.

    “Well-designed payments for environmental services are one way to help farmers to change land-use practices and make farming more environmentally friendly,” said Leslie Lipper, Senior Environmental Economist. “These are payments for real services farmers can provide, much like farmers are paid for the rice or coffee they produce.”

    Payment programmes

    The report says payments can take a variety of forms as voluntary transactions involving farmers, communities, taxpayers, consumers, corporations and governments. They could be direct payments by governments to producers or indirect transfers, such as consumers paying extra for a cup of shade-grown coffee beans.

    Hundreds of payment programmes for environmental services are currently being implemented around the world, mainly as part of forest conservation initiatives. “But relatively few programmes for environmental services have targeted farmers and agricultural lands in developing countries,” the report said.

    “If properly designed, payment programmes for environmental services might also benefit many of the more than one billion poor people in developing countries that live in fragile ecosystems,” Lipper said. This requires careful targeting as well as measures to monitor delivery of environmental services.

    November 30, 2007

    Many in Africa Not Benefiting From Economic Integration

    Region Not Benefiting From Economic Integration

    Rwanda News Agency/Agence Rwandaise d’Information (Kigali)
    NEWS
    20 November 2007
    Posted to the web 20 November 2007
    Kigali
    Despite belonging to several regional economic communities, countries in the East Africa sub-region are still riddled with poverty, conflict and civil strife – and development efforts have to be stepped up or the few gains are washed away, the UN Economic Commission for Africa (ECA) has warned.

    Although this sub-region covers 30% of the population of Africa, the UN agency says in a working paper for a three-day expert meeting in Kigali, that it represents just 10% of GDP of the continent. The session ends November 22. The countries include Rwanda, DR Congo, Burundi, Uganda, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Kenya, Tanzania, Somalia, Comoros, Djibouti, Seychelles and Madagascar. The 13 states are members of either the Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa (COMESA), East African Community (EAC), Intergovernmental Authority on Development (IGAD), Southern African Development Community (SADC), Economic Community of Central African States (ECCAS), or Economic Community of Great Lakes Countries (CEPGEL).

    Experts from the UN agency are meeting with counterparts from different regional groupings on the continent to work out ways on how the lagging blocks can tap from world wide growth prospects.

    The war between Ethiopia and Eritrea, the Somali civil war, internal strife and cross border conflict among Rwanda, Burundi, DR Congo and Uganda – have had adverse effects on stabilization and development efforts, the agency notes. There has been some progress in terms of growth, according to the top UN body that was charged with over seeing integration some 4 decades ago, but poverty has not receded. Malaria remains a problem and HIV prevalence rates running at 10% and above among a population 60-70% living in rural areas – barely able to feed itself. This, the agency says is due to structural imbalances, including fragile ecosystems, soil fertility depletion, and low technological base in an environment characterized by poverty.

    The UN also says despite IMF intervention in form of induced stabilization and structural adjustment programs ushering in new economic management models and reduced deficits, progress achieved has failed to be turned into ‘meaningful advances in poverty reduction through increased employment, investment and production’.

    In spite of this and membership of concerned countries in several regional economic communities, as the agency notes, economic policies continue to be divergent to a certain extent rendering cooperation in intra-regional trade, monetary and financial relations difficult to achieve within the various groupings. High transactions costs on the continent mean the levels of competitiveness are rather low and countries are not in position to cut import and production costs to compete in a rapidly globalizing market. The countries are meeting difficulties in the WTO trade talks and EU-ACP partnership agreement negotiations, notes the UN. “These are taking place amidst inadequate socio-economic infrastructures for health and education systems, transport and communication networks, energy etc.”

    Women’s rights have been furthered, but the UN body says land rights are still denied to women in some countries where ‘polices, programmes and budgets are still not engendered’. The UN Economic Commission for Africa has come up with a 3-year business plan (2007-9) that it wants streamlined into the development agendas of regional groupings.

    Africa’s “Marshal Plan” (Editorial)

    The Continent’s Marshal Plan
    This Day (Lagos)

    EDITORIAL
    22 November 2007
    Posted to the web 23 November 2007
    Lagos
    Painfully, the African continent has become the sick baby of the world, to which every other part must spare a thought by way of aids and grants. By the low development indices, Africa is understandably a leading member of the Third world community. But it ought not to be so. Given the abundant human and material resources available on the continent, Africa ought to be one of the leading lights of the world. But several intervening variables have conspired to stymied the growth of the continent. One such intervening variable being the slavery and colonialisation visited on the continent by Europe. This undoubtedly helped to get most African countries stunted. Indeed, several such African countries, although have since regained their independence, have not quite recovered from the deep lacerative effects of the invasions. As if that is not bad enough, Africa has also had a larger-than normal share of bad leaders, who are either acutely corrupt or super despotic. All of these have in no small ways helped to continually undermine the potentials of the African continent.

    It is against this backdrop that we commend President Musa Yar’Adua’s call for a comprehensive Marshal plan for Africa. He had made the call at the just-concluded third African Forum in Germany. President Yar’Adua had lamented that the miserly aids and grants often given to African countries for developmental purposes are often too tokenistic to make any meaningful impact. As he put it, such aids “are usually too little, most times misdirected and generally do not make much of a difference.”

    The truth is that Africa must learn to take its destiny in its hands by rising from the valley of dependence to a platform of responsibility. It must take charge of its own development challenges. One way of doing it effectively is for the continent to unite to draw a its own Marshal plan, akin to the European Recovery Programme employed by the United States of America. United States had with Europe designed a Marshal plan to reconstruct the European continent after the devastating World War 2.

    The African continent must resolve from the ravages of war and despotic terrorism of its leader to work out modalities of regional integration and co-operation in a way that it can synergise its resources and launch out into the global arena with a bang.

    We believe, and strongly too, that Africa surely needs an economic emergency scheme anchored on a Marshal plan. Given the fact of the human and material resources available, all that is thus germane is the harnessing of all its potentials for maximum impact. The Marshal plan, will in that sense, thus serve as a road map to the continental development plan of the region.

    We call on the African leaders to immediately set in motion a process that will truly activate the practical modalities of the plan, through re-orientation and attitudinal revolution of themselves and their people. It is only when the African people themselves demonstrate a strong resolve to help themselves will they truly get out of the quagmire of underdevelopment.

    One way of showing such attitudinal change will be to tackle the hydra-headed problem of corruption frontally and brutally. No donor nation or agency will be eager to assist a country where mere renovation of a government official’s residence for instance, can gulp as much as N628 million. Such high tempo graft will only repel nations willing to offer assistance. Well managed, under responsible leadership, powered by the right vision, Africa has all the potentials to be strong and independent, economically and politically. The Marshal plan can guaranty this.

    In all, we believe in the Marshal plan, just as we urge African leaders to co-operate and look-inward in the task of growing the continent.

    Celtel Launches World’s First Borderless Network

    Celtel Launches World’s First Borderless Network
    Daily Trust (Abuja)

    NEWS
    23 November 2007
    Posted to the web 23 November 2007

    By Hamisu Muhammad
    Abuja
    Celtel Network has launched the world’s first borderless network, connecting over 400 million people across 12 countries in Africa.

    Launching the One Network, the Chief Executive Officer of Celtel Nigeria, Bayo Ligali, said yesterday in Abuja that the new network is available only on the Celtel network, “Which enables our Customers to use their mobile phones in any of the 12 countries.”

    He explained that the Network allows customers recharge with the local recharge cards without signing any roaming agree-ment or making any financial deposit.

    According to him One Network covers Nigeria, Burkina Faso, Chad, Malawi, Niger, Sudan, and Congo Brazzaville.

    Others countries covered are The Democratic Republic of Congo, Gabon, Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda.

    Ligali said the network covered an area more than twice the size of Europe. “The service, which has been noted as a world first and is indeed an innovation, is today being introduced to our customers in Nigeria”.

    He said the beauty of the One Network is that the service has been activated for all prepaid and post-paid customers. ” You can use this service immediately. No Registration is required and there is no need to switch tariffs before you leave your home country”

    According to him it has underscored oneness of the pan-African Community and disregard the artificial nature of most African borders.

    “One Network is an eloquent testimony to our corporate philosophy of making life better for our customers, Nigerians and indeed Africans as a whole” Ligali said.

    Minister of State for Information and Communica-tions, Ibrahim Dasuki Salihu Nakande said at the launch that the breakthrough has underscored the facts that the Nigerian economy is very good and healthy to do business in.

    He said Celtel happens to be the a pioneer GSM com-pany in the country therefore “it is not a surprise for them to come up with such a wonderful innovation”

    He said Nigeria will continue to search for more space in investment, Quality of service and network cove-rage through attracting more investors into the sector.

    Ernest Ndukwe, Executive Vice Chairman of the Nigerian Communications Commissions (NCC) hoped that the whole of Africa will one day be integrated into one concept network.

    He said a lot of progress is being recorded by the African telecom company, and that “Africa now exports telecom services to other parts of the worlds.”

    Africa Should Bank On Innovation

    Continent Should Bank On Innovation

    Business Daily (Nairobi)
    NEWS
    14 November 2007
    Posted to the web 14 November 2007

    By Calestous Juma and Ismail Serageldin

    Biotechnology offers a wide range of economic growth opportunities for Africa. But as “Freedom to Innovate”, a biotechnology report on Africa’s Development shows, the continent needs to locate biotechnology policy in the context of wider economic strategies. Technological development goes hand in hand with overall economic growth and not as an isolated activity.

    The report addresses critical issues related to Africa’s place in a globalising economy. It demonstrates what is needed to build the capacity needed to apply biotechnology in agriculture, health, industry, trade, and environmental conservation (including biodiversity conservation).

    “Freedom to Innovate” shows that the measures needed to address biotechnology will strengthen Africa’s capacity to adapt other technologies to economic development. This report has placed these wider considerations in the context of the role of innovation in economic transformation.

    The main message of “Freedom to Innovate” is that regional economic integration in Africa should embody the building and accumulation of capacities to harness and govern modern biotechnology.

    Regional economic integration bodies are key institutional vehicles for mobilising, sharing and using existing scientific and technological capacities, including human and financial resources as well as physical infrastructure for biotechnology R&D and innovation.

    International partnerships in biotechnology are critical to the realisation of Africa’s biotechnology strategies and should be pursued aggressively.

    The panel draws it recommendations from analysis of the current research and development on the continent and outside Africa and some of the emerging social, economic, legal and political issues that surround the development, dissemination and commercialisation of products from biotechnology.

    A key outcome of the work of the panel is the creation of what we call “Regional Innovation Communities” involving groups of countries in eastern, western, northern and southern Africa.

    The innovation communities may be anchored by geographically-defined “Local Innovation Areas” with the clustering of universities, professional associations, enterprise and other actors with critical capabilities in agricultural, health, industrial and environmental biotechnologies.

    Freedom to Innovate identifies five critical areas for action. First, is the need to put science and innovation at the centre of Africa’s development, regional integration and trade efforts.

    Second, attention should be placed on priority areas in fields such as biopharmaceuticals, health biotechnology, crop biotechnology and forest biotechnology.

    Third, Africa needs to build critical capabilities for the development and safe use of biotechnology.

    These capabilities include: infrastructure development, reinventing the African university, developing human capacities and engaging the public.

    Fourth, Africa should establish continent-wide regulatory measures that are effective, transparent and efficient and are based on the co-evolutionary approach of promoting innovation, while protecting the public.

    Fifth, the continent should build regional biotechnology innovation communities, as well as suggesting options for financing biotechnology, engaging the African diaspora, and designing effective collaborations with international partners.

    The starting point in implementing the recommendations in Freedom to Innovate is the urgency that African heads of state and government place on the strategic role that technological innovation plays in economic transformation.

    UN to Continue Supporting African Region’s Development

    UN to Continue Supporting Region’s Development
    BuaNews (Tshwane)

    NEWS
    6 November 2007
    Posted to the web 6 November 2007
    Addis Ababa
    The United Nations will strive to tie inter-agency collaboration and partnership with the AU and the NEPAD to support the continent’s development, says UN Deputy Secretary-General Dr Asha-Rose Migiro.

    She was addressing the 8th Regional Consultation meeting of UN agencies and organisations working in Africa in support of the African Union (AU) and the New Partnership for Africa’s Development (NEPAD) on Monday.

    Dr Migiro said the UN could better support post-conflict reconstruction efforts as well as efforts of African states to achieve durable peace, sustainable development and human right for all their people.

    The deputy secretary-general, who said the UN was closely working with NEPAD to strengthen the partnership, added that the UN and AU had already signed an agreement which would enable the latter to build its capacity in the next ten years.

    The capacity-building programme was aimed at ensuring peace and security in the continent, she said, adding that a task force had already been established and was supporting the AU’s African’s peacekeeping activities.

    She said the UN was actively involved in supporting the establishment of an AU early warning system, a crisis centre and the African Standby Brigade.

    The brigade will consist of military personnel drawn from the member states, who will be assigned to quell disturbances and maintain peace and stability in trouble areas within the SADC region.

    She said UN programmes of support for the AU also addressed peace, development and human rights which were inter-linked and mutually reinforcing pillars of the UN’s work since the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) were also progress towards peace, security and respect for human dignity.

    Although many African states had made good progress towards the MDGs, she said the continent was not on track to reaching these essential development targets by the year of 2015.

    The eight MDGs are:

    - eradicate extreme poverty and hunger

    - achieve universal primary education

    - promote gender equality and empower women

    - reduce child mortality

    - improve maternal health

    - combat HIV and AIDS, malaria and other diseases

    - ensure environmental sustainability

    - develop a Global Partnership for Development

    The MDGs represent a global partnership that has grown from the commitments and targets established at the world summits of the 1990s.

    Responding to the world’s main development challenges and to the calls of civil society, the MDGs promote poverty reduction, education, maternal health, gender equality, and aim at combating child mortality, AIDS and other diseases.

    Dr Migiro said that in order to achieve the goals, a strengthened global partnership was required and shared responsibility, including on the part of the UN system, and the implementation of all existing commitment on the parts of developed and developing countries alike was vital.

    The consultation meeting of UN agencies and organisations working in Africa in support of the African Union and NEPAD would help design effective strategy and implementation, she said.

    The two-day meeting is expected to come up with resolutions on ways of implementing NEPAD in better ways.

    November 21, 2007

    Major Confusion Over EPA’s Rage in Africa

    Officials Confused About Pros And Cons of EPA
    Inter Press Service (Johannesburg)

    NEWS
    20 November 2007
    Posted to the web 20 November 2007

    By Aileen Kwa
    Kampala
    The news that the ministers of the East African Community (Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, Rwanda and Burundi) are on the verge of signing an economic partnership agreement with the European Union (EU) has been received with mixed reactions by government officials from these very same countries.

    The East African Community (EAC) ministers had agreed with their EU counterparts last week that they would sign a framework agreement on trade in goods, market access, development cooperation and fisheries by no later than November 23 this year.

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    This framework agreement will reduce to zero 81 percent of current EU exports in industrial and agricultural products entering the EAC markets. The elimination of tariffs to zero will take place over a transition period of 25 years.

    By the end of the tenth year, there will be a zero percent tariff on raw and capital goods. Tariffs on intermediate goods will be brought down to zero between the eleventh and twentieth year and tariffs on finished items will be brought to zero percent after 25 years.

    Built into the agreement will also be a mechanism for the continuation of the economic partnership agreement (EPA) negotiations beyond December 31, 2007. The additional areas to be negotiated include liberalisation of services, intellectual property and the “new generation issues” of investment, competition policy and government procurement.

    A negotiator from the region who had been involved in the negotiations felt that the outcome is good for the EAC. “Of course it is good. If it wasn’t good for us, we won’t have agreed to it.” He was pleased about the level of liberalisation, coupled with the exclusion list (19 percent of current trade), and the transition period. Tariff reductions will only commence from 2010.

    Other government officials from the region, however, expressed unease. A major issue between the negotiating partners had been over “development”. The EAC had presented the EU with a matrix of projects they wanted the richer nations to fund.

    According to an inside source from Nairobi, Kenya, who spoke on condition of anonymity, “what is not clear is what we are getting in the ‘development’ framework. I don’t know how concrete or binding this development framework is. It is a total mess, but unfortunately we are already there.

    “Are we getting additional funds? The EU is saying they will be using the current EDF (European Development Fund). We have been conned into this thing. Here we are, opening our markets to the EU, and in return we are getting a ‘best endeavour’ (non-binding) development framework,” he told IPS.

    “We don’t know, in concrete terms, where the funds are coming from — if there are no additional funds. So this interim arrangement is just about opening up our markets for EU,” he said.

    Another government official from Kampala, Uganda, raised similar concerns: “I think there is an EAC development plan. Most probably that is what has been picked up for support under ‘development’.

    “In terms of funds, are we getting anything over and above what we would have got (without the EPA) or are we getting the same? Those answers are not very clear and nobody can tell you. We know that the EDF is coming. Maybe it will still be the same amount of money.

    “But we are told that the EU has been the major funder of our roads, so we need to agree with them (on the EPA). So it is a bit tricky,” the Ugandan official said, on condition of anonymity.

    When asked how the package might affect the agricultural sector in Uganda, there was some uncertainty. The Ugandan official commented, “there is a list of sensitive products which has been excluded from liberalisation. I am told that the (EU agricultural) subsidies are not open for negotiation.

    “This means that, tentatively, (the EAC will not open its markets) to those products that the EU is subsidising, such as beef and dairy. But when you look at Rwanda, they are importing a lot of milk from the EU. How are Uganda and Tanzania going to keep the milk out? If there are no border measures, the milk can easily come here.”

    To the question whether the EPA will affect the industrial sector in Uganda, he commented: “We don’t have much of an industry to talk about, really. Maybe the problem is upcoming industries, I don’t know.

    “It could be a catch-22. Maybe we can attract investment or maybe it will discourage our local entrepreneurs who have already started something or who could have started something”, were it not for external competition.

    He gave the example of small grocery stores that are currently being pushed out of the market. “They are being swallowed by supermarkets. These small shops were supplying extra services. You could get a few things and pay later, and they were in the suburbs. Now, with the coming of supermarkets, some are pushed out.

    “They are no longer competitive. We are not sure whether those (EU) people will come in (as a result of the EPA) and displace the small people.”

    He also raised the issue of neighbours benefiting at the expense of Ugandans. “What if Europeans decide to put up industries in Kenya and don’t come here?

    “Unilever is in Kenya and they are bringing all the products here — soap, toothpaste — to our supermarkets. So the people benefiting are Kenyans and there is no guarantee that we will benefit, although we are talking as EAC.’

    “When you look at the Kenyan private sector, their export volume is quite high. But when you look at ours, the volume is a bit low. Ours could go under the EBA (the EU’s Everything-But-Arms trade initiative). I don’t know if our private sector is aware of this. If they are not, they might be told that by January, their products will attract a higher tariff.”

    As a least developed country (LDC), Uganda can avail itself of the EBA preferential arrangement of the EU which provides zero duties on all LDC exports.

    The Kenyan official had this to add: “We are better off with the generalised system of preferences (the tariff rates which the EU offers to all countries). The duties are high but they would not have stopped us from exporting and we would not have had to open our markets for the EU.

    “But now the EU is telling us to pay a price for the preferences we are receiving from them by opening our markets. Even when we do this, the countries we fear will still be more competitive – India, Korea and others. The EU is already entering into free trade agreements with them. So there is nothing we are gaining by opening up.

    “But the political aspect comes into play. The politicians say we need to reassure some of the key players, particularly in horticulture, that trade will not be disrupted (at the end of the year). Just because of horticulture, we are opening up our markets.”

    November 19, 2007

    Intra-Regional Trade an Imperative for Africa

    ‘Intra-Regional Trade an Imperative for Africa’
    The Herald (Harare)

    NEWS
    8 November 2007
    Posted to the web 8 November 2007

    By Victoria Ruzvidzo
    Harare
    Intra-Regional trade in Africa is not an option but an imperative for the African continent to sustainably eradicate poverty, unemployment and poor health systems among its challenges.

    This came out strongly here yesterday as the Trade Policy Training Centre in Africa (Trapca) annual conference entered its third day.

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    Overall, Africa was not ready to sign such agreements as the Economic Partnership Agreements (EPAs) from its current weak position but needed to build capacity through increased trade within regional groups such as Sadc, Comesa, Ecowas and Sacu. Presently there was not much trade activity within due to a myriad of challenges that included tariff barriers, misconceptions about the quality of local products and other perceptions that led many to believe that products from the continent were inferior to what the rest of the world produced.

    Zimbabwe is a member of both Sadc and Comesa. There was heated debate yesterday regarding the status quo on the continent. Poor trade within regions was reflected in low socio-economic growth and the continent’s inability to claim a significant share of global trade despite its rich endowment of natural resources.

    Africa commanded only 2,3 percent of world trade. Intra-Africa trade was the lowest at 14 percent compared to other regions such as the European Union whose figure stood at 60 percent and the North Atlantic Free Trade Area, which was at 50 percent.

    “This indicates that we need to do more to trade amongst ourselves. We should value this kind of trade to ensure that we become more competitive as a continent,” said Mr Fudzai Pamacheche, a Zimbabwean who heads the African Union’s Private Sector Development, Investment and Resource Mobilisation division based in Ethiopia. Regions needed to develop their trade capacities and infrastructure while taking the trade debate to a higher level that included not just Government representatives but the private sector as well.

    Leaving out the private sector had been a major drawback in fostering intra-regional trade while also compromising Africa’s position in world trade negotiations. “In most instances we forget the key players involved, which is the private sector. Negotiations should be all-inclusive in character so that they become easy to implement. Involving all stakeholders is critical to allow everyone to make an input,” said Mr Pamacheche.

    A delegate from Zambia also remarked that Africans lived under the misconception that selling their products to America was much better than trading with other African countries. “We are our own enemies. We have to defeat that notion so that we boost intra-regional trade and negotiate from a position of strength,” he said.

    A senior lecturer at the University of Buea in Cameroon Dr Ernest Molua challenged the continent to put its act together and look inwards before negotiating trade pacts elsewhere. “There have been a lot of missed opportunities to promote trade amongst ourselves,” he said. To enhance trade, it was important that African countries liberalised trade amongst themselves. This could be done through reduction of tariffs, more efficient customs systems, increased political will to promote trade and the adoption of appropriate exchange rate policies.

    Furthermore, it was essential that countries diversified their exports.

    United Nations Development Programme International Policy Advisor based in Mongolia Dr Koffi Addo challenged the continent to move with the times and realise that world trade polices were largely influenced by regional trade arrangements. “We should trade more among ourselves before we think of America, United Kingdom etc. Trade is the engine for economic growth and prosperity,” he said. This was echoed by the Minister Consular (Trade) at the Zimbabwean consulate based in Johannesburg Mrs Constance Zhanje who drew much applause when she remarked that it was all about attitude.

    “In Africa we need to start changing our attitudes because if we don’t, nobody will. Why should we see some countries buying water from Europe when we have it here,” she said. In his official opening remarks on Monday, Swazi leader King Mswati lll challenged the continent to improve trade within itself. “It is noteworthy that intra-regional trade is critical to economic development and poverty reduction in Least Developed Countries (LCDs) given that regional integration offers better markets while creating a bigger domestic territory amongst countries.

    “It is, therefore, important for us to explore ways of modernising trade facilitations in order to encourage more trade amongst countries in the same region,” he said.

    Zimbabwe is represented by Mrs Zhanje and two International trade experts from the Ministry of Industry and International trade.

    November 18, 2007

    South Africa’s Minister Lauds in Development Initiative

    SA Minister Lauds in Development Initiative

    New Era (Windhoek)
    NEWS
    2 November 2007
    Posted to the web 2 November 2007

    By Emma Kakololo
    Windhoek
    South African Minister of Trade and Industry, Mandisi Mpahlwa, has likened Southern Africa’s spatial development initiatives (SDIs) to the United States’ Marshall Plan of 1947.

    The Marshall Plan was a primary arrangement by the United States to rebuild and create a strong foundation for the allied countries of Europe, and repel communism after World War II. Speaking at the opening ceremony of the two-day Walvis Bay Spatial Development Initiative (WBSDI)/Namibia International Investment Conference, Mpahlwa said transport corridors were the living reality of integration.

    “It is in essence trans-border and trans-country. It promotes linkages that will become the life-blood of integration. It means that the fundamental platform for moving our goods and related services quickly and efficiently across borders will be established,” he stated.

    The SDI methodology was developed in 1996 as an integrated planning tool aimed at promoting investment in regions of the country that were underdeveloped but had potential for growth.

    In 2000, both governments funded the Walvis Bay Spatial Development Initiative (WBSDI), which closely mirrors the Maputo Corridor, which stretches from Gauteng in South Africa to the port of Maputo.

    The WBSDI has since been expanded to include the Trans-Caprivi Highway, which proceeds from Walvis Bay to Katima-Mulilo and the Trans-Kunene which links Walvis Bay to Ruacana, with Walvis Bay as the nodal point.

    “As we collectively deepened our knowledge of the potential economic outcomes it became clear that the geographic scope of the Walvis Bay SDI should be widened to include the Trans-Caprivi links to Zambia and the Trans-Kunene links to Angola,” said Mpahlwa.

    The WBSDI has already attracted investors and brought development to the respective countries, he said.

    “This is a vision that has moved beyond plans and commitments and we have good reasons to believe that the business case for success in Namibia is sound.

    He urged prospective investors by quoting Mao Zedong founder of the People’s Republic of China and most prominent Communist theoreticians: “If you want to know the taste of a pear, you must change the pear by eating it yourself.”

    “In other words, all genuine knowledge originates in direct experience. I urge you to experience investment in Africa for yourself.”

    Call for an African-Style Marshall Plan

    Continent Needs Marshall Plan – Yar’Adua
    Leadership (Abuja)

    NEWS
    5 November 2007
    Posted to the web 5 November 2007
    By Golu Timothy
    President Umaru Musa Yar’Adua yesterday in Eltville, Germany, called for a Marshall Plan for Africa along the lines of the European Recovery Programme employed by the United States of America to rebuild the nations of Europe devastated by the second World War.

    A statement from the office of the presidential adviser on communications, signed by O.J. Abuah last night, said the president was speaking on the Challenges of Globalisation for Africa at the Partnership with Africa Forum.

    He was quoted as saying that Africa needed such a bold plan for its regeneration after “decades of destruction engendered by forced partitioning and many years of self-inflicted ruin”.

    In making the call for greater international support for Africa’s efforts to catch up with the developed nations of the world, President Yar’Adua stressed, however, that ultimately, Africa’s development must be championed by Africans themselves.

    He said the whole concept of aid to Africa by the developed nations needed to be “re-thought” because it has become clear that aid, as presently operationalised, “is usually too little, most times mis-directed and generally does not make much of a difference”.

    “This Forum is a veritably apt platform for laying the foundation of another Berlin Conference, this time to work out the details of the plan to rebuild Africa’s infrastructure and, most importantly, to operationalize an initiative that should allow the nations of Sub-Saharan Africa export everything but arms (EBA) to the OECD nations completely free of duties.

    “I must stress the fact that, ultimately, Africa’s development must be championed by Africans themselves; no one from outside the continent is coming to face up to our developmental challenges on our behalf. We must commit to strengthening governance institutions and structures.

    “Endemic corruption, which has seen the distortion of our core values and the diversion of scarce resources from their development targets to private hands, must be tackled head-on.

    “Most critically, Africa must evolve a crop of focused, committed, service-oriented, and God fearing leaders to drive the continent’s rebirth,” President Yar’Adua declared at the gathering which had President Horst Kohler of Germany and several African leaders in attendance.

    He said that his administration was anchoring its pursuit of a re-energised, stable and prosperous Nigeria on the entrenchment of the fundamental principles of democracy, good governance, free enterprise and the rule of law.

    “These principles underlie our covenant with the people of Nigeria, which is encapsulated in our Seven-point Agenda – our short to medium term response to the challenges inherent in Nigeria’s desire to belong to the club of the world’s twenty biggest economies by the year 2020.

    “We recognize that the imperative to rapidly regenerate our economy can only be bolstered by continent-wide, focused economic and political reform. This informs our desire to drive greater integration and broaden regional cooperation on the continent so as to create and sustain the requisite macro-economic and financial conditions for a globally competitive regional economy,” President Yar’Adua said.

    The President said that despite Africa’s historical antecedents and current realities, he was confident that the continent could overcome the seemingly insurmountable challenges thrown up by globalisation with the support and understanding of its friends and development partners.

    One-Stop Border System Pilot System Carnet to be Implemented

    Chirundu Border Post to Pilot Carnet System

    The Herald (Harare)
    NEWS
    6 November 2007
    Posted to the web 6 November 2007

    By Joseph Madzimure
    Harare
    The Common Market for East and Southern Africa (Comesa) will introduce the Carnet system at the Chirundu one-stop border post to speed up the processing of documents among member states.

    The Carnet system is a bond which guarantees one to move freely within the Comesa region.

    The regional transit bond guarantee scheme is currently being used in the northern corridor – Kenya, Burundi and Rwanda – aimed at improving the movement of cargo across the region and cuts costs.

    Speaking at the Shipping and Forwarding Agents Association of Zimbabwe’s fourth annual general meeting in Harare last week, a representative of the Comesa Secretariat, Mr Berhand Giday, said the system would facilitate the speedy processing of documents at the border posts.

    “The bond guarantee would allow transporters to carry business throughout the member states without any hindrances at border posts.

    “The Carnet system would allow the processing of documents in one country and it would continue to work throughout all regional border posts among Comesa members,” said Mr Giday.The system has been used in other countries, notably Kenya, Uganda, and Tanzania among others, added Mr Giday.He added that under the system Zambia and Zimbabwe would be operating under one office, allowing free entry in either country.

    Two years ago, Zimbabwe and Zambia signed a bilateral agreement that allowed for the transformation of Chirundu into a one-stop border post. It was expected that the one-border post initiative would reduce transit times for imports and exports through the border. From the border transformation, trade between the two countries was also estimated to rise by 20 percent while at the same time saving over US$450 million through reduced transit times.

    Speaking at the same occasion, SFAAZ chairman Mr Willard Mushove said that the move is a welcome development in the freight industry, since it would facilitate expeditious processing of documents thereby cutting costs. Mr Mushove added that the Chirundu one-stop border post is expected to be operational by year-end and start working next year. Some of the envisaged benefits from the one-border post would be the reduction of time spent at the border posts, reduced costs of doing business while indirectly dealing with the socio-economic issues that were arising as a result of delays at the border post.

    Chirundu was singled out as a priority pilot site for the single border clearing systems at the 2005 Comesa Council of Ministers meeting held in Kigali, Rwanda.

    Africa Urged to Help Itself.

    Continent Must Help Itself And in Time

    The Monitor (Kampala)
    OPINION
    1 November 2007
    Posted to the web 31 October 2007

    By Dr Charles Murigande

    Many African countries are caught in a spiral of poverty and conflict. While it is important to seek international support, Rwanda’s lessons show that most of the solutions will have to come from Africans themselves. The genocide in Rwanda did not catch the international community unawares.

    There were early-warning signs that should have triggered urgent responses. For example, a 1993 report by the then Special Rapporteur of the UN Commission on Human Rights on Summary and Extrajudicial Executions confirmed there were clear signs that the regime in place was preparing a large scale genocide.

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    There were similar reports both at the UN Secretariat and in the capitals of all western countries with embassies in Rwanda. The most unequivocal warning was a 1994 cable from Gen. Romeo Dallaire, commander of the UN Assistance Mission in Rwanda Force Commander three months before the genocide started.

    The cable contained reliable information from a leader of an extremist militia called Interahamwe stating that his group has drawn up plans to be able to kill up to 1,000 Tutsi every 20 minutes. Gen. Dallaire requested permission from UN headquarters to launch a pre-emptive attack on Interahamwe’s arms caches. The request was denied. For France, the main international partner of the regime that committed the genocide, things were even more crystal clear.

    As early as 1992, Paul Dijoud, a senior French diplomat, warned a Rwandan Patriotic Front (RPF) delegation that visited Paris, led by President Paul Kagame, that France would never allow RPF to get to Kigali, and that if they did, they would find all their Tutsi relatives dead! But this global indifference was not new.

    The 1994 genocide of Tutsi was only the climax of a series of killings which started in 1959 and continued into the 1960s and 1970s. Apart from the lonely voices of philosophers Jean Paul Sartre and Bertrand Russell who characterised the killings of Tutsi in 1963-64 as “the most barbaric crimes committed in the world since the holocaust of Jews”, the rest of the world was silent and indifferent.

    The 1994 genocide would not have been possible or even contemplated had the international community responded more decisively to prevent or stop the crimes of 1959, the 1960s and the 1970s. These crimes took place despite the pledges of ‘Never Again’ following the Holocaust of the Jews.

    They took place despite the obligations to prevent such crimes under the 1948 Genocide Convention, as well as other international instruments including the Charter of the UN. It teaches us a lesson, namely that international law and other political commitments are only as good as our political will to implement or enforce them. Without political will, international law and other commitments are impotent.

    Once the genocide began, instead of strengthening its troop presence in Rwanda to prevent further killings, the UN reduced its force from over 2,500 to 270. Ironically, two months later, the UN Security Council, knowing very well the close relations that France had with the regime that committed the genocide, nevertheless authorised France to send a so-called ‘protection force’ to Rwanda. The Turquoise ‘force’ succeeded in allowing the killers safe passage to flee to DR Congo where they continue to wreck havoc. This is despite the massive presence of UN troops.

    These two episodes taught us two lessons. First, the UN Security Council, with the many competing interests of its permanent members, cannot protect people facing serious threats to their survival.

    Second, the failure to act and act timely can be extremely costly. Had the international community disarmed the defeated genocidal ex-FAR/Interahamwe force as they crossed into DR Congo, arrested and prosecuted their political and military leaders who masterminded the genocide, the region would not have had to go through endless and senseless wars.

    Dr Murigande is Foreign Minister of Rwanda

    October 25, 2007

    A Good .. but Older…. Paper on the State of African Infrastructure

    The paper copied below is OLD… but sadly still paints a relatively close and poignant picture of the status of Infrastructure Development. It can be accessed directly in the web at: http://www.afdb.org/pls/portal/

    We at Trans-African Development have a potential Solution to this dilemma that faces Africa… it is to build a BACKBONE of Infrastructure…. From Major Highways to Electrical transmission Facilities and transmission lines to Fiber Optic and Railroads… but we need the Cooperation of African Nations and Organizations to implement this . I will write more on this int he near future… but for now… this “picture” of African Infrastructure is very revealing.


    ECONOMIC RESEARCH PAPERS NO. 46
    AFRICAN DEVELOPMENT BANK

    Infrastructure in Africa: The Record
    By: Afeikhena Jerome
    University of Ibadan, Nigeria


    The views and interpretations in this paper are those of the author and not necessarily those of the African Development Bank.


    INFRASTRUCTURE IN AFRICA: THE RECORD

    1. Introduction

    In recent years, there has been a resurgence of interest in infrastructure development and Policy reform in developing economies, with much of the debate centering on efficiency
    of use and an increased role for private sector participation in the provision of Infrastructure (Jimenez, 1995; Mody, 1996; Kerf and Smith, 1996; and World Bank,1994). The apparent interest emanates principally from the growing realization that human and physical infrastructure are critical elements for economic growth and poverty reduction. Infrastructure plays a pointed, often decisive-role in determining the overall
    productivity and development of a country’s economy, as well as the quality of life of its citizens.

    A broader source of interest, however, derives from the generally poor performance of state-owned monopolies, combined with the rapid globalization of the world economies, which has brought into sharp focus the economic costs of inadequate infrastructure and prompted a growing number of developing countries to seek new initiates in promoting competition, private entry and foreign interest in the provision of  Infrastructure.

    The term ‘infrastructure’ was coined during the Second World War by military strategists to indicate wide-ranging elements of war logistics. Thereafter, development Economists began to use the term interchangeably with ‘overhead capital’ considered to include: those services without which primary, secondary and tertiary production activities cannot function. In its widest sense, it includes all public services from law and order through education and public health to transportation, communication, power and water supply as well as such agricultural overhead capital as irrigation and drainage systems (Hirschman, 1958: 83).

    There is no consensus in the literature on a common definition of infrastructure. What remains indisputable, however, is that is that they share some common characteristics which have hitherto been used to justify state involvement in their provision and financing. These characteristics include scale economies in production, consumption externalities and non-excludability. They are equally not generally tradeable.

    Broadly defined, infrastructure refers to all basic inputs into and requirements for the proper functioning of the economy. They are usually grouped into two. The first category is social infrastructure, such as education and health which facilitate the supply if skilled and healthy personnel to manage and operate other resources. They also enhance the economic, political and social empowerment of the populace, with the
    attendant positive effects on poverty alleviation and efficient use of national resources.


    The second category is often referred to as economic infrastructure. Mody (1997) defines this category of infrastructure as the facilities that provide society with the services necessary to conduct daily life and to engage in productive activities. These include power, transportation, telecommunications, water, sanitation and safe water disposal, among other things.

    This report is devoted to the study of the complementary physical infrastructure, comprising telecommunications, power, transport (roads, railways, ports and airports), water supply, and sewerage.

    Infrastructure has a pervasive influence on the whole economy.
    Telecommunications, electricity and water are used in the production process of virtually every sector of an economy, while transportation is necessary for the distribution of
    commodities. The quantity and quality of these services are therefore an important determinant of private sector productivity and output. In fact, there is a strong association
    between the availability of certain infrastructure -telecommunications (in particular), power, surfaced roads and safe water – and per capita GDP2. The relationship involves  both the supply side, in terms of the contribution of infrastructure to the generation of higher GDP, and the demand side, as higher incomes in turn generate higher demands for infrastructure services. Infrastructure thus makes an important contribution to expanding output.

    Africa trails the rest of the world, both in the extent and quality of infrastructure. Notwithstanding the large amount of scarce economic resources absorbed in the development of infrastructure in Africa, there is clear evidence that the provision of infrastructure has been much below standard both in terms of quantity and quality in relative and absolute terms. Infrastructure bottlenecks continue to exist, particularly in the management of current stock.

    Traditionally, infrastructure services have been viewed as public goods and the primary responsibilities for their provision have been entrusted to the government-owned
    `natural monopolies’. Consequently, these sectors have become inextricably entangled with the public sector that dominated it. While the performance of government-owned
    providers of infrastructure, vary from one country to another, their overall performance in Africa has been very poor. The sector is characterized by operational inefficiency, lack of technological dynamism and poor service to consumers. In addition to their inadequacy, the provision of infrastructural services in most African countries is characterized by high prices compared with per capita incomes and long waiting time (several years in some countries) between the time of application for services and actual connection.

    The cost of waste, in terms of forgone economic growth and lost opportunities for poverty reduction and environmental improvements, are unimaginably high. Poor infrastructure is a major obstacle to the region’s economic growth, and adversely affectsthe living standards of its people. Inadequate infrastructure adversely impacts on health, education and the capacity for effective governance as well as on the ability of industries to compete in international markets. Most evaluations of structural adjustment programmes in Africa point to deficiencies in infrastructure as a major cause of poor
    supply response in economies under reform (Ghura and Hadjimichael, 1996).

    The provision of efficient infrastructure is important for the development of the continent particularly in view of the fact that many of its countries are landlocked. As shown in recent literature on the economics of geography, nearly all landlocked countries in the world are poor, except a handful in Western Europe that are closely integrated into the EC via an efficient infrastructure which facilitates low-cost trade.

    This chapter takes stock of the state of infrastructure in Africa, investigates more deeply the root causes of the present unsatisfactory outcomes and explores the strategies and policies that can be instituted to improve infrastructure delivery in the pursuit of the overarching objectives of private-sector-led growth and poverty reduction. Accordingly, the paper is divided into four sections. The database on infrastructure in Africa is presented in section 2 while the record of infrastructure service is the focus of section 3.
    An appraisal of the causal factors in the dismal performance is conducted in section 4.

    2. Data on Infrastructure in Africa

    Data on the different types of infrastructure in Africa are sketchy and difficult to find in one publication. An extensive database of physical infrastructure stock for a cross-section
    of 102 countries have been compiled and presented in the Appendix. The database has been compiled for 53 African countries by region according to ADB classification. To
    allow for comparison, similar data is presented for 17 countries in Latin America, 8 countries in South East Asia and 24 OECD countries. The database comprises six measures:

    . Population, GNP per capita and percentage of population with access to safe water and sanitation;

    . Kilometres of paved roads;

    . Kilometres of railway lines;

    . Statistics on the power sector;

    . Telecommunication statistics; and

    . Information technology.

    Apart from physical stocks, the database also provides some measures of the quality of infrastructure.

    White It is imperative to sound a note of caution on these global statistics given their comparative basis, it should be noted, however, that the data provides a rough, albeit, useful
    basis for analyzing the development of infrastructure on a comparative global and regional basis. The data reveals a strong association between infrastructure capacity and level of development. Countries with lower income level are associated with lower levels of infrastructure capacity and service provision. It should be borne in mind that the
    performance of most African countries in all the indicators is quite dismal.

    3. The Record of Infrastructure in Africa

    It is crucial to examine in greater details the situation in the major infrastructure sub-sectors with a view to highlighting the peculiarities of each sub-sector. For each type of infrastructure , the section examines the state of the available networks, tariffs charged, supply and demand patterns, service quality; industry bottlenecks, and environmental
    consideration.

    3.1 Telecommunications

    Telecommunications infrastructure lies at the heart of the information economy. Countries lacking modern telecommunications system cannot compete effectively in the
    global economy. The telecommunications industry in Africa has made limited progress despite concerted efforts and programs aimed at modernizing and expanding the sub-sector.

    3.1.1 Networks

    Despite the giant strides which a number of African countries have taken in reforming the telecommunications sub-sector in recent years, telecommunication coverage in Africa is amongst the lowest in the world. There are more telephones in Brazil than the whole of Africa. While Brazil has 15,105.9 main telephone lines, Africa has only 13, 695.1 main telephone lines. Africa accounts for only two per cent of telephone main telephone lines globally as shown in chart 1. Low network densities, long waiting
    Source : International Telecommunication Union.

    Chart 1: Main telephone lines

    Africa2%
    America32%
    Asia28%
    Europe36%
    Oceania2%
    times for access to services, and clear willingness of some users to pay for access to the service illustrate the significant shortage of telecommunications services in the region.

    The most common measure of telecommunications access is teledensity or the number of main telephone lines per 100 inhabitants. In 1996, teledensity varied from 0.08 in
    Democratic Republic of Congo to 34.01 in Reunion. Africa averages 1.85 compared to 30.38 in the Americas, 6.02 in Asia, 30.60 in Europe and 40.39 in Oceania.

    There are substantial differences among the African sub-regions, with four countries currently in the forefront; namely, Reunion 34.01, Seychellis 19.51, Mauritius 16.21 and
    South Africa 10.2 . The laggards are sub -Saharan African countries with an average teledensity of 0.52. As many as 34 countries in Africa still have a teledensity of less than 1. These differences among countries are associated in part with variations in per capita GDP  In part, GDP per capita may serve as an indicator of the extent of a country’s rural population, which tended to receive fewer infrastructure services than urban areas did. It may also reflect the affordability of services. However, a nation’s teledensity is usually quoted as an average thus masking regional variability. For example, the distribution of telephone networks in South Africa presents striking internal contrasts. The average teledensity in South Africa is 10.05, but on a provisional level, this ranges between 22 in Gauteng (the region around Johannesburg and Pretoria) and 2 in the Northern pronvince.

    The distribution of telecommunications services is biased in most African countries in favour of the urban areas, which account for over 80 per cent of the services, while the
    rural areas, where over 80 per cent of the population reside, enjoy 20 per cent of the service.
    About 72.9 per cent of telecommunications mainlines were in urban areas in 1995 compared to 27.1 per cent in rural areas. Two countries, however, had most of their telephone mainlines located in rural areas. These are Sao-Tome and Principe (87.0 percent) and Central African Rep. (57.0 per cent).

    In terms of quality, networks are burdened with a high percentage of outmoded equipment and high fault rates. The information on faults per main lines, a standard measure of service quality, indicates that the average faults per 100 main lines for the region in 1996 was 78.1 compared with an average rate of 8.9 for America, 19.9 for Europe, 43.7 for Asia and 47.8 for Oceania. The recorded fault rates in the region,
    however, range widely- from 1.0 (Eritrea) to 937.5(Guinea).

    The most effective route to increasing service quality is the installation of digital exchanges. African countries are striving to modernize their systems – albeit at great cost – in order to remain plugged into the global network. Many telecommunications authorities in Africa, especially in those countries undergoing reforms are installing digital technologies and costly equipment in order to become competitive. In the absence of local manufactures, African countries are dependent on industries outside the region for the purchase of telecommunications equipment and spare parts. Such imports are generally made on a non- selective basis of ‘ready-made’ packages with little room for adaptation to local needs through local enterprise and know-how. Consequently, telecommunications services in Africa do not have the usual multiplier effects (via research and development, local manufacturing, services and employment) as they do in other regions of the world.

    Table 1:

    Comparative Statistics on Telecommunications Indicators in Africa and the Rest of
    the World (1996)

    SEE THE ORIGINAL REPORT WITH LINK AT TOP TO VIEW CHARTS AND DATA

    i HAVE DEBUGGED ONLY UP TO HERE FOR THE READERS CONVENIENCE IN CHANGING FORMATING… PLEASE GO TO THE LINK ABOVE TO READ THIS 57 PAGE PDF FILE WITH GRAPHIC CHARTS.

    Source: International Telecommunication Union

    3.1.2 Supply and Demand Patterns

    Comparative Telecommunications Statistics for
    Africa and the rest of the WorldPer 100 inhabitantMain lines per employeeSatisfied demand (%) 1996Fault per 100 machines peryear

    Source: International Telecommunication Union.

    Large waiting lists are evident in several African countries, but the demand for telephone connections is in all likelihood considerably higher. A sizable latent demand Lies concealed since prospective users do not even register on waiting lists until there is a realistic chance of receiving a telephone connection. The overall average expected waiting time for services in Africa for 1996 was 3.5 years, the highest in the world, compared with 0.3 in America, 0.7 in Asia and 2.4 in Europe as shown in chart 3. Ten countries recorded a waiting time greater than 10 years. These are Algeria, Eritrea,
    Ethiopia, Gambia, Malawi, Mozambique, Sao Tome & Principe, Sierra Leone and Tanzania. With such long waiting times in African economies, there may well be a significant number of discouraged potential subscribers who have not yet joined the
    queue for services.

    Development of cellular networks in African economies provides one example of customers’ willingness to pay for quick access to reliable services. This willingness is particularly true of businesses and high-income households. While the cellular network penetration rates are still comparatively small, (7.9 per cent of total telephone subscribers in 1996 ranging between 1.1 in Kenya and 18.3 in South Africa), the growth rates in the number of subscribers are considerable in some countries. This level of demand has been achieved despite the fact that charges for cellular services are substantially above those for fixed services in the region and those for cellular services in the EU. Surveys of business users in the region confirm this willingness to pay
    for quick access to reliable telecommunications services.4

    The introduction of competition has been most notable in mobile cellular and other value-added services, with almost half of the Africa countries allowing more than one provider in these areas. In the majority of markets where cellular mobile services are now provided, private capital has been introduced in the form of joint ventures with state-owned enterprises or stand-alone private ventures

    3.1.3 TARIFFS

    The structure of tariffs falls relatively heavily on businesses and more lightly on households, but the overall level remains low in most countries. In several African countries, there is no clear practice of pricing services, hence rough and ready norms for billing are adopted. Call waiting and forwarding for residential customers remains largely the domain of dominant local providers.

    While detailed data on long-distance and international tariffs are not available, average monthly subscription and installation charges for households and businesses
    provide some indication of tariff levels and structures. Table 2 presents average monthly subscription charges and connection rates for both household and business consumers by regions in the world. A comparison across these regions reveals that telecommunications tariff in Africa is the lowest in the world relative to both the global average and other
    regions in the world. The relatively low levels of tariffs in much of the region limit the extent to which internal cash flows and private finance can be raised for new investments.
    Most countries, characterized by underinvestment and low network growth, are unlikely to break out without reform of the tariff structure. As a rule, those countries at more
    advanced stages of development have adjusted tariff structures to allow for more balanced charges between households and businesses and have raised the overall level of
    tariffs. The need for investment in this sector to expand capacity and improve service quality is substantial. The necessary expansion in networks will not be achieved without
    recourse to private finance. However, unlocking this finance will require a commercial approach to telecommunications and credible reform of tariff structures.

    Table 2:

    Telephone Tariffs in Africa and Other Regions in 1996 (US$)

    3.1.4 Reform Activities the Sector

    The telecommunications sector in Africa faces a challenging future given the number of internal and international constraints confronting telecommunications administration, and the demand for value-added services by increasingly sophisticated consumers. Many African countries are already committed to reforms in the field of telecommunications,
    including promotion of private sector participation. In the past few years, a domino effect has occurred in Africa’s Telecommunications sector resulting in a flurry of reform
    activities which put the continent at par with the developments in other regions. Some of the major reforms being carried out include creation of a regulatory environment to accommodate private companies, institution of well-defined tariff regimes, privatization of state-owned telecommunications operations; and licensing independent telephone companies to provide value added services.

    Reform efforts across the region focused initially upon the separation of the telecommunications and postal operations and, subsequently, upon the development of separate regulatory agencies. By 1998, 27 countries in Africa had separated their postal and telecommunications operations, and 30 countries had corporatized the primary operator.

    In the regulatory sphere, 18 countries across Africa had undertaken the establishment of a separate regulatory agency by 1998. However, most telecommunications regulatory agencies so far created in Africa have limited powers -the
    sector ministry retain the authority to issue directives to the regulator, appoint the heads of the agency, and control the agency’s funding. In Uganda, for example, the ministry in
    charge of telecommunications is also responsible for tariff approval and the establishment of licence fees, while in Namibia, the operator is responsible for numbering, tariffs and interconnection rates. In many instances, the establishment of the regulatory agency has occurred in tandem with the privatisation process. In other countries, the introduction of
    a regulator has occurred prior to the initiation of liberalization and privatisation plans, such as in Botswana, Mauritius, Nigeria, Tanzania and Zambia.

    Privatisation of state-owned national carriers in Africa began in 1989 with the sale of the majority of shares in Guinea-Telecom in Guinea-Bissau, and STP/CST of Sao
    Tome and Principe in the same year. Between 1989 and 1997, close to 25 per cent partially privatised their state-owned telecommunications operator. In addition, six more countries have initiated, or announced, plan to sell equity stake in their state-owned telecommunication operator to private investors. However, competition in nation-wide basic services is allowed in just two markets, Ghana and Uganda, where second national operator licenses have been issued.

    The cumulative effect of these reforms is a substantial increase in telecommunications infrastructure. In 1996, Africa recorded its highest annual growth rate of 10 per cent in telephone main lines. The highest growth rates were recorded by Botswana, the Gambia, Cape Verde and Mauritius. North African countries, however, recorded marginal decline.

    3.2 Internet Access
    Internet is today one of the most dynamic telecommunication markets in Africa in spite of the fact that the region remains behind the rest of the world in informatics and information
    technology, accounting for less than 1 per cent of global spending in the sub-sector.
    Over the past five years, the number of African countries with access to the internet has risen dramatically. It was first introduced to Africa through a range of initiatives by national,
    international and non-governmental organizations, Internet is now clearly becoming a commercial undertaking with increasing private investment. Most of the countries (47 of the 54 nations) in the region have developed some form of Internet access in capital cities, either through local dialup, store and forward e-mail with a gateway to the internet, or through a full leased-line service. About 44 countries and territories have achieved full Internet public access services at least in capital cities. There are only five countries- Comoros, the Republic of Congo, Eritrea, Libya and Somalia that do not have plans for full internet assess.

    3.2.1 Network

    The key indicators of internet development are: (1) the number of host computers, (2) the number of internet service providers (ISPs) and (3) the number of users.

    a. Internet host computers: In 1997, there were 129,326 internet host computers in Africa, of which 122,025 were in South Africa, 3,310 in North Africa and 3, 991 in Sub-
    Saharan Africa. The density of internet hosts was 28.16 hosts per 10,000 people in South Africa, 0.25 in North Africa and 0.07 in Sub-Saharan Africa. The average for Africa was
    1.70.

    b. Internet Service Providers (ISPs): About half of the countries in Africa allow competition and have more than one ISP. Of the 300 or so ISPs in the region, around 200
    offer full internet services. South Africa has the highest concentration of ISPs with nearly 80
    service providers.

    c. Internet Users: In 1997, there were 896,120 Internet users on the continent of Africa, in addition to 800,000 in South Africa. This is equivalent to approximately six users for each
    host computer. The number of users averages about one user per 5,000 people (excluding South Africa with a rate of one to 65 people), compared to a global figure of one internet
    user per 45 people; or one per 6 in Europe and North America.

    3.2.2 Tariffs

    The high price of internet connections and personal computer (PCs) relative to income is a major inhibiting factor to a wider use of internet in Africa.. Estimated PCs per 100 inhabitants in 1996 was just 0.66 compared with 15.87 in America, 9.56 in Europe and 30.31 in Oceania. Considering the lower incomes of most African countries, it is unrealistic to expect widespread Internet usage on the continent. As the internet market in Africa becomes increasingly liberalized, and market forces take firmer root, prices will be driven lower owing to increasing competition among ISPs, the privatisation of state-owned telecommunications corporations, and the liberalization of domestic telephone markets.

    3.2.3 Bottlenecks

    Internet use in Africa is limited. The basic obstacles in the path of rapid Internet growth are the lack of telecommunication infrastructure, and the relatively high hardware and transmission costs. Although many countries have taken major steps to improve their infrastructure, great variation still remains between regions and countries; rural areas, where 70-80 per cent of the population resides, are largely uncovered by telephone service.
    International internet bandwidth is lacking because international leased lines are costly and crowded, and peering between ISPs is limited. Proposals, such as the Africa One and SAFE- undersea fibre-optic cables, or wireless technologies including WLL, VSAT, HF radio and GMPCS systems, or stratospheric Helium supported balloons promise to extend internet services to both urban and rural areas. Hardware is much more expensive in Africa relative to many other parts of the world due to high import tariffs and little price competition.

    An increasing number of countries are allowing internet service provider (ISP) competition, even though more than ten countries still hold monopoly control. PTOs have
    assumed a monopoly position especially in countries where the Public Telecommunications Operator (PTO) established the international internet backbone with some exceptions, such
    as South Africa, Mozambique and Zambia. Foreign internet service providers are increasingly entering into Africa and are expected to gain market share from the local companies. Open entry for ISPs, however, is not enough to ensure rapid Internet growth. An appropriate, “Internet-friendly” regulatory framework is also important to achieve effective
    entry, survival and growth of ISPs. High license fees, for example, can limit the entry of ISPs.

    3.3 Transport

    Transport constitutes an important sector for the enhancement of economic growth and the socio-economic integration of the African region, particularly the promotion of intra- and extra-African trade. However, despite the efforts made in the past five decades to develop the transport sector in Africa, it has remained inadequate and ineffective. The general lack of repairs and maintenance in infrastructure has led to further deterioration in the sector in recent years, and has, as well, increased the magnitude of its operational problems and costs. The environmental implications of transport policies and projects also received low priority.

    However, despite the difficult environment of high operating costs and low capacity utilization, the various sub-sectors of transport have shown some remarkable resilience.

    3.3.1 Roads

    In Africa, road transport is the most widely used means of transportation. The fragmentary
    nature of the railway system and the limitations imposed on the scope of inland water
    transport by geographical factors are such that the transport of people and goods by rail and
    inland waterways has to be supplemented usually by road transport over long distances.

    3.3.1.1 Road Network

    An accurate assessment of the development of the road networks in African countries is made difficult by the lack of reliable statistical information and the compelling necessity to employ, for analytical purposes, surrogate indicators, such as aggregate lengths, classified according to operating conditions, instead of such standard indices as ton-kilometre or passenger/ kilometre.

    Africa had approximately 311,184 kilometers of paved roads in 1991 (see Table A2), with half of them in poor conditions. Chart 4 indicates that only 24.2 percent of total road network in Africa were paved in 1996 albeit with considerable regional diversity. 57.4 percent of the roads in North Africa were paved compared to 25 percent in South Africa and 10.2 percent in Central Africa. Road densities per km2 are generally much lower than those of Asia and Latin America. Road construction and maintenance standards vary greatly in
    Africa: few countries are able to construct and maintain trunk-road systems to stipulated requirements and standards according to volume and weight of traffic. Road building has
    traditionally been given more priority than road maintenance in most African countries, with scant attention to the imperatives of recurrent costs and road management once a road has been constructed. Besides, as the road networks expands, the institutional and financial burden has tended to increase much more rapidly than the national budget could cater for, especially in times of socio-economic crisis.

    Another important dimension to the quality of infrastructure is maintenance and renewal. Lack of maintenance has left over 50 per cent of the paved roads in poor conditions. Over 80 per cent of the unpaved main roads in Africa would be considered just fair. The case of rural feeder roads is even worse; up to 85 per cent are estimated to be currently in poor conditions.

    The constructing of international road networks on a sub-regional basis in Africa has received much greater attention. However, a real regional African road system does not as yet exist; what exists, instead, is a large number of separate national road networks that are ineffectively coordinated, and are at best a series of ad hoc inter-country road links and connection.

    3.3.1.2 Demand and Supply Pattern

    National road networks in Africa have not kept pace with the growing demand: kilometre lengths are limited and their standards of construction often low. The existence of
    inadequate and poorly maintained rural and feeder roads connecting villages and farming areas with each other, and to market centres is a major gap in rural transport in most
    countries. And few cities have been able to keep pace with road network needs. As agriculture and industry expand, and as national and subregional economies develop, existing road networks will require tremendous extensions and improvements in quality. In particular, road links between nations will have to be strengthened to meet large scale
    demand for intra-and inter-subregional goods traffic; all of this require heavy capital investment and expenditure on roads in many African countries.

    3.3.2 Rail

    Railways in Africa are fragmented, and can hardly be described as a system since the railways run from the interior to sea ports, a reflection of their antecedent as a transport
    system designed for external trade purposes.

    3.3.2.1 Available Network

    The aggregate network of African railways is estimated at 73,000 route kilometres, of which South Africa alone accounts for some 22,500 km. Eleven countries namely; Burundi,
    Central Africa Republic, Chad, Cape Verde, Comoros, Djibouti, Mauritius, Seychelles, Somalia, the Gambia, Guinea Bissau and Libya have no railway system. With the exception of North Africa, railways in Africa generally have a low level of traffic. Most of the lines are of light rail, and are unsuited for fast and heavy traffic. Moreover, there is general deterioration due to maintenance problems.

    The national railway networks in Africa are mostly independent of each other and, with the exception of Eastern and Southern African railways, unconnected among themselves. All the networks in Africa were built at the end of the nineteenth century or the beginning of the twentieth century, with different technical characters, gauges, couplings, brake systems, buffers, etc. The only exceptions are, Tazara, the Trans-Gabonese, the Trans-Cameroonian and the mining lines. The 1.067 m gauge predominates, especially in sub-
    Saharan Africa, whereas the 1.435 m gauge accounts for 76.1 per cent of the total kilometrage in North Africa.. Upgrading existing railway lines would involve major investments in track realignment, resignalling, safety systems and rolling stock..

    3.3.2.2 Demand and Supply pattern

    Almost all the railways in Africa enjoyed monopoly or near-monopoly status at inception, especially for long- and medium- distance transport of goods and peoples. With the spectacular development of road transport and to a lesser extent, air transport, in the 1970s, railways have, however, faced increased competition in the transport market, to
    which they have not always been able to positively respond and adapt.

    3.3.2.3 Tariffs

    Railway tariff has stagnated or declined in recent years, and measures of operational efficiency have shown little improvement. For example, locomotive availability remained
    generally low at around 50 percent, although both Uganda and Zimbabwe have improved performance in response to restructuring plans. Most railway authorities in Africa have not pursued sustainable tariff policies. Being public or semi-public enterprises, they were not always profit-oriented or cost- conscious in their operation, limiting their ability to maintain the existing networks, let alone upgrade or expand them. Whenever they made profits, they were required to pass them to the users in the form of reduced tariff rates. The tariff basis was the same throughout the network, varying only with distance.

    Freight rates by rail in Africa are on average about twice as high as those in Asia and one and half times those in Latin America. But, at the same time, rail operations run at a
    deficit. A number of reform programs are under way. These include increased managerial autonomy and sub-contracting more services to the private sector. Some have sub-contracted part, or all, track maintenance to the private sector (Cameroon, Gabon, Nigeria and Senegal) and Senegal has also sub-contracted cleaning of rolling stick, maintenance of wagons, catering and parcels traffic. The broadest private sector initiative involves re-unifying the railways of Cote d’ Ivoire and Burkina Faso, with a view to operating them
    under a concession agreement with the private sector.

    3.3.3 Airports

    Air transport network in Africa is still relatively underdeveloped. All countries in the region have at least one international airport as well as several smaller ones. Few of them are capable of handling large amount of traffic. Less than 50 per cent of the 5,304 potential air links among the countries in the region are actually operational or being actively exploited at present. The countries with the highest number of airports are Egypt (17 airports) and Nigeria (15 Airports). Most of the airports lack modern equipment and infrastructure. They are characterized by deteriorating runways, and obsolete traffic control equipment. Much of
    the infrastructure required for ancillary activities, such as customs and immigration, air cargo, catering, baggage handing and connecting surface transportation, is lacking compared
    with market needs. For example, operational and safety shortcoming that plague Nigeria’s international airports have given them the reputation of being among the worst in the World.

    Almost every African country own at least one airline although some of them are being privatized in recent times. However, Air Afrique is a regional airline, jointly owned
    by ten countries. The privatized airlines include Kenya Airways incidentally the first airline to be privatized in Africa, Royal Air Maroc and Air Tunisia both of which are
    partially privatized. Nigeria, however, adopted the liberalisation of the domestic aviation industry resulting in the licencing of 22 private carriers, of which 14 offer scheduled
    passenger service, 7 carry cargo and the balance provide charter fights.

    Only Cote d’ Ivoire is currently actively reforming its airports with the ceding of the management of Abidjan’s international airport to a French international consortium, Aeria, which has pledged to spend CFA 14 billion upgrading the airport.

    3.3.3.1 Tariffs

    The airlines in Africa suffer from high operational costs compared with their counterparts world-wide, including other developing regions; they lack proper maintenance facilities
    locally and their tariffs are generally uncompetitive in the absence of subsidies. With the growth of mega-airlines in many regions of the world, the African airlines, being mostly
    small and poorly equipped, are unable to compete in the international market. And the only hope for survival for most of them lies in mergers with bigger and more competitive
    carriers.

    .3.3.3 Demand and Supply Pattern

    Air services are restricted by low demand in several countries. Apart from Air Mauritius which accounted for about 50 per cent of total persenger traffic in 1997, the share of African
    airlines in international traffic is very low, owing in part to a reputation of poor services and reliability. For example, the share of Air Egypt in international traffic is only 25 per cent at
    most, despite fare reductions in recent times.

    3.3.4 Sea Ports

    Maritime transport is extremely important to African countries due to the nature of its operations, and the high proportion of traded goods transported by sea. However, the poor quality of port services and infrastructure in Africa, and the low level of trade volumes are some of the major limitations on the growth of this sub-sector. Port productivity is, on average, about a third of international norm due to poor management, excessive bureaucracy, and inadequate as well as unreliable of equipment. Delays in clearing goods are frequently a problem. Most ports are in need of modern, better managed facilities to serve traffic for which sea transport has a significant cost advantage over surface transport, such as dry and liquid bulk cargoes or containerized cargo. The port of Mombassa, for instance, has only two cranes one of which is frequently out of order. The main port of Ghana was recently rehabilitated and expanded but suffers from mostly human inefficiencies. Manufacturers habitually post employees in the port for several days on end to make sure that the goods move in and out of the port on time. There is generally a need for upgrading of existing ports in Africa.

    Less than two per cent of the African merchant fleet capacity are container ships; the majority being conventional cargo ships. The shipping lines that principally service long-
    distance sea routes consider most of Africa’s coastal traffic as mere subsidiary to their traditional overseas activities.

    3.3.4.2 Tariff

    Ocean freight charges in Africa are competitive. The impression that ocean freight charges from Africa are prohibitively high is not supported by the facts. Empirical evidence provided by Biggs, et al. (1994) and presented in Table 7 on freight and port charges from five African countries to the port of New York/Newark and a comparison with similar charges from Sri Lanka and Bangladesh, two countries in East Asia, indicate that freight charges generally reflect their relative distances to the port of destination and appear to give West African countries a slight competitive advantage. However, port charges in the principal ports in Africa are higher than the comparable charges in the two Asian ports.
    Consequently, when freight and port charges are added up, the costs of transportation from some ports in Africa may actually be higher than from those ports in East Asia. Interviews with a number of large shipping agents indicate that the frequency of sailing from the principal African ports to New York/Newark is also not a constraining element.

    3.4 Electricity

    3.4.1 Available Network

    Total electricity generation in 1994 was 350,000 Gigawatt-hours. The generation mix is dominated by fossil fuel generating plants which account for 81 percent of total
    electricity generation, with hydro accounting for just 15 per cent. A small fraction of available hydro resources is utilized in Africa, with 64.4 percent of the exploitable hydro capacity located in East and Southern Africa, 34.2 percent in West Africa and 1.2 percent in North Africa. This is mainly due to shortfalls in water-flow associated with climate change in some countries, low demand in countries endowed with immense hydro resources, and potential transmission losses associated with long distance transmission from countries endowed with immense hydro resources to energy deficient
    countries and regions. Oil-based generation is more uniformly distributed in Africa while coal-based generation feature prominently in the southern African countries of South

    Africa, Zimbabwe, Botswana, and Mozambique; and in Morocco in North Africa and Niger in West Africa. Gas fuelled plants are of increasing importance in Algeria, Nigeria
    Tunisia. Nuclear and geothermal plants are relatively unimportant at 2.7 and 0.1 per cent respectively. Kenya remains the only country exploiting its geothermal resources, though progress in this direction remains lack-lustre.

    In terms of regional distribution, North Africa accounts for about one third of Africa’s electricity production based largely on burning oil supported by coal and natural gas. West Africa’s share of 9 per cent is based on a mixture of hydro, oil and gas. Central Africa’s share of 4 per cent is dominated by hydro and East Africa’s share of 3 per cent consists of s mixture of oil and hydro. Southern Africa produces the largest share of Africa’s electricity production-about-55 per cent which is dominated by hydro and coal-burning generating plants.

    The region’s generation, transmission and distribution systems tend to be old and inefficient, resulting in often substantial losses of generated energy, as much as 40
    percent in the case of Uganda. These system losses have further limited the amount of energy available for production and consumption. Furthermore, in many countries consumers have experienced frequent power outages as well as voltage fluctuations, which damage electronic equipment and motors. This unreliability has forced many enterprises in the region to buy and install their own generators, thus raising their
    overhead costs.

    Self-provision of electricity is common across the region. In Uganda, most large customers maintain stand-by diesel generators.5 In Guinea, between 1983-1992 the private sector installed for its own use some 70 MW of power generation, and in 1993 produced some 109 GWH of electricity, almost as much as the national electric utility6

    3.4.2 Demand and Supply Pattern

    Africa’s state-owned energy sector in the early 1990s typifies some of the worst failings of the African public monopoly model. While deficiencies in the public enterprises model are
    hardly unique to Africa, its weak administrative capacity and legacy of political instability exacerbate the problem.

    Countries in the region have one state-owned company performing the four separable activities of generation, transmission, distribution and supply. Only a few countries, such asGhana, have separate companies responsible for generation and transmission, and distribution. Private sector participation in the power sector, although not legally
    prohibited, is negligible in most countries in the region. Available data on the structures of power sectors in the region and the policies of different governments suggest that the
    pattern of vertically integrated monopoly enterprises with little or no autonomy from government to operate in a commercial manner is typical of Africa. For example, the utility SONEL in Cameroon is approximately 93 percent state-owned, with a board of directors appointed by the government’ UEB in Uganda handles generation, transmission and distribution, and also regulates itself; and NEPA in Nigeria is a state monopoly, and government controls all procurements and foreign exchange transactions. Almost all
    countries in the region have opted for an electric utility industry that is an arm of government and generally vertically integrated.

    Table 8 presents two performance indicators for selected countries in the region: transmission and distribution losses and rate of return on net fixed asset. Countries perform
    differently according to these indicators. Uganda has, for instance, transmission and distribution losses of 38 percent and zero rate of return on net fixed asset, while Ghana has
    lower transmission and distribution losses (17.8 percent) and a higher rate of return on net fixed asset (6 per cent) than Uganda. Such differences are also observed when countries in
    the region are compared with some countries in other regions of the world (Table 8).
    Comparing the performance of the power sectors in most of these SSA countries with that of Chile, a developing country which has reformed its power sector, the latter outperforms
    most of the former (at least according to the two indicators that we cite in Table 8). (The only exception is South Africa1).

    Most of these countries have rates of return on net fixed asset and debt service coverage that are very low. For instance Nigeria, Sierra Leone and Guinea obtained negative returns in the range of minus 6.2 to 16 percent (Gutierrez 1996). On the issue of reliability, data for power systems in Africa are extremely limited; moreover, supply is widely considered to be low in several African countries. Alternatively, electric utility industry reforms in Chile and Argentina, which led to significant increases in plant availability factors, have reduced the number, length and frequency of outages as compared to their previous experiences (Gutierrez 1996).
    3.4.3 Electricity Tariffs

    Prices of electricity have typically been between 3 and 4 cents per KWH, compared to 8 and 9 cents or higher in developed economies. Prices have thus been insufficient to generate revenue to cover long run marginal cost, taking into account asset depreciation. These problems are further exacerbated by difficulties in billing and billing decision. Traditionally, state-owned enterprises have played a dual role in electric utility services, acting both as providers of services and regulators. The regulatory structure is not transparent, often characterized by undesired distortive effects. Tariffs, for example, are set by cabinet decision or by the line ministry responsible for the power sector. Most countries have had relatively high inflation (i.e., double-digit) during the past twenty years. As a consequence, there has been a definite tendency to use the cabinet’s or the line ministry’s
    ability to manipulate electricity prices as part of broader anti-inflationary programmes. This suggest that real electricity prices have actually fallen drastically n those countries in the region with high inflation.

    3.5 Water and Waste Management

    Africa made some progress during the International Drinking Water Supply and Sanitation Decade (1980-90). The number of persons served in urban and rural areas rose from 110
    million in 1980 to 230 million in 1990 (114 million of the later being in urban areas). But this was overshadowed by rapid population growth, resulting in more urban residents being
    without adequate water supplies in 1990 that in 1980. Water supply and treatment are also deficient in the region. In 1995, only 60.1 and 40.24 percent of the region’s urban and rural
    population respectively had access to safe water, albeit with substantial variation in different countries the range was 18 and 18 percent in Central African Republic and 95 and
    100 percent for urban and rural areas respectively in Mauritius. Chart 5 presents a comparative analysis of the percentage of population with access to safe water for Africa
    and other regions. Most of the water pipe networks are old and urgently require repair and replacement.

    UrbanRural

    Africa’s performance in terms of access to sanitation is equally deplorable. In 1995, only 36.6 per cent of the population had access to sanitation compare to 51 per cent in South East Asia, 64.1 percent in Latin America and 96.7 OECD countries (see Table A1).


    However, why Mauritius attained 100 per cent access, the comparative figures for Zambia, Congo Republic and Lesotho are 23, 9 and 6 per cent respectively. A few urban water utilities have been restructured (Conakry, Abidjan, Banjul, for instance). They have moved from being government departments operating with little commercial autonomy and no accountability to commercially run public agencies or to fully or partially privatized firms. Experience has shown that delivery of water to the poorest segments of the population becomes both cheaper and more reliable through such reforms but this transition is still in its early stages.

    3.5.2 Tariffs

    Except in very few countries, water and waste-water sectors rely on governments for a substantial part of funding requirements, especially for capital investment. Charges are thus kept low to convey benefits to households. Table 9 presents the median price of water for several African countries in 1993. The figures compare favourably with the median price of $0.54 in Asia Pacific but low compared to $2.24 in industralized economies. As with other infrastructure sectors, the balance between household and industrial water tariffs tends to fall more heavily on industry. Currently, the price of water does not reflect its scarcity, resulting in wasteful use of water.

    3.6. War Affected Countries

    Many devastating conflicts have persisted in several African countries ( Ethiopia, Namibia, Uganda, Angola and Mozambique) while pernicious internal struggle continue to plague others (Liberia, Somalia, Sudan and Sierra Leone). The damage inflicted on the social capital and economic potential of these countries have been horrific. The impact of warfare on physical infrastructure has been enormous, exercebating the already precarious situation. While war ravaged, infrastructure stocks including roads and bridges were often the primary targets. Existing infrastructure stocks were often severely depleted. For example, in Uganda, the transport infrastructure suffered greatly from neglect during the troubled period between 1971 and 1986. The international airport at Entebbe was extensively damaged during the conflict with Tanzania in 1979-80. The railway system was not left out as many sectors of tract, apart from the rolling stock, were in serious need of remedial work by 1986. This has been the trend in many war ravaged economies.

    .7. Landlocked Countries and Infrastructure

    Africa has a considerable number of landlocked countries, incidentally among the poorest countries in the world. The current state of infrastructure provision in these countries is demonstrably poor relative to other African countries, thus constituting impediments to the growth potentials of these economies. Countries like Malawi, Uganda, Zimbabwe and Zambia rely on neigbouring countries to ensure reliable delivery. Transportation problems are compounded for landlocked countries by problems in intermodal transportation. In many cases, railway system differ among countries, schedules are not coordinated, and even in transport by road, goods tend to be delayed by customs control. It takes a typical Ugandan business man, three and half months from the time of shipment departure from Europe until arrival Kampala, three times what will be needed under comparable conditions elsewhere in the world (Donaldson, et. al. 1997).

    3.8 Infrastructure and the Environment

    Infrastructure development in Africa has largely proceeded with minimal consideration for environmental standards and quality. This has been a major factor in the severe degradation of the environment in the form of industrial pollution. In any case, environmental issues have not been given serious policy considerations in Africa’s development agenda. Environmental awareness has only become perceptible in recent years since the Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro in Brazil in June 1992. The concept of sustainable infrastructure development has become relevant in Africa.
    Creating a sustainable infrastructure economy based on efficient resource use should be given greater consideration. The environmental problems within urban areas often termed the ‘brown agenda’ is more immediate in Africa. The issues involve include the lack of safe water supply and sanitation, inadequate solid and harzadious waste management, emissions from cars etc. The need arises to introduce environmental sound practices in the management of existing infrastructure in Africa. 

     

    Causal Factors in the Inadequate Provision and Delivery of Infrastructure Services in Africa.

    A pertinent question is what led to the present unsatisfactory outcomes? In spite of the recognition that each infrastructure sector has its own peculiar problems, there are common weaknesses in most African countries. An extensive inquiry is beyond the scope of this paper, but it suffices to focus on several general reasons affecting infrastructure delivery in Africa.

    While political and economic instability, low per capita incomes and often challenging geographic conditions have significantly constrained the development of Africa’s infrastructure, there is abundant evidence that the protracted crisis in the sector is due mainly to past and current policy choices. A major explanatory factor is the prevalence of a regime of price controls that for a long time had little consideration for commercial objectives including cost recovery. Prices amount, on average, to just above a third of supply costs and are half as much as those in industrial countries. The pricing regime is characterized by administered prices that are in many cases appreciably below what is required to operate, maintain and rehabilitate facilities, and consequently entail large efficiency losses and social costs. Too often, controlled prices often imposed on state infrastructure monopolies, prices that are unresponsive to changing market conditions, encourage uneconomic investment of resources targeted at meeting the inefficient and unsustainable growth in the demand for infrastructure services. It is evident that prices that are below economic costs and what is needed to finance infrastructure development and maintenance expenditure in the face of escalating cost conditions in the industry are unlikely to restrain excessive demand and minimize uneconomic investment of resources. With negative or at best low positive financial and social rates of return to infrastructure investment associated with low product prices, it is not surprising that supply shortages persisted in the sector. In response to these shortages, many businesses and households have resorted to self-provision, often at high cost. For example, according to a 1988 study of 179 Nigerian manufacturers, 92 percent of forms surveyed owned electricity generators, and 44 percent had boreholes to assure their own private water supply. In the face of chronically unreliable public services, many also had acquired radio equipment for communications (37 percent of firms) and vehicles to transport personnel (37 percent) and freight (63 percent).
    For firms with 50 or more employees that could practice economies of scale, the extra costs of private power generator amounted to some 10 percent of the total machinery and equipment budget; for smaller firms, the burden was as high as 25 percent.7 Substantial self-provision of infrastructure is also the norm for low income consumers, relief from the failure of public providers often comes through the informal sector. The best known examples are private water vendors who use trucks or smaller receptacles to haul water either for distribution at central locations or to individual dwellings. In some places, private vendors served 90 percent of households, and in several places purchases of private water amounted to more than 30 percent of household income.

    A fairly robust analysis of incremental reserves that would arise from moderate and achievable increase in financial returns through pricing reforms in Africa’s infrastructure, albeit dated, indicates that the net benefit on resource mobilized would amount to about one fifth and one third of public revenues as shown in Table 11 (Anderson,1989). Furthermore, such reforms apart from being easy to administer would entail negligible ‘deadweight’ or efficiency losses.

    Sector Current contribution Potential Contribution as Percentage to Public Revenue of Public Revenue

    Overall Incremental Effect

    Electricity small or negative 5 – 10 per cent 5 – 10 per cent

    Water small or negative 2 – 5 per cent 2 – 5 per cent

    Telecoms varies but marginal 5 – 10 per cent 5 – 10 per cent

    Roads 10 – 15 per cent 10 – 25 per cent 5 – 10 per cent
    Source: Anderson (1987).

    Apart from administered prices, several demand and supply-related factors, some of them interwined, have had a profound negative impact on infrastructure development in Africa. As in most other developing countries, governments in the region have assumed responsibility for almost all of these infrastructure services through state owned enterprises created precisely in order to make socially productive investments so as to eliminate impediments to the overall economic development. Almost without exception, the provision of infrastructure in Africa is the exclusive responsibility of the government.
    Government own, operate and finance nearly all infrastructure. Thus, the record of success and failure in infrastructure is largely a story of government’s performance. However, these enterprises have established a poor reputation across Africa. Besides trying to provide a particular service to an acceptable quality, they are also expected to pursue a variety of social” goals, including the creation of employment and the subsidization of prices to consumers, ostensibly with the view to providing broad and affordable access to the poorer parts of society. These objectives have in reality imposed a variety of costs on the enterprises as a major employment mechanism has resulted in significantly bloated workforces. Similarly, the prevalence of widespread input and output subsidies creates significant wedges between product prices and costs and in the process confront these enterprises with soft budget constraints and dysfunctional government interference in sector activities and enterprise management functions that encourage gross inefficiency in production, distorted demand patterns and investment choices, induced endemic and expensive delays and cost overruns that encouraged widespread corruption in infrastructure construction and equipment and material purchases and minimized the market responsiveness of the sector to changing demand and supply conditions through excessive regulations. The subsidization of services in reality often allows the more affluent citizens to benefit disproportionately from artificially low prices by providing them with better access to these services. In Lusaka, Zambia, for instance, only 28% of the households in the poorest fifth of the population have access to electricity, compared to 70% in the richest segment. Similarly, it has been estimated that the poorest fifth of the population in Tanzania receives only about 10 per cent of the government subsidy for water, whereas the richest fifth receives about 40 percent. At the same time, these subsidization polices have invariably translated into smaller revenues. Public utilities have thus often found themselves in the difficult financial position of not being able to cover their operating expenses. It has not been possible in many cases to maintain existing facilities adequately, and new investments have consistently had to be postponed. At the same time, most governments have suffered from chronic budget deficits, which have kept them from filling the financial gap. In the end, countries have been left with inadequate infrastructural facilities, while the responsible enterprises, not motivated by commercial objectives, have had little incentive to improve their performance significantly. The Nigerian experience provides considerable support for the distortionary effects and the disincentives associated with excessive political interference in investment decision, pricing policy, plant location, equipment choice and employment structure resulting in higher costs and low earning ability of public infrastructure.

    Economic theory justifies an important role for government intervention in efficient and equitable infrastructure use and provision. The arguments rest on several “traditional” notions of market failure, such as: externalities in consumption and production; scale economies; non-excludability; information problems about benefits alleviation. But infrastructure services are diverse and each exhibits these characteristics to varying degrees. Policies often fail when they do not make such distinctions within infrastructure.

    There are several reasons why public provision of infrastructure services have not had the desirable impact in Africa.

    First, under a public sector dominated regime, investments in infrastructure are often misallocate for various reasons. For example, most of the selected projects are not based on the articulated needs of the society. Hence, there is no informed prioritisation of project selection or implementation. Hence, projects of lowest priority could be preferred to those of topmost priority in terms of the real needs of the society at a given point in time. Another dimension relates to the obsession with new projects. In this regard, there is usually excessive concentration of resources on new structures and little or no allocation to maintenance of infrastructural facilities. Interestingly, however, infrastructure is the easiest prey for speeding cuts during periods of fiscal crisis, while priority is given to consumption-promoting expenditure and projects of short term benefit to the economy. Many on-going infrastructural projects are usually abandoned, only to be revived, if at all, at very exorbitant costs later on. Another major source of disenchantment with this policy stance relates to the quality of services. The delivery of high quality services is usually hampered by technical inefficiency and outright waste.
    Inadequate maintenance leads to erratic service supply and distribution, while the low productivity of such facilities results in very high unit operating costs which are often times passed on to the consumers. The useful life of affected facilities are also shortened.
    The World Bank (1994b), observed that low-income communities are not offered suitable transport and sanitation options that provide services they value and can afford. Rather, premature investments in capacity especially in water supply, railways, power and irrigation have often absorbed resources that could otherwise have been devoted to maintenance, modernisation or improvements in service quality. More significantly, because infrastructure investments are immobile and serve local markets, excess capacity cannot serve other markets and it remains under-used. And in some cases, large public projects have been overambitious, placing a costly burden on the economy. Also important is the twin problem of waste and inefficiency, that seems to claim a large share of resources that could be used for infrastructural services delivery.

    The nature of public decision process with multiple, nebulously defined and often conflicting objectives which place less emphasis on nor provide adequate incentives for efficiency of operations is at the root of this problem. Arising therefrom, investment decisions and tariff policies are often driven primarily by political considerations. Many infrastructure projects in Africa should never have been embarked upon. Decisions to proceed with new projects are sometimes taken at the political level. It is not uncommon for the political element, for reason of prestige or with unjustified claims insist on an overdesigned capacity. Even within the state-owned enterprises, management is often appointed more on the basis of political loyalty than competence, and staffing profiles are more often dictated by political demands rather than felt needs. Costing and pricing decisions are also guided less by economic but more by political considerations. It is against this background that agitation have mounted for private sector involvement in the provision of infrastructure. This, it is hoped, would enhance the preference for economic considerations and demand-driven decisions process. Greater emphasis will be placed upon efficiency with its attendant positive effects on economic growth, enhance standard of living and poverty alleviation. The reduced pressure on government revenue will also facilitate internal and external equilibria and stimulate foreign investment. Overall, permission for private provision of infrastructure will suggest to international and national investors, or development institutions government’s commitment to sound fiscal management, efficiency and substantial role for the private sector (Kerf and Smith,
    1996).

    Redefining public-private sector interface in the provision of infrastructure services has become an important though controversial policy issue in the search for a more viable infrastructure sector in Africa. This is particularly vital since the efficiency, productivity and reliability of infrastructure provision impacts on the efficiency of domestic production and investment as well as the international competitiveness of the economy. A crucial variable is also the role of foreign capital. Foreign private involvement in Africa’s infrastructure has been quite limited as shown in Table 11 which presents private infrastructure projects word-wide between 1985 and 1995. A cursory examination of the table indicates that only sixty-four projects were recorded for Africa in the ten year period, compared to 223 for East Asia/Pacific and 252 for OECD countries. The project sum at $1.2 billion (less than 1 per cent) is equally deplorable and the reasons are not farfetched.

    The region is yet to broaden its investment base beyond energy and mining which remain the prime attractions. Africa has the unenviable reputation of having uncompetitive product markets, thin capital markets, perceived high risks as well as legal, procedural and regulatory impediments. Public enterprises in infrastructure have a lower net worth and are
    less attractive to foreign buyers, except perhaps in telecommunications. African governments until recently resist selling to foreigners. Investors are reluctant to take an equity position in infrastructure because governments have established consistent pricing
    and other macroeconomic policies which continue to undermine infrastructure. Even in
    countries where the sector is open to private participation, there is often the problem of
    the inability of regulatory and legal institutions to provide credible commitments to create
    opportunities for potential investors to cover their investment costs and make profit
    including the risk-adjusted opportunity cost of capital. Macroeconomic and political instability as well as legal restrictions on foreign capital discourage the flow of direct
    investment to this sector. Investors are wary of internal political volatility and the uncertainty of obtaining the enforcement of contracts.

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    Roads Bring Jobs to People… Will Africa Follow this Advice??

    January 19, 2005. Over the last fifty years, investing in transport infrastructure has been a common ‘strategic’ intervention intended to bring firms and job creation to lagging regions stuck in spatial poverty traps, where poor infrastructure and resource endowments limit access to educational, social, and economic opportunities

    However, World Bank researchers Deichmann, Kaiser, Lall, and Shalizi find that, in practice, firms often make their location decisions based on a range of factors—including the benefits of clustering in areas that offer both natural and production-related advantages.

    This finding is part of a broader World Bank development research effort to examine the effectiveness of government interventions in lagging regions, and the policy tension between the market solution of out-migration or “moving people to jobs”, and the intervention of promoting capital flows, including fiscal transfers designed to support incomes or to subsidize the creation of jobs and the extension of credit –“moving jobs to people”.

    “Roads are necessary for the expansion of production and trade, but they do not always facilitate the movement of jobs to people,” says Zmarak Shalizi, who heads the Infrastructure & Environment Research Team at the World Bank. “Our research in Indonesia shows that investing in transport infrastructure to attract industry to secondary centers outside of Java will have limited success without complementary investments, especially in sectors that benefit from clustering and are already established in other leading regions.”

    The broader conclusion from the Indonesia research study is that authorities need to better understand the factors that influence location decisions for manufacturing firms, and also need to view the outcomes of potential policy interventions in a new ‘economic geography’ context.

    Given that governments in both developed and developing countries have widely undertaken spatially targeted programs that include public expenditure on transport infrastructure to improve market accessibility, the research presents new evidence that could influence future policy decisions.

    In Bihar, India, for instance, standardized manufacturing development is not likely to be very successful, where production is already clustered elsewhere in India because of increasing returns from clustering. In the absence of investment focused in a few centers, the state is more likely to benefit from an agro-based industrial strategy, since agriculture is likely to be the mainstay of Bihar’s economy for the foreseeable future.

    What firms want

    ‘Localization economies’ partly explain the location decisions of some firms. These clusters of firms located in the same area share sector-specific inputs, skilled labor and knowledge. Opportunities for intra-industry linkages such as buyer-supplier relationships, and subcontracting are higher when firms are located near one another.

    Firms also look for the benefits offered by ‘urbanization economies’, where a larger overall size of urban agglomeration and its diverse industry mix enables innovative firms to access a large pool of potential buyers and complementary services.

    Larger cities provide a larger home market for products; attract skilled employees looking for urban amenities; and offer financial, legal, real estate, advertising and services not available to such an extent in smaller towns.

    In addition, firms look at various aspects of the local business environment, ranging from quality and cost of complementary utility services to the nature of the regulatory environment.

    The limited success of regional incentives

    Evidence from research is mixed on whether regional incentives—such as interest rate subsidies, tax breaks and industrial estate development—succeed in attracting industries or transforming the fortunes of lagging regions within a country.

    In India, evidence shows that the government’s policy of influencing industry location toward backward areas using licensing regulations was neither successful in stimulating industrialization in these areas, nor sustainable in the long run, as new investments moved out of these regions as soon as regulations were relaxed.

    In Brazil, research suggests some regional incentives are effective where the need for complementary factors have been addressed.

    Developing an “intervention package”

    “Clearly, large-scale transport improvements and regional incentives, without other forms of public service provision and amenity creation, are not enough to induce firms to locate production facilities in spatially disadvantaged areas,” says Somik V. Lall, Senior Economist with the Bank’s Infrastructure & Environment Research Team.

    Lall advocates that governments seeking to woo firms into lagging areas invest first in finding out more about what firms want, and then develop a comprehensive package of strategic complementary interventions.

    Finding out more about what firms want can be done both through surveys of firm representatives, as well as by econometric analysis that can establish the probability of a firm in a specific sector establishing production in a particular location.

    A survey that attempts to find out what firms want should gather information on several aspects of the business environment. For instance, measures of the quality of utilities, such as frequency and duration of electricity cuts, can directly affect firms’ performance.

    Measures of the regulatory environment are also very important – firms’ decisions could be influenced by the time taken to start a new business, time taken to hire or lay off employees, and the existence of corruption among officials.

    The researchers

    World Bank Development Research Group

    Uwe Deichmann is a Senior Environmental Specialist in the Development Research Group and coordinator of its Spatial Analysis Team. His research interests are in the geographic aspects of development. He is currently working on approaches to information based urban management in rapidly growing cities and on poverty-environment linkages.

    Somik V. Lall is a senior economist with the infrastructure and environment team of the Development Research Group. His current research includes (1) examining the impacts of programs to assist the urban poor, (2) implications of strengthening local government fiscal capacity, and (3) influence of local and regional policies on sub national growth. Lall has recently initiated a policy research program with IPEA in Brazil to examine the determinants of growth and slum formation in urban areas, and is also working with the Indian National Institute of Public Finance and Policy (NIPFP) to examine the consequences of improving local tax handles on revenues and provision of services and local public goods in selected Indian cities.

    Zmarak Shalizi is Senior Research Manager for Infrastructure and Environment in the Development Research Group. His current research interests include (1) urban and regional development, including evaluating pricing and non-pricing approaches to reducing the negative externalities associated with motorization in rapidly growing cities in Asia; (2) Mitigation and adaptation issues associated with climate change, particularly problems of lock-in and path dependency in the use of different types of energy in China and India; (3) evaluating institutional reforms and economic instruments to facilitate Forest and Biodiversity conservation.

    World Bank Poverty Reduction and Economic Management Unit
    Kai Kaiser is an Economist with the Public Sector Group at the World Bank. His current work focused on decentralization and sub-national economics, public finance, and institutional constraints to government performance and reform. Previously he was based in Jakarta, Indonesia. He remains engaged in a research project to assess the impact for Indonesia’s 2001 Big Bang decentralization on households and firms. Recently he has also worked on decentralization reforms in Africa and South Asia.

    External Researchers:

    Professor Christopher Timmins (Duke University)

    Professor Sanjoy Chakravorty (Temple University)

    Dr. Alexandre Carvalho (IPEA, Brazil)

    References:

    Agglomeration, transport, and regional development in Indonesia. Uwe Deichmann, Kai Kaiser, Somik V. Lall, Zmarak Shalizi. World Bank Policy Research Working Paper 3477, January 2005

    Public Interventions for improving economic prospects of lagging regions: review of experience. Somik V. Lall. The World Bank and NIPFP, October 2005

    Regional Subsidies and Industrial Prospects of Lagging Regions. Alexandre Carvalho, Somik V. Lall, and Christopher Timmins. World Bank Policy Research Working Paper, forthcoming.

    Industrial Location and Spatial Inequality: Theory and Evidence from India. Somik V. Lall and Sanjoy Chakravorty, Review of Development Economics, 9, 47-68, 2005.

    October 17, 2007

    Time for Africa to Insist On Defining Its Own Future

    Time for Continent to Insist On Defining Its Own Future

    Business Day (Johannesburg)
    OPINION
    3 October 2007
    Posted to the web 3 October 2007

    By Paul Kagame

    THERE is very little to show for the $300bn in aid that has apparently been disbursed to the African continent since 1970. Economic growth and human development in Africa still lag behind the rest of the world.

    In part, this is because past aid flows were often spent to suit the geostrategic interests of the givers. Today, Africa represents less than 2% of world trade. While Asia and Latin America have become richer through integration with the global economy, Africa has yet to take advantage of globalisation.

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    Fresh promises of doubling aid to Africa to $50bn a year are to be welcomed, but this money will not suffice in transforming our continent. To assess whether aid can be a more effective tool of development, we first have to understand why it is that Africa has fallen behind.

    Four reasons stand out.

    The first is bad leadership, giving way to personalised governance and weak public institutions, often led to costly conflict in Africa. The resulting insecurity made productive investment all but impossible. Moreover, bad leadership in one country often infected entire regions. Thankfully, since the early 1990s, democratic governance has made steady gains throughout Africa.

    The second was a failure to invest in people — a trend that Africa is slowly reversing. We cannot expect to develop if we disqualify half of our population — women — from full and equal participation in national endeavours. That is why in Rwanda we have been reforming our laws and institutions to bring women into the mainstream of socioeconomic and political development. Today half of our MPs are women.

    Similarly, investing in education is a precondition for Africa’s development and for accessing the global economy. We have no option but to rapidly increase the number of science and technology graduates, and do much better at retaining than in the past.

    That leads us to the third reason, a lack of productivity and competitiveness. Countries get rich by adding value to commodities and selling these products. But that requires investment and Africa is still hardly the most attractive destination for such capital. Inadequate infrastructure, insecurity, lack of skilled labour and stifling government bureaucracies cause investors to put their money elsewhere. Again we in Africa are reforming these structures and systems, but we need to do more and faster.

    Fourth, we have to be honest about the consequences of aid dependence. Countries that have used aid as a temporary support while domestic and foreign investment stocks are built up have achieved lasting success. Aid should strengthen the bonds between governments and their own citizens, including business communities. It should aim to build stronger domestic institutions and transfer skills to local managers and administrators. If aid weakens these relationships, systems and structures, it should be rejected. Development is about choices, and so is the acceptance of aid.

    There have been recent, positive changes in the way some aid is given. For example, the Clinton Global Initiative (CGI) commits human and financial resources to community development in fields ranging from health care to environmental protection. The CGI’s strength is in its close alignment with national priorities, working hand in glove with African institutions. This approach stresses the effectiveness of aid as transitory support, avoiding long-term dependence.

    But what really matters most for socio-economic transformation is private capital and Africa’s share. Africa receives less than 10% of the $500bn in annual private capital flows to emerging markets — five times the amount of official development assistance to all countries. How can we increase these flows to our continent?

    First and foremost, we must maintain security. But security is not only — or even primarily — about the work of the military or the police. Security also derives from economic growth and political inclusiveness. Security ultimately is about building inclusive political culture in which all citizens see themselves. And this has to spread regionally to instil greater confidence for those international investors viewing Africa as a whole as one big “trouble spot”.

    In Africa, we must above all confront the key constraints facing our economies. In Rwanda, our priorities include addressing the high costs of electricity and transportation. But these constraints are not necessarily universal to every African economy, and they certainly do not affect all our countries equally, which is why there will never be a successful “one-size-fits-all” solution to our continent’s development challenges.

    The barriers that governments put in the path of entrepreneurs need to be urgently removed. Individuals and companies create wealth, not governments. This is not to say that the state should become invisible. But governments should see their roles as enablers of business, and not gatekeepers that control and hamper it.

    Lastly, we must develop and communicate a vision. This does not come from one person. Rather, it must be nurtured over time in a way so that all citizens can contribute to its creation and ownership. Such a vision is not about reaching an abstract set of development targets focused on poverty alleviation. It is instead a positive and substantive strategy for growth and development.

    Our vision in Rwanda is to become a regional service hub for transport and communications. It is a place where energy costs are sharply reduced by the use of cutting-edge technology and realised through regional co-operation. A country where visitors can not only experience our magnificent wildlife and famous gorillas but also take a journey on our “coffee trail”, a route of plantations dotted amid spectacular mountain scenery. This is a vision where the traumatic divisions of the past are healing in the melting pot of commercial activity and burgeoning employment. It is, in every sense, a vision of “Team Rwanda”.

    The developed part of the world has also to play fair in contributing to such a vision by opening their markets to African trade. Openness and the engine of economic activity behind trade are the real tools for creating wealth and defeating poverty.

    These actions will only bear fruit when Africa substitutes external conditionality — that is, doing what the donors tell us to do — with internal policy clarity — that is, knowing ourselves what we need to do and articulating this vision clearly to our development partners.

    We need to learn to “just say no” whenever donor priorities do not align with domestic priorities. We need to use aid and debt relief as a catalyst for growth.

    Africa must increasingly be seen on its own terms, as a continent of opportunity, and not as an object of pity and charity. With its 750-million people, half of whom are under the age of 15, Africa offers a fast-growing and dynamic market.

    This is our future and our promise.

    Kagame is the president of the Republic of Rwanda.

    October 1, 2007

    Craig Eisele Creates Trans-African Development Strategies, Inc.

    Craig Eisele Creates:

    Trans-African Development Strategies, Inc.
     

                Trans-African Development Strategies, Inc or “TADS” is a New “Private” NGO focused on Infrastructure Development in Africa.

                The purpose of TADS is as follows:

    1.    To provide Infrastructure development throughout Africa, whereas the Countries of Africa incur NO DEBT.

    2.    To rehabilitate the 108,000 km of roads in Sub-Saharan Africa as identified in a study for the World Bank in 2006 (co-authored by David Wheeler) to facilitate development of trade throughout the Continent of Africa.

    3.    To establish a modern limited access 4-lane “Highway” extending from the Mediterranean Cost of Africa and ending in South Africa (hopefully Cape Town, and 1 to 2 kilometers wide the full length of approximately 10,000 km.

    4.    To encourage investment in the major portions of Infrastructure in the areas of Communications, Transportation and Power along the path of the “highway listed above in Item #3 and itemized below.

    5.    To facilitate the development of a Trans-African Railroad

    6.    To facilitate the development of a series of Pipelines to include Oil and Gas (refined and crude products) and Transportation of Water resources to areas in need.

    7.    To bring a Fiber Optic Cable through the CENTER of Africa allowing Communication, Video and Internet into areas beyond the coastlines of Africa.

    8.    To erect an Electric Transmission line from North to South through the Center of Africa.

    9.    To develop electric Generation facilities including Hydro, Solar, Wind, Nuclear and Natural Gas along this same route.

    10.  10 To assist in the development of Manufacturing Facilities and secondary and tertiary processing facilities for Natural resources to maximize value added services within Africa and to substantially add and foster job creation.

    11.  To Assist in the building of Schools and Hospitals along this same pathway.

    12.  Assist in the development of large scale commercial farming and ranching operations.

    13.  To repeat Items 3 through 12 on at least one possibly 2 East to West Trans Continental Paths in Africa intersecting with the Primary Route of North to South and tying the Continent of Africa together with World Class Facilities.

    We are certain that this will allow Africa to not only be self sufficient, but also Increases Wages to alleviate Poverty, reduce human suffering increase health care availability, and foster educational benefits throughout Africa and allow other NGO’s to better server those people who are in need but are not getting the aid they now desperately need because of the lack of infrastructure.

    We also believe that the increase in GNP and GDP will spawn an increase in Tax Revenues and the ability for the countries to be able to access international financing for other projects that each individual country deems appropriate for its population.

    TADS expects to raise 100 Billion Dollars of “AID” for the Roads and Highway Projects paid over the next 7 years. With Direct Spending on African Labor and materials to exceed 40 Billion Dollars up to 70 Billion dollars over the 7 year period. A Strategy to obtain these funds has been developed and refined over the last 2 years. While meet with skepticism by many the project is real and attainable despite the nay-sayers and those who would detract form the ultimate goal of a “New and Brighter Future for Africa.”

    This estimate does not include anything except the road and highway projects.

    TADS has a REAL Vision for Africa and invites anyone wishing to see this vision realized to participate in anyway they feel is appropriate.

    While this is the first in a series of Announcements, more information will be provided over the near future.

     

    Craig Eisele

    Managing Director

    Trans African Development Strategies, Inc.

     

    September 25, 2007

    Call for Africans, and the African Diaspora to Take Global Responsibility

    Africans, Diaspora should take global responsibility
    BuaNews (Tshwane)

    NEWS
    12 September 2007
    Posted to the web 12 September 2007

    By David Masango
    Paris
    Africans on the continent and in the Diaspora should take global responsibility towards the development of Africa, says South Africa’s Foreign Affairs Minister Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma.

    Addressing the African Union-African Diaspora in Europe Regional Consultative Conference (RCC) in Paris, France on Tuesday, the minister said Africans should work together for the continent’s development.

     

    Dr Dlamini Zuma said Africans’ quest was to, through the dialogue, rally behind the call for them to collectively take a global responsibility for their own development, and “for the African condition in its totality, which covers the ground occupied both by Africans in Africa and in the Diaspora”.

    She said the meeting was about the opening up of more vistas in which Africans and those in the Diaspora could create more opportunities and possibilities for the voices of Africans to be heard to influence the shape of the world in the future.

    The conference focused on ways forward on crucial issues including migration, global governance, peace and security, sustainable development and knowledge sharing and the empowerment of the vulnerable groups such as women.

    Dr Dlamini Zuma explained that the AU was making a call on the African Diaspora to put forward concrete and tangible proposals for cooperation between itself and its Diaspora.

    She said those in Africa were aware of some of the reasons why Africa’s best educated and productive citizens found themselves on the other side of the Atlantic – and not at home where their skills, energies and resources were in great demand.

    “In responding to the call by the AU, we must pay due regard to the fact that we are building on many good initiatives that are already underway in Africa that need our active support.

    “One crucial element in our quest to reunite Africa and her Diaspora is the need to acknowledge and accept our diversity as Africans as much as we recognise the quest for greater unity. Africa is big with many countries, nations, nationalities, religions, tribes and challenges,” she said.

    The minister however said that diversity should not preclude Africans and the African Diaspora from acting in unity of purpose.

    “Notwithstanding the divergent views we may espouse, we should be united in our desire to see this better Africa in a better world,” she said.

    Dr Dlamini Zuma also explained that the New Partnership for Africa’s Development (NEPAD) project of the AU offered Africans a possibility to work together, adding that NEPAD remained the blueprint for the social and economic regeneration of the continent.

    She also alluded to the Pan-African Infrastructure Development Fund in which Africa is using its own resources to address its developmental challenges.

    “In this way we are putting our own resources behind infrastructure projects on the African continent,” the minister said.

    She said the fund would initially focus on transport, energy, water and sanitation, and telecommunications infrastructure investments – it would mainly focus on projects that could contribute to the regional integration of the continent.

    Minister Dlamini Zuma recognised that the African Diaspora in Europe continued to face various challenges such as xenophobia, racial discrimination, and political and socio-economic marginalisation.

    The meeting forms part of a series of RCCs that have been organised in preparation for the Summit of the African Diaspora to be held during the first half of 2008 in South Africa.

    Similar conferences have already taken place in Brazil for Latin America, London for the United Kingdom, New York for North America, Barbados for the Caribbean.

    The Africa RCC will take place in Addis Ababa in October 2007.

    The RCCs aim to produce a shared vision for sustainable development for the African continent and its Diaspora.

    September 24, 2007

    FREE… that is what African Countries have been told!

    FREE… that is what African Countries have been told!

    By: Craig Eisele 24 August 2007

    Free is just that FREE!!

    What am I referring to?? 108,000 Kilometers of road rehabilitation… cost… about 40 billion US dollars… Cost to participating African Countries… ZERO!!

    “What?” I can hear the disbelief coming through my computer already!! Yes… Zero Cost!!

    As the Founder of Trans-African Development I have spent the last 2 years trying to find a proper way of giving Africa a boost to be self sufficient… And I believe with my whole heart that I have done just that.

    So what is the problem?? Well. Besides skepticism and people who are myopic (closed minded) and without hearing me through on this plan and how it can be implemented, dismiss the idea as fanciful or impractical…. The problem appears to be that this project plan has not been able to get to the decision makers of most African Countries to present such a plan for development. The “gatekeepers”, as they are called in marketing and management terms, are blocking access and as a result they are keeping Africa from Development that is needed for the PEOPLE of Africa.

    Today in AllAfrica.com there was an article (http://allafrica.com/stories/200709240087.html) co-authored by Donald Kaberuka (President of the African Development Bank) and Pascal Lamy (Director General of the WTO… World Trade Organization) that specifically referenced the need for the rebuilding of Sub-Saharan Trade Routes (by aid I presume) to facilitate Africa’s ability to Trade Inter-Africa as well as Outside the Continent of Africa. YET… I have already devised a program to do just that…. based upon the same World Bank report co-authored by David Wheeler.

    How is it possible that these gentlemen, these men with intense interest in developing Africa, are not aware of this project??… It is simple… the “gatekeepers” have decided that this project is not realistic without even hearing the presentation or reading the literature that supports this project. Hence… Africa and Africans suffer the consequences.

    Africa is suffering from Paralysis by Analysis at its highest levels. The “movers and shakers”, those that are willing to actually do the work, are dismissed instead of being used to implement ideas and strategies that benefit the Continent of Africa. While the People of Africa are natural entrepreneurs, some governing bodies seem to me obsessed with more and more studies as the people of Africa suffer. In my opinion, this is just plain wrong.

    The Continent needs a through and complete coordination of needs to facilitate plans that benefit the people and the Communities of Africa… but that requires that there be an actual implementation plan of action and that it actually be implemented…. Personally I cannot wait that long…. And I suspect neither can the Population of Africa. So I implore ALL Countries in Africa to endorse this plan as “good” for them and for all of Africa and to let me implement this project with minimal delays!!!

    I am ready to IMPLEMENT this project plan… to rehabilitate the roads necessary for trade and Development of the Continent of Africa… but I cannot do it without the governing bodies of Africa… and so far trying to get to the right people, let alone get their endorsement has been frustrating.

    Today I decided to make my frustration known… to publicly announce that I stand ready to raise the money for this “gift” to Africa and to start the process of rebuilding the most basic of Infrastructure needs… ROADS.

    I humbly ask those decision makers in Africa to hear my call. I ask that they endorse such a gift and see the enormous potential that such a project can and will bring to the Continent. The idea that we can ease human suffering, create Jobs, Increase Investment, and start a positive path for the Population of Africa ….to ease their suffering, reduce poverty and despair and to bring hope for a better future to fruition via this project!

    NGO’s take note… as this will allow your “aid” to get to the people in a timely and reasonable safe and efficient manner… to the Industries of the World take heed… this project bring transportation of raw and finished goods to a more efficient level… and to the people of Africa… I will not stop trying to help you to be able to be self-sufficient! No NGO or Industry should hinder this project.. and in fact they should also endorse it and encourage its implementation and development with all due haste. The question is… do you have the foresight and courage to do so??

    This article is not meant to inflame or denigrate any person or persons… it is strictly a call to action for those that can help… to those that want to make a difference…

    I neglected to say that several Countries have endorsed this project… but naturally they do not want to be left sitting alone while the rest of Africa ignores this project. I respect their need and desire to be anonymous until we have a majority of African Nations endorsing this project.

    Lastly I want to reiterate the word FREE…. few if any African Country can afford to do what I am offering to do in their own countries… the only real way to help Africa is to give it the necessary Infrastructure to allow it to develop in the way it wants to develop… the road rehabilitation offer is only a tool for Africa to use…. BUT even then… such a project MUST be WITHOUT cost to ALL AFRICAN Nations… to saddle them with more debt is only to exacerbate the problems that have kept Africa down so long… and any cost to any African Nation for this project would simply add to what is already a tragic story…. So again I want to do this project for FREE (NO COST TO ANY AFRICAN COUNTRY)!!

    Next week in Tanzania there is a conference (yes ANOTHER conference) with the world Bank about Aid and Trade… I would hope that this project and the Trans-African Development Company’s proposal would be discussed and publicly acknowledged as something that has potential if not more for Africa and should be encouraged to proceed with tacit endorsement pending review…. I will be watching and waiting to see if the decision makers are finally aware of this… and hopefully share with me this dream of a revitalized Africa in the near future.

    NOTE: This “Road Rehabilitation” project is in addition to the Trans African Development Company project to build a 4-lane major highway extending from the Mediterranean Sea to the tip of Southern Africa and the ancillary projects it hopes to install as well along that path.

    September 23, 2007

    The Humanitarian Impact of Urbanisation in Africa

    Tomorrow’s Crises Today – the Humanitarian Impact of Urbanisation
    UN Integrated Regional Information Networks

    NEWS
    21 September 2007
    Posted to the web 21 September 2007
    Nairobi
    Somewhere, some time this year, a baby will be born on the 25th floor of a city hospital or the dirt floor of a dark slum shack; a first-year college graduate will rent a cramped apartment in lower Manhattan or a family of five will finally concede their plot of farm land to an encroaching desert – or sea – and turn towards Jakarta or La Paz or Lagos in search of a new livelihood and a new home. The arrival of this family or graduate or baby will tip the world’s demographic scale and, for the first time in history, more than half the human population will live in cities.

    At present, 3.3 billion people live in urban centres across the globe. By 2030 this number is predicted to reach five billion, with 95 percent of this growth in developing countries. Over the next three decades, Asia’s urban population will double from 1.36 billion to 2.64 billion, Africa’s city dwellers will more than double from 294 million to 742 million, while Latin America and the Caribbean will see a slower rise from about 400 million to 600 million, according to the UN Population Fund (UNFPA).

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    While megacities appear more frequently in headlines and on development agendas, overall growth in urban centres of 10 million or more inhabitants is expected to level out. Instead, over the next 10 years, cities of less than 500,000 will account for half of all urban growth.

    Two sides of the urban coin

    All this growth is not necessarily a bad thing. As David Satterthwaite of the International Institute for Environment and Development (IIED) points out, the speed at which a city grows – if it is responding to economic opportunities – is a benefit, not a problem. “A very large part of the economic value in any country is being generated in the urban areas,” Satterthwaite says. “Even in [developing] nations, where 60 to 70 percent of the population is in rural areas, you still have more than half the economy – and often more than that – generated in urban areas.”

    The problem is not growth, but unplanned growth. In 2001, 924 million people, or about 31 percent of the world’s urban population, were living in informal settlements or slums, 90 percent of which were located in the developing world. By 2030, the number of worldwide slum dwellers is projected to reach two billion. In the Bangladeshi capital of Dhaka, 3.4 million of the city’s 13 million residents live in 5,000 slum and squatter settlements. Sixty percent of Nairobi’s city dwellers are packed into more than 130 informal settlements occupying only 5 percent of the city’s total land area, while the squatter settlements of Mumbai are growing 11 times faster than the city itself, with 300 people arriving from the countryside each day.

    What this translates to is abject poverty, disease, and appalling conditions. Take Dhaka: every time the river level rises, it floods the illegal clusters of tiny stilted huts built on the flood plain with smelly water full of factory effluence. In Delhi, the water problem is one of scarcity as slum dwellers fight each other to gain access to the one working standpipe in their area and often go without for days at a time. Malnutrition is often highest in slums, as unemployment means people are too poor to purchase produce that could be grown on the land.

    Defining a ‘slum’ and the ‘urban poor’ invariably focuses on what people lack – access to education, social services, employment, safe and affordable water, sanitation and housing, and residential status. In many cases, they live in sub-standard housing, in public spaces, or in squatter settlements near major urban areas.

    It is generally assumed that urban poverty levels are lower than rural poverty levels, but the absolute number of poor and undernourished in urban areas is increasing. “In general, the locus of poverty is moving to cities … a process now recognised as the ‘urbanisation of poverty’,” the UN Human Settlements Program (UN-Habitat) noted in 2003.

    If the locus of poverty is moving to cities, development aid has been reluctant to move with it. CARE USA chief Helene Gayle makes a blunt assessment of urban development capacity: “The NGO community is dependent on outside donor funding [and] its priorities often depend on where donors have put their focus,” with the result that “neither the NGO community nor the donor community has co-evolved in the direction of facing urban poverty as rapidly as urban poverty has occurred”.

    ‘More threatening than the village’

    Throughout the 20th century, city growth was largely fuelled by rural to urban migration. Today, however, cities are mostly growing from within – more people are born than are dying in urban centres. This process of urbanisation – what demographers call ‘natural increase’ – is partly an indicator of medical advances across the developing world and of better access to healthcare in urban areas specifically.

    But the fact that mortality rates are generally lower in cities masks a health crisis in slums. Worse, those most affected by this urban healthcare divide are children. A 2006 analysis in the International Journal for Equity in Health found that in 15 sub-Saharan African countries the difference in child malnutrition within cities was greater than the urban-rural divide.

    As the UN’s 2006/2007 State of the World’s Cities report notes: in Ethiopia, child malnutrition in slums and rural areas is 47 percent and 49 percent respectively, compared with 27 percent in non-slum urban areas; in Niger, child malnutrition in slums and rural areas is 50 and 52 percent, against 35 percent in non-slum urban areas; and in the slums of Khartoum, the prevalence of diarrhoea among children is 40 percent, compared with 29 percent in rural areas. “Living in an overcrowded and unsanitary slum,” the report concludes, “is more life-threatening than living in a poor rural village.”

    Access to water

    Access to water and sanitation in urban areas, like access to healthcare, is generally better than in rural areas. But again, comparing aggregate urban and rural numbers hides the fact that – for example – in the Mbare neighbourhood of Harare, Zimbabwe, 1,300 people share one communal toilet with six squatting holes.

    As urban populations increase, the number of people without access to improved water sources is also rising, doubling from 108 million in 1990 to 215 million by 2010. In dense city environments – and in even more dense slum environments – communicable diseases can quickly become epidemics, making the consequence of unsafe water and poor sanitation much more severe than in rural areas. And more people are affected due to city concentrations.

    In addition to the outwardly identifiable impacts of poor access to water, sanitation, and health services (pneumonia, malaria, diarrhoea, tuberculosis, HIV/AIDS), a dearth of services also perpetuates poverty. The urban poor spend a higher percentage of their income on treating illness, and are more vulnerable to lost wages and have less job security when they are forced to miss work – all of which erodes their coping capacity, and can keep potentially mobile families trapped within a cycle of poverty.

    Unnatural disasters

    In the last quarter-century alone, 98 percent of the people injured or affected by natural disasters were living in 112 countries classified as low income or low-middle income, according to the World Watch Institute’s 2007 State of the World Report.

    And while tsunamis and earthquakes continue to grab the headlines, flooding and landslides affect a much larger number of the urban poor. While the 2004 Boxing Day tsunami accounted for about 90 percent of that year’s natural disaster death toll, the 2.4 million people affected was a relatively small number compared with the 110 million people hit by flooding in Bangladesh, India and China the same year, according to the International Federation of the Red Cross (IFRC) 2005 World Disasters report.

    With little available land in urban areas, the poor, by necessity, live on floodplains, unstable cliff sides and in the shadow of industrial facilities. In the developing world an earthquake or a hurricane is not a disaster, but a catalyst for disaster – exposing poor infrastructure, substandard housing, haphazard city planning, and often nonexistent response measures – all of which constitute the true disaster for the urban poor.

    Urban warfare

    Poverty has long been considered a key driver of violent crime. In recent years, however, this relationship has been challenged as too simplistic. A 2004 article on urban violence and insecurity in the journal Environment and Urbanization identifies inequality as a primary driver, noting that “interpretations based on statistical modelling have demonstrated that with regard to national-level data on murder rates, inequality is more influential than poverty, with income inequalities being generally more marked in urban than in rural areas”.

    A World Bank study on violence in Latin American urban areas showed that homicide rates ranged from 6.4 per year per 100,000 in Buenos Aires to 248 in Medellin, Colombia. Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo, Mexico City, Lima and Caracas account for more than half their countries’ national homicides.

    More difficult than measuring crime within urban areas has been differentiating between underlying structural causes (like unequal power relations), and trigger risk factors (such as alcohol and drug abuse), which can often precipitate gender-based violence.

    The danger in mapping and measuring urban violence is that perceptions of violence are then reinforced; because statistically-speaking, urban centres (and especially slums) are subject to more crime, violence can become institutionalised, and more dangerously, a stereotype of slum dwellers as criminals is perpetuated.

    From shanty to State House

    In 1990, the UN Development Programme (UNDP) released its first Human Development Report. The fifth chapter dealt exclusively with the humanitarian effect of urbanisation in the developing world. Addressing the role of local and national governments in service provision for the urban poor, the report’s authors recommended that governments “shift from directly providing services to enabling others to provide them – be they formal and informal producers, community-based and non-governmental organisations or the urban residents themselves”.

    By 2007, this outsourcing paradigm had come full circle. As author Rasna Warah noted in her assessment of the Kenyan government’s role in urban development, “The answer to Nairobi’s slum problem lies in stronger and more integrated intervention by government ministries and agencies.”

    The promotion of healthcare, education, access to water and sanitation, together with the prevention of violence and the response to natural disasters, depends on active and accountable local and national governments. Indeed, underneath almost all aspects of urban development and poverty reduction are issues of governance.

    At the most basic level, good governance involves recognising slum and squatter residents’ legal right to exist, and formalising this right through land tenure, ownership, city zoning regulations, etc. The realisation that government was missing from urban planning coincided with the realisation that the urban poor had been, at best, passive recipients and at worst, completely absent from the planning and implementing of slum upgrading projects; and that the urban poor were in the best position to advocate for their rights vis à vis local governments, and design and implement slum-upgrading schemes.

    At present, urban development actors are struggling to define their roles, and to establish a more cohesive, active approach to urbanisation. CARE chief Gayle sees her NGO as a link between governments and communities: “We are not saying that we are marching on the halls of power within countries necessarily, but instead really looking at how we help at the grassroots level to give people a sense of their own ability to engage and make their government accountable to them.”

    Cities of half-light

    The UNFPA 2007 World Population Report states: “Cities concentrate poverty, but they also represent the best hope of escaping it … The challenge is learning how to exploit [a city's] concentrated population.”

    Over the next months IRIN will produce in-depth articles and interviews examining how this challenge is being met. The interviews will include conversations with leaders in the urban development field – from the heads of international NGOs to academics – and slum-dwellers themselves. The in-depth articles will explore issues of urban healthcare, resource scarcity, violence, disasters and the role of governance.

    Is the rural model of top-down donor funding workable in urban areas? Is Millennium Development Goal 11 to improve the lives of 100 million slum-dwellers attainable? Does the fact that more than half the world’s population will now be living in cities represent a turning-point around which development practitioners and governments can begin to narrow the already wide gap between urbanites, or is it just a number?

    For the urban poor the stakes are high. As the IIED’s Satterthwaite warns, “What we have now is a perfect example of what the future scenario is if we continue failing to change governments’ and international organisations’ response to urbanisation. Half of urban populations have infant and child mortality rates 20 times what they should be, with at least half of the urban populations housed in squatter settlements. We would obviously begin to see strong resistance movements creating civil unrest and possibly civil war.”

    [ This report does not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations ]

    Part of Africa’s Problems Today are SOME of it’s Leaders.

    Continent’s Problem is Today’s Leaders

    The Monitor (Kampala)
    OPINION
    22 September 2007
    Posted to the web 21 September 2007

    By Mr Jimmy Adiga

    This is a response to the speech President Yoweri Museveni delivered at the recent East African Community meeting in Nairobi. The speech was published in Daily Monitor and New Vision of (September 7) titled Africa is awakening and Africa’s problem is with leaders respectively.

    With due respect to the president, I’m exceedingly humbled by his problem identification and fixing abilities, vision and courage. Now that he has rightly identified bad leadership as Africa’s major problem causing underdevelopment, we can assume that he will fix it very soon.

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    The challenge, however, is the tendency by the current African leaders to exonerate themselves and heap all blames on past leaders – that they failed to resist colonialism which is responsible for Africa’s underdevelopment.

    However, look at Ethiopia that was not colonised; the economy is not any where near that of South Africa, a country that was once under the grip of apartheid rule.

    Current African leaders behave like a chief executive of a company under liquidation who blames his predecessors for his company’s misfortunes. Today, Africa’s biggest problem is the deliberate effort by the current leaders to ensure institutions do not work in their countries.

    The infamous High Court siege in Uganda by gunmen on November 16, 2005, and the worsening legal environment in Zimbabwe, among others, are unfortunate scenarios. Africa needs functioning institutions backed by independent legal frameworks. The impotence of the legal system gives government room to make unpopular policies and decisions.

    In Uganda, for example, the government made the unpopular decision to demolish Shimon Demonstration Primary School under the pretext that an investor would build a big hotel at the site. To date, nothing is on the ground.

    Often, money is allegedly extorted from “investors” who want to see the President. Yet if issues were handled properly, the right institution for any investor to approach is the Uganda Investment Authority.

    Today, even market vendors petition the president to address their problems instead of them taking their cases to the courts of law. Several minority groups such as women, the disabled, Luweero war veterans, the Balaalo, run to the President instead of clearing issues with the relevant bodies. The interesting aspect is that these are deliberate African leaders’ strategies to perpetrate themselves in power.

    Therefore, unless African leaders promote institutions in their countries, Africa’s efforts geared towards creating common market, removing trade barriers, creating socio-economic and political federations, regional markets and having uniform customs unions will be in vain. Africa will remain perpetually underdeveloped as the current leaders continue enrich themselves than the nations they lead.

    The writer is a student of development economics, Uganda Martyrs University Nkozi.

    UN Admits that MDG’s are NOT Being Met!!!

    Working Group Meets At UN to Put Teeth Into Plan to Boost Development
    UN News Service (New York)

    NEWS
    20 September 2007
    Posted to the web 20 September 2007

    Senior international development leaders met at United Nations Headquarters in New York today to forge an operational work agenda to boost Africa’s as yet failing efforts to meet the ambitious goals the world has set itself to slash poverty, hunger, maternal and infant mortality, and other social ills, all by 2015.

    The closed-door session, chaired by Deputy Secretary-General Asha-Rose Migiro, was the first meeting of the Working Group of the Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon’s Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) Africa Steering Group launched by Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon last Friday.

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    Participants included leading economists from the African Union, African Development Bank, European Union, Islamic Development Bank, International Monetary Fund (IMF), Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), UN Development Programme (UNDP), UN Economic Commission for Africa and the World Bank, as well as the Secretary-General Special Adviser on the MDGs, Jeffrey Sachs.

    Today’s meeting was called to carry out the Steering Group’s recommendations in three areas: to identify effective mechanisms to implement commitments in the areas of health, education, infrastructure, agriculture and food security, and statistical systems; to improve aid predictability so that African governments can plan years ahead for additional hospitals, schools and train doctors, teachers and nurses; and to strengthen joint efforts at the country level.

    Launching the initiative on Friday, Mr. Ban voiced concern that many African countries are off course for meeting the MDGs, particularly in sub-Saharan regions. “That is the only region in the world where not even a single country is on the track. We must help those countries so that they can join on the track,” he said.

    The areas for action the Steering Group identified comprise five of the eight MDGs: cutting by half the proportion of people living on less than a dollar a day and suffering from hunger; ensuring that all boys and girls complete a full course of primary schooling; slashing the mortality rate among children under five by two thirds; reducing the maternal mortality ratio by three quarters; and halting and beginning to reverse the spread of HIV/AIDS and the incidence of malaria and other major diseases.

    Economic Integration Vital for a Better Africa

    Economic Integration Vital for a Better Africa
    BuaNews (Tshwane)

    NEWS
    21 September 2007
    Posted to the web 21 September 2007
    Windhoek
    South Africa’s Finance Minister Trevor Manuel has emphasised the importance of economic integration to building a prosperous future for Africa.

    “Economic integration – the idea that prosperity rests in part on institutions and markets that are shared across national borders – is far more than a technical economic construct,” Minister Manuel said Thursday at the University of Namibia’s gala dinner Thursday. “It is not just about the industrial and trade ties that bind us together. It goes to the heart of what it means to be human, what it means to confront loneliness and despair, what it means to build a future that is better than the past.”

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    It is up to Africa said the minister, to develop a response that addresses our needs and interests, as individual countries, as a region, and as Africans.

    “We have to be able to connect the dots between our domestic agendas, the regional integration programme and events unfolding in China, Europe, the Americas and India,” he said. “In the same way that the continent is we are required to forge the linkages between the upswing in commodity prices and our policy choices and the way we govern our countries.

    “It is then that we start to recognise that a compelling opportunity exist – now – to turn the tide on poverty and all manner of human suffering.”

    Minister Manuel told the academics and dignitaries that how well African states draws together their policy choices, the resources and “the form of our neighbourliness”, would draw heavily on the continent’s capacity to create, to transform, and to be greater than its suffering.

    “We have a real chance to make a difference – this is not only due to the upswing in commodity prices, or because of better policy choices and improved governance, or because we recognise that greater integration of our economies hold long-term benefit. “Sustainable outcomes that lead to the future we desire is dependent on all of the above, and many more.” Africans, said Minister Manuel, have been confronted with choices and challenges before. “Globalisation has been around for a very long time – Jim Wolfensohn, former President of The World Bank said, ‘Globalisation in the sense of the world becoming smaller has been going on, since Adam and Eve.’ And so, too, there is a long history of African responses to external opportunities.” The finance Minister explained that the continent shares the enormous privilege of building better regional institutions in a context of comparatively favourable international opportunities.

    Whether these opportunities turn out to be a blessing or a curse depends on us, he said, and highlighted specific areas such as: what priorities we set, how we work together, how we manage our budgets and spending programmes, how we encourage investment and job creation. It took the European Union 50 years to achieve what they currently have, he explained, adding that this is a luxury Africa does not have. “And so it is right that Ben Okri should remind us of our capacity to create, to overcome, to endure, to transform,” said Minister Manuel.

    “And if it helps sometimes to think in terms of a competition between nations, even as we search for better ways of working together, the recent passion displayed by the Namibian rugby team in a titanic battle with the Irish is surely a sign that astonishing things can come from the south.”

    September 20, 2007

    African Nations QWorking with China on Media Enterprises.

    Continent Has Its Bright Side, Too

    East African (Nairobi)
    COLUMN
    18 September 2007
    Posted to the web 18 September 2007

    By Oscar Kimanuka
    Nairobi
    A group of Africa’s media practitioners have been in China to assess how Africa can relate with China in the exchange of information and experience but most importantly how perceptions about both can be changed in the challenging era of globalization.

    In Chengdu city, Sichuan province, an important seminar took place a few days ago to promote Sino-Africa friendship and co-operation.

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    A senior journalist from the Beijing Review set the tone of the meeting when he observed that the Chinese view Africa today from three perspectives.

    SO WHEN a Chinese is asked about Africa he or she thinks of pyramids, the Safari or Nelson Mandela, the symbol of Africa’s humanity. Mandela has increasingly come to salvage Africa’s battered image, which has often been seen through the Western media as a continent of famine, hunger, disease, ignorance and conflict.

    But fewer Chinese know that Africa is a continent of diversity in cultures, languages and hospitable people.

    From Africa’s perspective, China is a huge country with the largest population in the world – 1.3 billion – rapid economic growth and development, and a friendly people.

    Africans have consistently shown their admiration for China’s increasingly important role in world affairs.

    But that is only one side of the story. China too has many serious challenges.

    There is evident disparity between the haves and the have-nots. There are also serious environmental challenges, arising from the rapid industrialisation.

    More than 150 million people live below the poverty line but the Chinese have proudly managed to feed themselves.

    THIS ASIDE, there is a need to change negative perceptions about Africa in China and about China in Africa by increasingly exchanging information through the mass media.

    Thus the launch by the South African Broadcasting Corporation of an international news programme that will focus on Africa’s real stories that portray our development and less on hunger, disease and poverty must be welcome by all.

    Rwanda too, is hosting an international telecommunications summit, with about a dozen heads of state and government as well as senior executives in the private sector expected to address issues of digitisation and how this can contribute to poverty alleviation and prosperity.

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