Notes from “Leaders Forum on the 10-Year Anniversary of AGOA”

April 26, 2010
Washington, DC

On April 26th, The Whitaker Group and the AGOA Action Committee co-hosted a Leaders Forum with the Africa Coalition for Trade, the African-American Unity Caucus, the Africa Society of the National Summit on Africa, the Constituency for Africa, the Leon H. Sullivan Foundation, Manchester Trade, and the Corporate Council on Africa to address remaining challenges in trade-based development for Africa and a way forward for US-Africa economic policy.  The coalition also unveiled a comprehensive Africa economic policy recommendation for the Obama Administration, found here. Continue reading

Enterprise for Development: A New US Policy Approach Toward Africa

On April 26, 2010, the AGOA Action Committee introduced a new six-pronged Africa policy framework entitled “Enterprise for Development: A New US Policy Approach Toward Africa,” or EnDev.  The proposal will be presented to the Obama Administration and Congress in support of their on-going work to strengthen and enhance expanded US engagement, trade, investment and proven poverty alleviation efforts with Africa. Continue reading

Africa’s Top 9 Business Stories of 2009

by Margot Bokanga

1.  Telecommunications remained one of the fastest growing sectors in emerging markets last year, with African mobile phone use increasing more rapidly than anywhere else in the world.

2.  The East African Community emerged as the most evolving regional trade bloc on the continent, with major agreements and accomplishments achieved in 2009.

3.  African banks survived the global economic crisis by continuing to attract investment from across the continent and even from Asia with prudent lending and investment policies.

4.  Despite the global economic crisis, African economies continued to attract foreign investors like CDC Group who saw the continent’s impressive return on investment and potential for high rewards. 

5.  The Aid Trap, a unique approach to development written by Glenn Hubbard and William Duggan, proposed that the US government make direct loans to businesses in the developing world and encouraged investment in infrastructure.

6.  South-South trade and investment – particularly exports from Asia to Africa – tripled in the last five years, making Asia Africa’s third largest trading partner (27% of trade) after the EU (32%) and the US (29%).

7.  At the Copenhagen climate change conference in December, Africa emerged as a powerful bloc when the continent staged a successful, unified walkout to prevent African interests from falling by the wayside.

8.  While oil and mining has often been the main area for investment in Africa, in 2009 Africa offered new opportunities – particularly in the construction of undersea cables.

9.  The World Bank’s Doing Business 2010 report noted that the business environment is continuing to improve in key countries on the continent: in particular, Rwanda was ranked the world’s top business reformer and Mauritius became the first African country to break into the top 20 countries to do business.

Investment: The Next Area for African Cooperation

By Meg Dallett

Earlier this year, I wrote about the lack of African foreign investment in Africa and how crucial intra-Africa FDI is for the continent’s long-term development.  With the developing world’s highest rate of return on investment and plenty of room for new projects, Africa should be an obvious choice for African investments.  But in 2008 UNCTAD reported that intra-African investment made up only about 13% of all investment in Africa. Continue reading

The West Has to Deal With the New Africa

howthewestAfrica is a place where many things have been changing and continue to change for the better, write Rosa Whitaker, Hassan Ba, David Applefield, Tumi Makgabo, Mugo Kibati, Kola Karim, Euvin Naidoo, and Ali Belhaj in Corporate Africa 2009.

For all the enthusiastic response to President Obama’s July address in Ghana and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s first Africa visit in August, there is another Africa in which the Obama message of African accountability resonates differently.

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West Africa’s Regional Economic Integration

Last week, Accra hosted the Ghana-Togo-Benin-Nigeria Business Summit to explore ways to boost investment and trade between our four countries.  In a speech read on his behalf, President Faure Gnassingbé of Togo expressed my exact sentiments on regional economic integration.  He urged businessmen in these countries and other West African states to stop seeing challenges to cross-border business as obstacles, but instead as opportunities.  These trials should be an impetus for us to define appropriate measures for facilitating business, investment and trade.  Continue reading

Nuclear Power for Energy Security in Africa

by Adanma Osakwe

Due to crippling energy shortages and power blackouts in homes and businesses, African nations are facing the question of energy security.  As a result, an increasing number of African countries are taking an interest in the development of nuclear power energy.   Continue reading

The New Global Reality: Africans Lead the Way at the AGOA Forum

odinga-at-agoa-forum1

Kenyan PM Odinga addresses the AGOA Forum. Source: KICC, 2009 AGOA 8th Forum.

The world has come to expect strong and dynamic leadership from the Obama administration.  In the campaign, they promised to bring change and new ideas to domestic and international policy and to redefine and recalibrate the US’s role in the world. At the 8th Annual AGOA Forum-the annual US-Africa Summit-held this week in Kenya, however, it was the African leaders who broke new ground. Continue reading

African Investment in Africa

By Meg Dallett

After the UN Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) reported last year that Africa provides the highest rate of return on foreign direct investment (FDI) of any developing region in the world – over 12% – it’s hardly surprising that private investment in Africa is increasing exponentially.  In just seven years, FDI to Africa grew by over 550%, skyrocketing from $9.1 billion in 2001 to $60 billion in 2008Continue reading

The COMESA Customs Union: Promoting Regional Integration

Traveling in Southern Africa for the past week has made me increasingly aware of the need for regional integration in Africa.  The Southern African Development Community (SADC) is one of the most integrated groups of countries on the continent and continues to make strides toward greater regional cooperation, but barriers to trade and investment are still higher than they could be. Continue reading

Uganda Update Spring 2009

uganda-update-spring-2009In this issue:

  • Uganda set to be among Africa’s strongest economies in 2009
  • Uganda secures African Development Bank funding to improve local markets
  • MTN Uganda launches mobile money transfer service
  • Computer education initiative wins Intel award
  • Alliance for Green Revolution in Africa launches African Seed Investment Fund
  • GroFin to invest $20 million to support small businesses
  • Uganda poised to become business outsourcing hub Continue reading

Trade-Led Growth and Development, Even in a Recession

By Meg Dallett

Amidst the omnipresent news stories about countries and industries suffering in the global economic crisis, there’s good news coming out of East Africa:  according to the African Development Bank’s African Economic Outlook 2009, growth for the region is expected to be about 5.5% for this year.  This is much, much better than almost every other region in the world is expected to do. Continue reading

Ugandan Economy to be among Africa’s Strongest in 2009

A Ugandan coffee farmer harvests coffee beans.  Coffee is Uganda's top export, earning $348 million in 2008.

Coffee is Uganda's top export, earning $348 million in 2008.

Uganda’s economy is expected to be among Africa’s strongest in 2009 with a growth rate of around 6% thanks largely to strong regional trade and continued demand for its agricultural exports, according to the African Economic Outlook 2009, published in May by the African Development Bank (AfDB), the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) and the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (UNECA). Continue reading

Doraleh: Infrastructure Investment and the Future of African Shipping

By Meg Dallett

Yesterday’s Financial Times had an interesting look at the state of Africa’s logistics sector, as exemplified by the contrast between Djibouti’s Doraleh Container Terminal and the older Port of Djibouti.  One is new, well-organized, and a model of solid logistical management; the other is backlogged with technical and bureaucratic hang-ups.  This line sticks out to me:

The question for Africa’s logistics sector is which of the two scenes will be more typical of its future – the modern, efficient container terminal or the congested, chaotic old port.

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Why Africa Needs Market Access

by Paul Fakes

The World Trade Organization recently released its 2008 International Trade Statistics.  At a glance, you can see not only that Africa remains isolated from global trade (Africa represents only 3% of trade worldwide), but that the continent is still making little progress in expanding regional trade.  While regional economic communities are implementing substantive measures to reduce barriers to intra-African trade, it will be some time before regional free trade agreements are fully implemented, not to mention the continuing need for substantial infrastructure investment to reduce the costs of regional trade.  Continue reading

Financing for Regional Transportation Links: A Move in the Right Direction

Trade advocates had some good news recently: at a recent high-level financing conference in Lusaka, Zambia, international donors pledged over $1 billion to the North-South Corridor Initiative to upgrade transport links across Eastern and Southern Africa. Continue reading

Free Trade Agreements for Africa

by Paul Fakes

After ECOWAS, the EAC, and COMESA got things rolling, Business Daily Africa reports that regional free trade agreements in Africa are expanding to more and more of the continent:

“Twenty six African countries seeking to merge their economies into a single trading bloc that controls a combined wealth of $624m and a market of 527m people moved to a definitive stage after their leaders approved plans to establish a free trade area early this week.” Continue reading

Uganda Update Fall 2008

uganda-update-fall-2008-thumbAfrica moved one step closer to full economic integration in October when representatives from three regional trade blocs, including six Heads of State, agreed at a summit hosted by Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni in Kampala, to form a new cross-regional free trade bloc and customs union. The new bloc, to be comprised of the 26 member nations of the Common Market of Southern and Eastern Africa (COMESA), the East African Community (EAC) and the Southern African Development Community (SADC), will create the largest free trade area on the African continent with a market of over 527 million people and a combined GDP of $624 billion.

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