To Africa’s many challenges, add one more: unemployment.
Unemployment,
independent of any other factor, threatens to derail the economic
promise that Africa deserves. It’s a time bomb with no geographical
boundaries: Economists expect Africa to create 54 million new jobs by
2020, but 122 million Africans will enter the labor force during that
time frame. Adding to this shortfall are tens of millions currently
unemployed or underemployed, making the human and economic consequences
nearly too large to imagine.
Thus, even with the strong economic
growth we have seen over the past decade, job creation in Africa remains
much too slow. Africa needs a comprehensive, coordinated approach akin
to America’s “Marshall Plan” in Europe after World War Two. That effort
focused on building infrastructure, modernizing the business sector, and
improving trade. By the end of the four-year program, Europe surpassed
its pre-war economic output.
We can, and must, do the same for
Africa. Entrepreneurs, politicians, philanthropic foundations, and
development organizations — such as the World Bank, International
Finance Corporation and USAID — must all work together to solve the
unemployment crisis and make Africa an engine of growth. If we are
outrun by the employment challenge, Africa will be a drag on global
growth and resources for generations to come.
Africa’s Marshall
Plan should prioritize three interdependent “pillars” of development,
which all work together to form a virtuous cycle of growth: policy
reform and a commitment to the rule of law; investment in
infrastructure, and a commitment to developing Africa’s manufacturing
and processing industries. This virtuous cycle forms the heart of
Africapitalism: the public, private, and development sectors all coming
together, united in a single objective of creating jobs and social
wealth.
First, we need enlightened government policies that help reduce
administrative and operating costs for investors and businesses. We must
streamline licensing and permitting processes, reduce import duties and
tariffs and ease visa restrictions, among other reforms. Such policies
would do much to attract investment, increase entrepreneurship and
ultimately generate jobs.Enlightened government policy in
Kenya and Nigeria has already helped to advance the information
technology and financial services sectors. Microsoft’s pilot project to
expand broadband access in Africa depends on government policy that
frees up unused “white space” in the TV and radio broadcast spectrum.
Financial services reform across several African nations, starting with
Nigeria, enabled United Bank for Africa to grow into a pan-African
financial institution. The government’s privatization program has
attracted billions of dollars of private investment to develop Nigeria’s
power infrastructure.
Governments and the private sector must
also commit to strong, transparent institutions to help boost confidence
in Africa’s business climate. African nations such as Botswana, Rwanda
and Liberia have made tremendous progress in this area, though in some
countries, war and civil unrest continue to take a toll. Sustained
economic and job growth requires creating a safe and reliable
environment for capital — including strong civil and legal institutions,
corporate financial transparency (such as efforts by the Nigerian Stock
Exchange to improve the quality of financial reporting for listed
companies), accountable, democratically-elected politicians, and modern,
open and transparent markets (like the new commodities exchanges that
Heirs Holdings, Berggruen Holdings and 50 Ventures and its partners are
creating at African Exchange Holdings). Aggressive advances on such
policy fronts will help support the development pillars of
infrastructure investment and industrialization — both of which are
vital to creating employment on the continent.
The second pillar of Africa’s development program must be
infrastructure investment, particularly in power and transportation,
without which business cannot function. Today, more than 70 percent of
sub-Saharan Africa lacks access to electricity and every 1 percent
increase in electricity outages reduces Africa’s per-capita GDP by
approximately 3 percent. Access to affordable electricity is essential
to unlocking the continent’s growth potential — reducing costs and
enabling business growth, including homegrown businesses that create
jobs and sustainable local economies.Transportation
infrastructure promises to have an equally transformative impact: roads,
railways, waterways and airways are the backbone of a thriving
commercial economy. The African Union should encourage and embrace
transportation projects that first connect African nations to each
other, and then to our global trading partners. Projects like the toll
road between Entebbe and Kampala, and the Kenya-Tanzania highway will
facilitate greater trade of agricultural and manufactured goods within
Africa. Consider that today in Nigeria, 65 percent of our produce spoils
for lack of storage infrastructure, and is difficult to export to other
African markets for lack of rail and road infrastructure.
Major
multinationals like Diageo, Wal-Mart, Barclays, and Microsoft are
ramping up African operations in spite of infrastructure challenges. In
some cases, they even build their own infrastructure. Stronger policy
and physical infrastructure would bring more investment from those who
cannot or refuse to bootstrap it. It would also help small and mid-sized
enterprises grow faster, and these companies are the engines of job
growth in any economy.
Africa’s third development pillar must be
building our manufacturing and processing industries. Africa lacks the
capacity to process and refine its own natural resources. Raw materials
such as oil, cocoa and gold are shipped overseas, where they are
processed into high-margin products and often re-imported into Africa —
costing both jobs and hard currency. For example, Nigeria exports raw
crude oil and then imports expensive gasoline, when the country should
be able to refine the oil itself, supplying not just its own market, but
also other markets across Africa. This inability to create finished
goods at home, and trade them with other African nations, drastically
limits the continent’s growth potential, and thus its ability to create
businesses, jobs and wealth within Africa’s own domestic economies.
I
believe we can solve Africa’s employment challenge, but only if we
focus on these three development pillars with great urgency, and
accelerate current investment and business trends.
Many of
Africa’s stock markets are delivering stellar returns, while
institutional, retail mutual fund and private equity capital is flowing
rapidly into African markets. Many multinationals and African
conglomerates are investing heavily in Africa.
Despite such
investment and economic growth, however, Africa is not creating nearly
enough jobs. According to demographics, time is not on our side. But
with a coordinated jobs plan for Africa, we can secure a productive,
economically independent future for the continent and its people
.Tony Elumelu is a leading entrepreneur in Africa, philanthropist and chairman of Heirs Holdings Limited.



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