Africa's Amazing Rise

Obama to announce $14 billion in U.S. corporate investments in Africa

Obama to announce $14 billion in U.S. corporate investments in Africa
By By Jeff Mason
20 hours ago

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Barack Obama will announce on Tuesday that U.S. businesses have committed to investing $14 billion in construction, clean energy, banking, and information technology projects across Africa, a White House official said.

The announcement will occur at the U.S.-Africa Business Forum, part of a three-day Africa summit in Washington meant to showcase U.S. interest in improving trade and investment in the region.

"These investments will deepen U.S. economic engagement in Africa, fueling growth that will support broader African prosperity and emerging markets for US businesses, which will support jobs in both the United States and Africa," the White House official said.

Obama will take part in a discussion with corporate chief executives and government leaders at the event, which will be attended by Commerce Secretary Penny Pritzker, former New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, and former President Bill Clinton.

The business forum will allow dozens of African heads of state to mingle with U.S. and African executives, the official said. It will focus broadly on investment in finance, infrastructure, energy, agriculture, and consumer goods.

More than 90 U.S. companies are slated to participate including Chevron Corp.

http://news.yahoo.com/obama-announc...ate-investments-africa-100409313--sector.html
 
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Blacks Missing from U.S.-Africa Business Forum



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<img src="http://www.blackpressusa.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/10/Raynards-headshot-199x300.jpg" width="120">
by Raynard Jackson | August 11, 2014 |http://www.blackpressusa.com/2014/0...s-africa-business-forum/#sthash.Dc4bngum.dpbs

President Obama hosted the first ever U.S.-Africa Business forum last week here in Washington, DC. Leading up to the conference, the U.S. Commerce Department announced:, “On August 5, 2014, Bloomberg Philanthropies and the U.S. Department of Commerce will co-host the first-ever U.S.-Africa Business Forum, a day focused on trade and investment opportunities on the continent. The U.S.-Africa Business Forum will be part of President Obama’s U.S.-Africa Leaders Summit, the first summit of its kind, and the largest event that any U.S. president has ever convened with African heads of state or government.”

I must admit that the various panels consisted of executives who all had a track record of great achievement. Panelists included Americans, Indians, Africans, and women. <span style="background-color: #FFFF00"><b>But, I couldn’t help but notice that there was not one Black American on any of the panels.</b></span>

<span style="background-color: #FFFF00"><b>Not only has the first Black president continued to ignore his most loyal voting block, the Black community, but by his actions he has made it perfectly clear to African leaders that Black business leaders are totally irrelevant within the U.S.</b></span>

There was not shortage of Blacks who could have fit the bill: Ken Chenault, CEO of American Express; Dick Parson, former CEO of Time Warner; Dave Steward, CEO of World Wide Technology ($ 6 billion in annual revenue); Junior Bridgeman, owner of 195 Wendys (doing more than $ 500 million in annual revenue); Bob Johnson, CEO of RLJ Holdings, who has already invested money in hotels in Liberia.

There was one panel that had five African presidents: Macky Sall (Senegal), Paul Kagame (Rwanda), Jacob Zuma (South Africa), Jakaya Kikwete ( Tanzania), and Moncef Marzouki (Tunisia). The panel was moderated by Charlie Rose. I guess the White House has never heard of Black interviewers such as Charlayne Hunter-Gault, Michelle Norris, or Gwen Ifill.

The first question Rose asked was about the ebola virus. The presidents seemed to have been quite offended by the question and pushed back that America only views Africa in terms of the negative.

The blame is totally Africa’s fault for the negative portrayal they receive in U.S. media. African presidents come to the U.S. and rarely, if ever, engage with the American media and definitely not with the Black media.

Kagame admitted as much when he told Rose, “We [must be] able to own up to our weaknesses, our mistakes and own up to our solutions and contribute to our solutions. We can’t even tell our story. We even depend on others to tell our stories which leads to distortions.”

<span style="background-color: #FFFF00"><b>When the president of Cameroon landed in the U.S. on his presidential jet at Andrews Air Force Base (where Obama’s presidential jet is stored), there was a huge story written about his arrival in the Washington Post. No, no it was not on the front page. No, not in the business section, But on the gossip page. There was not one mention of the president’s name. The full page story was all about the president’s wife hair. Yes, you heard right, her hair; and the author of the story was a Black female.</b></span>

<span style="background-color: #FFFF00"><b>This is how irrelevant Africa is viewed by the U.S. media.</b></span> This is what happens when African presidents and their U.S. based ambassadors have no meaningful engagement with the media.

African can’t continue to demand to be a player on the world’s stage in the 21 st. century and yet govern and lead with a 20th century mentality. In many ways, having a media strategy is just as important as having a military strategy.

Controlling how you are perceived in the global market place has a direct impact on the investment community throughout the world. One needs to look no further than Equatorial Guinea to prove my point. It is one of the most corrupt countries on the planet; and outside of the oil industry, it’s almost impossible for them to get investment in their country.

I didn’t see or hear one media interview with any of the presidents during their stay in the U.S. The daily media coverage was focused on all the traffic problems being created by the street closures because of the various presidential motorcades.

Obama spent more time discussing the unemployment rate in Africa than he has the unemployment rate within the Black community here in the U.S. He talked about targeted incentives for investment and job creation on the continent of Africa; but can’t find the time to create opportunities for Blacks here at home.

Obama even created the Washington Fellowship for Young African Leaders. According to the White House, “through this initiative, young African leaders are gaining the skills and connections they need to accelerate their own career trajectories and contribute more robustly to strengthening democratic institutions, spurring economic growth, and enhancing peace and security in Africa.”

How about a similar program for Blacks in the U.S.?

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The U.S.-Africa Leaders Summit: A Resounding Success Exposing American Media’s Ignorance of Emerging Africa


[T]here was limited comprehensive and objective media coverage of the summit. Instead, the media focused on the Ebola outbreak with some even referring the summit as “Ebola infected.” Others have criticized the summit as having limited success, but these criticisms appear to be poorly informed and lack an objective basis for evaluating the outcomes of the summit

In a pre-summit posting, I proposed a number of objective indicators with which to gauge the success of the summit. These indicators included: a tangible plan of action and commitments, effective and coherent participation of the African leaders, alignment with African development priorities and strategies, a shift in the relationship from unilateralism to mutualism, and finally, the institutionalization of future summits. [At the link above is a review of] the outcome of the summit against these various indicators of success.


 
The media make sure to note of the corruption, however, there is rampant corruption here that does not stop investment. It is done in a more subtle manner, that is difficult to prove.

Privacy and intellectual property rights are not upheld which is important for a business.
 
Exclusive: Obama plan to 'Power Africa' gets off to a dim start

Obama yet to have African legacy like predecessors
By NEDRA PICKLER | Associated Press
06-28-2013

AFRICA INVESTMENT: Can Obama's Africa Power plan hold a candle to China?
By Ed Stoddard | Reuters
07-02-2013


Exclusive: Obama plan to 'Power Africa' gets off to a dim start
Reuters
By Joe Brock
11-28-2014

JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) - Barack Obama last year told a cheering crowd in Cape Town that a $7 billion plan to "Power Africa" would double electricity output on the world's poorest continent and bring "light where currently there is darkness".

A year later, the U.S. president's flagship project for Africa has already achieved 25 percent of its goal to deliver 10,000 megawatts of electricity and bring light to 20 million households and businesses, according to its annual report.

But the five-year plan has not yet delivered the power.

Power Africa has not measured its progress by counting actual megawatts added to the grid but promises of additional power made in deals it says it helped negotiate, according to sources inside the project and documents seen by Reuters.

Some projects facilitated by Power Africa -- a program operated by the U.S. aid agency USAID -- were under way years before the scheme's inception, others are still in the planning stage.

It is unclear how much of the $7 billion Obama pledged has actually been spent or if a further $20 billion in private sector investment commitments will materialize.

"Saying you've met targets on projects that might never happen or taking the credit for projects that have been worked on for years makes me uncomfortable," a source working on Power Africa told Reuters. "It's misleading."

Obama's pledge to double power generation in Africa within five years looked highly ambitious from the start. Per capita electricity output in Sub-Saharan Africa has been flat for three decades because most promised power plants never get built.

"We're dealing with megawatts on paper, rather than on the grid," a second source working on the project said.

"Is that really what Obama promised?"

The first African-American U.S. president, the son of a Kenyan father, Obama has often been criticized for a lukewarm engagement in Africa, consisting more of words than deeds.

"WE'RE LIKE A PHARMACIST"

The 48 countries of Sub-Saharan Africa, with a combined population of 800 million, produce roughly the same amount of power as Spain, a country of just 46 million. This constrains Africa's growth and keeps hundreds of millions in poverty.

Power Africa coordinator Andrew Herscowitz told Reuters there had been some confusion about the role of the program. He said it was always intended to "expedite transactions", facilitating private investment rather than handing out aid.

Herscowitz said Power Africa was there to help the private sector deliver electricity and it had already negotiated commitments from companies worth $20 billion, although he did not know how much of this money had been spent.

"We’re like a pharmacist, where people come to us, we reach out to people and figure out what is needed," he said.

"In some projects we may have a lot of involvement and in some we have very little involvement."

Foreign companies sign billions of dollars of agreements with African governments to build infrastructure every year, although a large number never get built.

In April 2011, the U.S. Millennium Challenge Corp., a government aid agency involved in Power Africa, signed a $350 million deal to "revitalize" Malawi's power sector.

More than three years on, 1.7 percent of that money has been spent, according to the programmer's website, which gives no detail on progress on the ground.

Memoranda of understanding Power Africa signed this year with its six focus countries -- Tanzania, Nigeria, Kenya, Ethiopia, Liberia and Ghana -- contain less than $100 million of financial commitments targeted at specific countries, most of which is for consultants.

U.S. consultancy Tetra Tech won a $64 million contract and former British Prime Minister Tony Blair's Africa Governance Initiative was given a $3 million deal.

As with many African aid projects, rights groups have criticized Power Africa as mostly being a vehicle to subsidize U.S. companies.

Documents show $5 billion out of the $7 billion pledged is for loans for U.S. exports from the government's Export-Import Bank (EXIM) and Overseas Private Investment Corp. (OPIC).

TURN ON THE LIGHTS

"It’s absolutely not true. Power Africa is an opportunity to turn on the lights for millions of Africans by taking investment from all over the world," Herscowitz said.

Herscowitz rejected suggestions Power Africa merely tapped into existing projects, highlighting a 5 megawatt "NextGen" solar project in Tanzania and a 30 megawatt biomass scheme in Kenya which he said "didn't exist before Power Africa".

The NextGen project website, however, says a power purchase agreement for the solar project was signed in January 2013, six months before Power Africa was launched.

It is by no means guaranteed that the Power Africa program, which has an initial five-year mandate, will continue or be seen as a priority when Obama's final term ends in two years, U.S. government sources told Reuters.

In addition, the investment banks EXIM and OPIC are fighting for their survival in Congress, where Obama's Democratic Party was severely weakened in mid-term elections this month.

In a change of tack, the U.S. government said this month it wants to partner with China on improving power in Africa.

Meanwhile, corruption in the countries that Power Africa operates in remains a problem.

Nigeria's state oil company was accused last year by the then central bank governor of withholding $20 billion in oil funds due to the government, while Tanzania's parliament is currently reviewing a report on graft in its energy sector.

http://news.yahoo.com/exclusive-obama-plan-power-africa-gets-off-dim-061242670.html
 
You aren’t investing in Africa — and you’re missing out

You aren’t investing in Africa — and you’re missing out
By Sara Sjolin
Published: Dec 3, 2014 11:26 a.m. ET

LONDON (MarketWatch) — If a financial adviser offered her clients a chance to invest in a country that expected economic growth of 6% or 7% a year for the next two decades, chances are the clients would jump at the prospect.

But once they found out that country was in sub-Saharan Africa, chances are a lot of them would lose their nerve.

With the Ebola virus ravaging the populations and economies of several West African countries, and armed conflicts claiming lives in Nigeria, Kenya and other nations, Africa continually generates the kind of headlines that make Westerners uneasy. And in the U.S. in particular, the continent barely appears on investors’ radar screens. David Snowball, publisher of the Mutual Fund Observer newsletter, estimates that only about 0.3% of the average portfolio in the U.S. — just $3 out of every $1,000 — is invested in Africa.

But more fund managers and economists believe it’s time for that to change. With a lot of factors falling into place at the same time — rapid economic growth, unprecedented political stability, and a young and increasingly middle-class population — the continent could be at the foothills of a promising upturn.

For investors with steady nerves, the bulls say, Africa offers an opportunity to reap a better return than they would in the “old” emerging markets — an opportunity to cash on greater growth than they can expect from, say, the BRICs or the MINTs. While economic growth and a rising stock market don’t always occur in tandem, some investors see the two creating a virtuous cycle in Africa.

“We believe that Africa could be the ‘emerging market’ story of the next decade,” said Mark Mobius, executive chairman of Templeton Emerging Markets Group and manager of the Templeton Africa Fund, in emailed comments. (Read an interview with Mobius here.)

Jim O’Neill, who coined the term BRIC (for Brazil, Russia, India and China) and is former chief economist at Goldman Sachs, is also investing in the region; among other moves, he personally bought a significant chunk of Pagatech, a Nigerian mobile-payment company, earlier this year. (Read Jim O’Neill: Short the euro, watch Apple and more tips.)

Of course, there’s no single, monolithic Africa to invest in. There are 48 countries in the sub-Saharan category, ranging from large and relatively stable democracies like South Africa to tiny, volatile dictatorships. Most of the continent’s stock markets are relatively new and expensive for outsiders to invest in, and risks — including financial and political corruption — abound.

In short, for most investors, African stocks are a speculative play with high rewards and high risks — not the kind of “core” investment you’d bet your nest egg on. As frontier-markets investor Thomas Vester puts it, if you can’t turn on CNN without getting freaked out, this isn’t a region for you. That said, a payoff could await the patient investor with a long time horizon who can ride out the impact of some bad headlines.

A continent’s growth prospects

The International Monetary Fund estimates that the real GDP of sub-Saharan Africa as a whole will grow by 5.1% and 5.8% in 2014 and 2015, respectively, as foreign investments in natural resources, increased public spending on infrastructure and better agricultural production combine to help local economies accelerate.

Those are the kind of growth numbers that developed economies, and even other emerging markets, can only envy. The IMF in its most recent World Economic Outlook estimated that the U.S. economy will expand by 3.1% in 2015, while the euro area is forecast to produce growth of only around 1.3%.

Granted, it’s easier for underdeveloped economies to deliver eye-popping growth numbers, since they’re starting from a much smaller economic base than the developed world. Still, economists think many African countries can expect even more impressive growth than the average for the continent. Paul Collier, co-director at the Centre for the Study of African Economies at Oxford University says some African nations have the potential to double their economies over the next decade (which implies growth of over 7% a year, a rare accomplishment in the global context).

Collier cites Kenya, Rwanda, Tanzania and Ethiopia as potential doublers. “You’re looking at strong economic growth, reasonable economic management and favorable balance sheets,” in each of those nations, said Collier, who currently also is adviser to the Africa Region of the World Bank.

Favorable demography is helping to drive Africa’s growth. With the youngest population in the world, the region is in the economically fortunate situation of having a lot of people entering the workforce and very few retired people. In that sense it’s the opposite of Germany and Japan, where large populations of retirees are becoming a brake to economic growth.

In the strongest African economies, as the workforce expands, economists expect demographics to drive higher demand for services, goods, housing and infrastructure, which in turn will help drive domestic economies.

“The burgeoning middle class needs to be nurtured and supported, with a little help from prudent policy, and a constructive global economic backdrop,” said Mobius of Franklin Templeton.

Thomas Vester, overseer of $875 million at the LGM Frontier Markets fund BLGFX, -0.52% explained that political stability is another major factor in Africa’s growth prospects.

Where African government leaders in the past hesitated to commit to longer-term projects—such as infrastructure and housing construction — many now feel more comfortable with planning further ahead, because they don’t fear being ousted immediately, said Vester.

Vester pointed to Kenya, Ghana, Botswana and Zambia as countries that could benefit from this new political stability. “Factors like that will give [these countries] a serious liftoff, where they can enjoy 20 years of trend growth of around 6%-7%,” Vester said.

“Long-term, we believe, and studies show, that there’s a correlation between democratic transitions, stability and economic progress,” he added.

Feeding the world

With the global population expected to increase to 9.6 billion people by 2050, from a little over 7 billion today, concerns about future food shortages have found their way to the international agenda. The United Nations estimates that by 2030, global food demand will have increased by 50%, increasing the need for greater food production.

Africa is in a unique position to help solve the problem, and to profit from doing so. The continent holds around 50% of the world’s uncultivated land that’s arable (that is, suitable for growing crops). The World Bank estimated in 2013 that African farmers and agribusiness could develop a trillion-dollar food industry by 2030—compared with $313 billion in 2010—if they started putting more of that land to use.

While investing directly in African agriculture is difficult — Vester, for one, cautions against it — a booming farm sector could help drive broader economic growth, putting more spending money in the pockets of local consumers and boosting other industries. Vester expects this trend to play out particularly dramatically in Nigeria and Zimbabwe. “This will really drive demand and consumption in these countries for a very long time,” he added.

Where the middle class is growing

For years, the fastest-growing sectors in Africa have been natural resources and mining. But Western investing pros say that other industries will be bigger growth stories over the next few years. With rapid economic growth also comes a rising middle class that wants to go out, open bank accounts, buy branded groceries and, eventually, buy cars, houses and life insurance.

Africa’s biggest economy, Nigeria, is a prime example of this, with the middle class having grown by 600% between 2000 and 2014, according to data from South Africa’s Standard Bank, one of Africa’s largest banks. Other countries that are expected to see a significant rise in the number of middle-class families by 2030 include Ghana, Angola and Sudan.

“The consumer goes from never getting a paycheck to actually getting one, and then goes out to spend money,” Vester said. “That’s usually where you make money.” He and other investors see some of the greatest opportunities in telecom companies, food and beverage companies and banks — all of whom can offer products and services to a new middle class.

The top holdings of LGM’s Frontier Markets Fund include the Guaranty Trust Bank in Nigeria, and Sonatel, a telecom provider in Senegal. Mobius’s Templeton fund also owns Guaranty Trust Bank, as well as Zenith Bank (also of Nigeria), Nigerian Breweries and South African telecom firm MTN Group.

Along with consumer products, Collier of Oxford pointed to the construction and infrastructure sectors as the next big thing. “That’s what’s been missing in Africa,” he said. “Anything that has to be built, whether it’s housing, infrastructure, electricity generation or railways,” he said.

Enduring problems

Africa investment bulls identify the biggest short-term threats to growth as political instability, corruption — and perhaps most notably, the fact that many of the continent’s resource-heavy economies are vulnerable to a slowdown in China.

Collier describes the African nations as messy democracies, where you “can’t expect too much” stability. That said, he thinks political conflict is “not going to be catastrophic” for the continent as a whole. Frontier-markets guru Mobius says corruption is still prevalent in Africa. But in his experience, “many government leaders are increasingly willing to talk about the problem openly, and seem to be working to find ways to stamp it out.”

And then there’s the risk of a shock from China. Growth has been slowing of late in that industrial powerhouse, and that could seriously bruise global prices for commodities — which still underpin the economies of many African nations.

In 2009, China took the top spot as Africa’s largest trading partner, surpassing the U.S., and in 2013 trade between the two reached $210 billion, compared with just $10 billion in 2000. China is the number-one trading partner of 15 African nations, according to data from the CIA World Factbook, and it purchases more than 40% of the exports from seven of those nations.

This means the world’s second largest economy could bring Africa down with it in case of an economic crash, Collier explained. “But of course if China crashes, it’s not just Africa that suffers,” he said. “Then invest on Mars.”

http://www.marketwatch.com/story/you-arent-investing-in-africaand-youre-missing-out-2014-12-02
 
Hope African nations that come up can at least protect themselves from exploitation this time around. Economies and money don't mean shit if you can't protect yourself.
 
How to invest in Africa

How to invest in Africa
By Sara Sjolin
Published: Dec 3, 2014 11:26 a.m. ET

Vester launched LGM’s frontier markets fund in December 2011, and the fund has already seen a return of roughly 90%. Vester says he’s also seen about $600 million of new money has flowed into his fund — which he sees as a sign of burgeoning interest in Africa in general.

Does such growth mean retail investors have already missed the boat? Collier, for one, thinks that’s unlikely. He sees the international community as underinvested in Africa. “We know that over the next 10 years that’s going to change,” he said. “You’ll see a shift in American and European portfolios. The share they invest in Africa will never be huge, but if you move it up from pretty close to zero to a few percentage points, that’s a big increase.”

Buying funds

The easiest way for a U.S. or European investor to get hard-core exposure to Africa is through mutual funds and ETFs. David Snowball from Mutual Fund Observer says some of the best Africa-focused funds are the Nile Pan Africa Fund NAFAX, -1.59% and the T. Rowe Price Africa & Middle East Fund TRAMX, -0.99%

Both are up around 50% over the past five years. In comparison, the wider iShares MSCI Emerging Markets index EEM, -1.47% is flat for the period. Snowball describes these two funds, in baseball terms, as winning “by consistently hitting singles and working hard not to strike out, rather than for seeking the highest possible gains.”

For broader frontier funds that invest heavily in Africa, Snowball points to the Harding Loevner Frontier Emerging Markets Portfolio HLMOX, -0.88% ; Mark Mobius’s Templeton Frontier Markets Fund TFMAX, -1.36% ; and Wasatch Frontier Emerging Small Countries WAFMX, -0.31%

For ETFs, consider:

— iShares MSCI South Africa EZA, -2.47%

— SPDR S&P Emerging Middle East & Africa GAF, -1.89%

— Global X MSCI Nigeria NGE, -2.96%

— Market Vectors-Africa AFK, -1.72%

Fees for investing in Africa funds traditionally have been higher than for emerging-markets funds. Snowball said the average expense ratio for a no-load emerging markets fund is 1.6%; the expense ratio for the Nile Pan Africa Fund, by contrast, is 2.5%.

Of course, mutual-fund expenses tend to fall as funds attract more assets. A survey last year by Novare Investments of the Africa-focused fund landscape found that there’s been a shift toward lowering fees, with almost all new funds charging management fees of less than 2% a year.

Buying stocks

Investing directly on African stock exchanges is something few experts recommend to retail investors. Few exchanges are open to foreign investors, the markets tend to be illiquid and the fees are high.

However, if you do prefer to do your own stock picking, there is a long list of African companies that are listed on U.S., U.K. and German exchanges, which makes them more accessible to international investors. Many of these are commodity plays, but more consumer-oriented African companies are now joining them on these exchanges.

Highlights include:

— AngloGold Ashanti Ltd. AU, +1.64%

— Gold Fields Ltd. GFI, +1.91%

— Randgold Resources Ltd. GOLD, +2.48%

— Sasol Ltd. SSL, -5.83%

— Astral Foods A9U, -1.63% ,

— Blue Label Telecoms 5TP, +0.76%

— Cashbuild C8J, +2.64%

— MiX Telematics MIXT, -3.29%

— Zambeef ZAM, +1.94%

For a complete list of individual African stocks listed in the U.S. or the U.K. as “depositary receipts,” check out this list, maintained by investment analyst Ryan Hoover.

If you’re intrigued by Africa exposure, but would rather avoid the risks of direct investment in African companies, there’s also the option of investing in U.S.- or Europe-listed companies with significant exposure to frontier markets. Consumer-products companies Nestlé SA NESN, -0.21% and Unilever PLC UL, -0.38% for example, tick those boxes. In 2013, Nestlé generated 20% of its sales from the Asia, Oceania and Africa region, while Unilever said most of its 2013 sales growth came from emerging markets.

http://www.marketwatch.com/story/yo...africaand-youre-missing-out-2014-12-02?page=2
 
No strings attached: African Union seeks financial independence

No strings attached: African Union seeks financial independence
AFP
By Karim Lebhour
February 1, 2015 6:41 AM

Addis Ababa (AFP) - African leaders have agreed in principle to impose a flurry of taxes in a bid to finance their pan-African bloc, set up to push the continent's diplomatic agenda but dependent on foreign handouts.

After a two-day summit held in the African Union's Chinese-built headquarters in the Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa, heads of state proposed new taxes on airline tickets, hotel stays and text messages.

The AU was once heavily bankrolled by toppled Libyan strongman Moamer Kadhafi, who championed the institution as a means to challenge Western hegemony. Now, however, 72 percent of the AU's operational budget comes from international donors led by the United States and European Union.

"Over 70 percent of our budget is foreign funded. This is not sustainable," said Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe, who during the summit was appointed to the AU's rotating chair -- certain to raise eyebrows among key donors who have sanctioned him for political violence and intimidation.

Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta, who has also been embroiled in a stand-off with the West after being charged by the International Criminal Court for crimes against humanity, also said the dependence on foreign financing was a "profound handicap and an impediment to the continent's momentum".

"Depending on external funding for the union's budget is simply unacceptable," he said during Friday and Saturday's summit, calling for Africa to assert "its independence and sovereignty more robustly".

At present, the 54-member bloc sources only 28 percent of its half-billion dollar operational budget from its own members. In addition it has to source an additional $750 million for peacekeeping operations -- with the funding gap filled mostly by the European Union, United States, World Bank, China and Turkey.

- Donor conditions -

The bloc is now proposing a $10 tax on flight tickets to and from African destinations, plus a $2 dollar tax on each night spent in a hotel. It is estimated that the levies will pull in $730 million dollars a year.

An additional half-a-cent tax on SMS exchanges would bring in $1.6 billion, according to AU officials, who are hoping to see the bloc able to fund its operations and projects to the tune of 65 percent by 2016.

The anticipated windfall would shake off institutional aid dependency and ease pressure on key donors Libya and Egypt, which cannot afford to contribute at the same levels as before.

"We should be able to take our decisions freely," said Francine Muyumba, head of the Pan-African Youth Union (PYU).

"In case of emergencies like Ebola, we need to have the means to intervene quickly and without having to wait for foreign money. Money from donors always comes with strings attached."

Whether the plan takes off, however, remains to be seen -- even as AU members will additionally have to respect a new, higher threshold for contributions calculated on the basis of their GDPs.

While African heads of state agreed in principle to the proposals, the application of the taxes will be initially on a voluntary basis -- leaving each member state with the choice of slapping the new taxes on their citizens and visitors.

The proposals, drawn up by former Nigerian president Olusegun Obasanjo in May 2013, have been criticised by many member states as punishing for their tourism sectors and unduly sparing of the oil and mineral sectors.

https://news.yahoo.com/no-strings-attached-african-union-seeks-financial-independence-114144112.html
 
Mixed fortunes blur idea of Africa's collective 'rising'

Mixed fortunes blur idea of Africa's collective 'rising'
Reuters
By Joe Brock
March 6, 2015 6:24 AM

JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) - Falling commodity prices, political upheaval and simmering conflict are exposing the differing fortunes of Africa's economies, undermining the idea that the continent of a billion people is on one collective ascent.

Sub-Saharan Africa has achieved annual growth of more than 5 percent over the last decade, and foreign investment has more than quadrupled over the same period, feeding the popular catch phrase that Africa is 'rising'.

However, the regional cooperation, infrastructure development and political reforms needed to diversify economies and even out growth are taking longer than expected, speakers at a Reuters Investment Summit said this week.

"'Africa Rising' served a purpose because it alerted people who weren't interested in Africa before to the opportunities," said Simon Freemantle, senior economist at Johannesburg-based Standard Bank, Africa's largest bank by assets.

"It is useful to move away from that now and give each country individual attention and accept that some will build on success and others will fall back."

For now, Africa's growth remains more disparate than any other region in the world.

South Sudan, which won independence in 2011 after decades of civil war, should be the best performer this year with expansion of almost 20 percent, while oil-reliant Equatorial Guinea will be the worst, contracting by nearly 8 percent, according to Standard Bank.

As well as killing more than 9,000 people, the Ebola outbreak has hammered the economies of Sierra Leone, Guinea and Liberia in West Africa, putting them further behind bigger countries that were not affected.

"LEARNING PROCESS"

A near halving in oil prices in the last nine months has taken its toll on the currencies and budgets of major producers Nigeria, Angola and Ghana but South Africa, Africa's most developed economy and a net energy importer, has benefited from cheaper fuel.

"Investors are going through a learning process in Africa," said John Vitalo, chief executive of Atlas Mara, the investment group set-up by former Barclays boss Bob Diamond.

"They are becoming more aware that Africa is not one monolithic place and challenges differ from country to country."

Impressive growth figures in Ethiopia, Uganda, Tanzania and Democratic Republic of Congo show how off-the-beaten path countries are becoming more attractive but the largest economies remain the focus for investors.

South Africa is likely to grow around 2 percent this year but its GDP is thirty times that of South Sudan and twenty times bigger than neighbouring Mozambique, which should grow 8 percent this year on the back of new coal and gas finds.

Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) into four resource-rich countries - South Africa, Nigeria, Ghana and Mozambique - totalled $23 billion in 2013, more than the rest of sub-Saharan Africa combined, according to data from the 2014 United Nations World Investment Report.

Brazil still receives more FDI than the whole of Africa.

"BIG STAY BIG"

Despite countries such as Kenya, Ghana, Rwanda and Zambia tapping international debt markets in recent years and growing their stock markets, 70 percent of Africa's total portfolio investment remains in South Africa.

"If you look at the ranking of the economies in Africa over several decades, one thing stands out: the bigger countries stay big," said Razia Khan, head of Africa research at Standard Chartered in London.

"The small countries are not necessarily catching up."

The 'Africa rising' concept was largely predicated on strong commodity prices, the spread of mobile telephony and banking, improving governance and a rapidly expanding middle class offering enormous opportunities for consumer driven investment.

The bumper share price performance in the last decade of South Africa-listed telecoms operators such as Vodacom and MTN and retailer Shoprite support this theory but success has not been guaranteed.

High-end South African retailer Woolworths found Nigeria's uncertain regulation and wobbly infrastructure too much to handle, pulling out in 2013, while Walmart's South African subsidiary Massmart has not expanded north as quickly as investors had hoped.

"There is this expectation that South African retailers are going to be doing half their business in the rest of Africa in two to three years. I don't believe that will happen," Doug Murray, chief executive of South African fashion retailer Foschini Group told Reuters.

"It's a very long term growth story."

http://news.yahoo.com/mixed-fortunes-blur-idea-africas-collective-rising-112459531--sector.html
 
With Jonathan, Africa's list of good losers gets longer

With Jonathan, Africa's list of good losers gets longer
Reuters
By Tim Cocks
April 2, 2015 2:38 AM

ABUJA (Reuters) - Graciously conceding defeat is not something candidates in African elections have traditionally been very good at.

In a macho political culture that sees a routing at the ballot box as a source of shame, refusal to accept a result often leads to protracted battles in court, on the streets or in the worst cases a military crackdown.

So when Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan magnanimously threw in the towel to challenger Muhammadu Buhari after the latter's stunning victory in the weekend's presidential election, he joined a growing list of African leaders for whom humbly admitting the game is up has become a cause for pride.

"I thank all Nigerians once again for the great opportunity I was given to lead this country," a sombre Jonathan said in his concession speech. "I have conveyed my personal best wishes to General Muhammadu Buhari."

Such speeches used to be rare on a continent still getting used to winner-takes-all electoral contests and where power has frequently changed hands at the barrel of a gun.

Academics have long pondered the reasons - it could be the emphasis in a traditional African societies on consensus over competition or that losing political office can mean the difference between sleeping in a palace or a shack.

The wide margin of Buhari's win, enabling the first peaceful transfer of power at the ballot box in Africa's most populous nation, certainly helped.

But the idea leaders need to know when it is time to pack their bags has also gained ground over the last five years.

When former Ivory Coast President Laurent Gbagbo refused to concede to Alassane Ouattara in 2010, re-igniting a civil war, one of Gbagbo's most high profile campaigners, reggae star Alpha Blondy, publicly urged him to play fair and hand over.

He failed to listen and is now facing war crimes charges in The Hague.

Senegal's former President Abdoulaye Wade in 2012 became the first West African leader in a while to concede defeat when he was thumped by former protege Macky Sall, enabling Sall to proclaim that "the big winner...is the Senegalese people".

In Southern Africa too, the time has come where a "big man" was told by voters he was no longer popular - and has had to accept their verdict.

Ex-Malawian president Bakili Muluzi, who observed Nigeria's elections for the Commonwealth, ran against dictator Hastings Banda in 1994 and succeeded in ending his 33-year-rule.

"He was unhappy. He said to me 'You are like my son and now you are running against me,'" he told Reuters outside a polling station on Saturday. "But he couldn't do anything about it."

Zambia's Rupiah Banda drew more than a few tears when, on losing his presidency to Michael Sata in 2011, he told the nation: "I have no ill feeling in my heart".

"I wish him well in his years as president," he continued. "Now is the time for a new leader. My time is done. It is time for me to say good bye."

http://news.yahoo.com/jonathan-africas-list-good-losers-gets-longer-063843702.html
 
Kenya to welcome Obama 'home' to a continent that feels ignored

Kenya to welcome Obama 'home' to a continent that feels ignored
By Edith Honan
2 hours ago

KOGELO, Kenya (Reuters) - When Barack Obama visits Africa this month, he will be welcomed by a continent that had expected closer attention from a man they claim as their son, a sentiment felt acutely in the Kenyan village where the 44th U.S. president's father is buried.

"We thought the American government could at least bring some assistance to the area," said Stephen Okumu Obewa, a teacher in Kogelo village who works at Senator Barack Obama Primary School, named before Obama reached the White House.

"Maybe he is interested somehow but we are not aware," he said in a scruffy school with many broken chairs and desks.

Obama wrote about a visit to Kogelo in his 1995 book "Dreams from My Father", which helped launch his swift political ascent.

Some of the fame rubbed off on the village. Tourists turned up and visitors often knock on the door of Mama Sarah, as Obama's step-grandmother is known.

Nearby is the grave of his father, the senior Barack Obama, a Kenyan government economist who died in a car accident in 1982, 21 years after fathering the future U.S. president while living in Hawaii as a visiting student.

Many Africans wonder why Obama has not made development on their continent more a priority in his two terms in office.

"With his election, there was this huge euphoria and high hopes that the U.S.-Africa relationship would see substantive improvements and the U.S. would give more attention to Africa," said David Zounmenou, a research fellow at the Institute for Security Studies in South Africa. "But the record is very weak."

Obama visits Kenya and Ethiopia later in July, his third major trip to Sub-Saharan Africa after traveling to Ghana in 2009 and to Tanzania, Senegal and South Africa in 2011. He has also visited Egypt, and South Africa for Nelson Mandela's funeral.

"NOT LIKE AN AFRICAN MAN"

"My hope is that we can deliver a message that the U.S. is a strong partner not just for Kenya, but for Sub-Saharan Africa generally," Obama said last week. He said he hoped to build on progress made in health, education and counterterrorism, and to encourage democracy and reducing corruption.

U.S. officials say the perception Obama has ignored Africa is unfair. They point to U.S. efforts to contain the Ebola virus in West Africa and a $7 billion continent-wide initiative to expand electricity supply that was launched in 2013.

But that is a tiny sum compared to the many billions that China has been spending on infrastructure in Africa, bringing roads, airports and railways to a continent with almost 1 billion people and an emerging middle class.

The year Obama took office, 2009, was also the year China overtook the United States as Africa's biggest trade partner.

Nor does Obama have a signature African achievement, unlike his two predecessors.

George W. Bush was lauded for funding HIV/AIDS treatment across the continent. Bill Clinton signed a law which sharply reduced trade restrictions on imports from 35 African states. Obama, who leaves office in January 2017, has carried on both initiatives, but cannot claim them as his own.

"To me, he's not like an African man. He doesn't even have a building or a business here," said Calvine Rachuonyo, 28, who drives a motorcycle taxi in Kisumu, the nearest big city to Obama's father's western Kenyan home village.

In Kenya, his visit could attract some protests, most likely small. Members of one fringe anti-gay group are planning to protest naked in the capital on the eve of Obama's visit because of his support for gay rights. A student group says it will defile a tree that Obama planted before he became president at Nairobi University, unless he returns there for another visit.

Still, the upcoming arrival has meant an uptick in business for Victor Agwa, who sells Obama trinkets and t-shirts, some emblazoned with the words "Son of Africa", in Kisumu.

Agwa sold a thousand T-shirts before Obama's first election in 2008. Since then, business has steadily declined.

"People have a feeling that maybe he got too busy to come here," he said, hoping for more visits when Obama leaves office.

U.S. Ambassador Robert Godec has said Obama would not visit Kogelo, and that he will instead address the Kenyan people at a Nairobi stadium on July 26.

But Kogelo residents are still preparing just in case Obama does turn up, including sprucing up the grave site of the president's father.

"The gate is always open for Barack, day and night," said Mashart Onyango, who lives on the family compound and said she was one of Obama's aunts. "He is our relative."

http://news.yahoo.com/kenya-welcome-obama-home-continent-feels-ignored-111107254.html
 
America in Africa: Military ties grow but trade lags

America in Africa: Military ties grow but trade lags
AFP
July 22, 2015 5:45 AM

Washington (AFP) - President Barack Obama's keenly-awaited trip to Africa this week comes as the US superpower's military footprint on the continent is growing.

But US diplomatic and trade ties in Africa have not kept pace with defense cooperation, and lag far behind those of Europe and China.

- Targeted military presence -

Compared to its large-scale bases in Europe and Korea, and ongoing operations in the Middle East and Afghanistan -- the US deployment in Africa is discreet.

Indeed, the US military's Africa Command is still based in Stuttgart, Germany, having failed to find a suitable host country on the continent itself.

The United States has also deployed a joint task force in the Horn of Africa that operates from a base in Djibouti and carries out missions in the broader region.

In sub-Saharan Africa itself, the US military concentrates efforts on training and supporting local forces in the battle against extremist militant groups.

"Our efforts on the African continent are all about creative and innovative ways to have small –- very small elements to advise and assist and support the African nations -- doing that," AFRICOM commander General David Rodriguez said last year.

He acknowledged most African countries would not welcome a large US military presence on their soil, and said US forces would instead help build up local armies to face mutual enemies.

The exception to this rule is the Djibouti base, which houses 3,200 US personnel, including units able to launch drone strikes and commando raids against jihadist targets in Yemen and Somalia.

US non-profit group the Bureau of Investigative Journalism estimates that in the past four years US forces have conducted between 10 and 14 drone strikes in Somalia and conducted between eight and 11 secret missions.

- Terrorism and Ebola -

Smaller counterterrorism missions and one limited humanitarian deployment have also brought American boots onto African ground in recent years.

In Niger, 200 US personnel have been assigned to assist the French forces of Operation Barkhane against the jihadist groups roaming the Sahel desert.

Up to 300 special forces and other US experts can be assigned at any one time to central Africa -- based largely out of Uganda -- to help track down Joseph Kony's Lord's Resistance Army rebels.

Late last year, 2,800 personnel briefly deployed to West Africa to offer hands-off logistical support to the battle against the Ebola epidemic.

- China rising -

But while military action occasionally grabs the headlines, the inroads made by America's great power rival China go deeper -- as Beijing gathers African raw materials and invests in industry and infrastructure.

Last month, Obama renewed AGOA -- the 15-year-old African Growth and Opportunity Act -- which offers trade advantages to some African products seeking US markets.

Trade between the United States and Africa rose to $73 billion last year, roughly half each way, but with the United States enjoying a slight $3.5 billion surplus over its poorer partners.

And the African countries who benefit most from AGOA are not fledgling manufacturers or financial services hubs, but crude oil exporters like Angola and Nigeria.

Recent steep falls in the price of oil -- in part due to US success in developing its own shale oil -- helped force Africa's exports under AGOA down by 47 percent last year.

Meanwhile, the broader engagement by resource-hungry China and Africa's former colonial powers in the European Union saw their trade with Africa hit $200 billion and $140 billion respectively.

https://news.yahoo.com/america-africa-military-ties-grow-trade-lags-094529277.html
 
Why 200 American investors have joined Obama in Kenya

Why 200 American investors have joined Obama in Kenya
Sub-Saharan Africa, the second-fastest growing region in the world, is a golden opportunity for investors, say experts.
By Kelsey Warner
July 25, 2015 2:20 PM

President Barack Obama called Africa a continent "on the move" Saturday, as he opened a US-sponsored business summit in Kenya. Tagging along are some 200 American investors.

The presence of American investors in Nairobi sends a strong signal that investment on the continent is shifting, from the billions of aid-focused dollars from the US government to private sector involvement in one of the fastest growing regions in the world.

One program that has struggled with private sector inclusion is President Obama's Power Africa Program, which set out to double access to electricity in sub-Saharan Africa over the next five years. With a price tag of $7 billion, the initiative has yet to provide any electricity two years in, the New York Times reports. The International Energy Agency currently estimates electricity reaches only about 32 percent of sub-Saharan Africa, a challenge the US has picked up alongside the region's leadership, but which dogs lawmakers and energy investors who cannot seem to broker progress.

Power Africa officials in Washington told the Times that Power Africa was intended to provide incentives to help foster private investment, rather than to function simply as an aid program.

The shift from aid to capital investment was repeatedly emphasized by the president and Kenyan officials. Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta, who co-hosted the business summit with Obama, said he hoped Obama's visit would help change the narrative about Kenya and Africa. The two leaders sat down for a formal meeting at Kenya's State House after the summit, where again Obama called for a shift in US-Africa relations, one that emphasizes opportunity, rather than charity.

The presence of so many private investors at Saturday’s summit may be one of the first signals that such a plan is finally starting to take shape.

Sub-Saharan Africa is second only to South Asia as the fastest growing region in the world, says the World Bank, and its statistics tell a story that is complicated, but full of potential.

The continent is home to a third of the planet’s mineral reserves, a tenth of the oil, and two-thirds of the diamonds. Highly dependent on the price of natural resources and export crops, the economy ebbs and flows with growth in those industries, according to The Economist. An emerging emphasis on manufacturing is slowly freeing Africa’s economy from the fluctuating prices of its natural reserves.

The International Monetary Fund reports that by 2035, the number of Africans joining the working age population (ages 15–64) will exceed that from the rest of the world combined, a trend with significant ramifications for the global economy.

The World Bank consistently projects around 5 percent annual growth for the continent, despite noting that half of school-aged children are not in school in sub-Saharan Africa, which signifies a vast resource of untapped potential.

Perhaps the biggest struggle in the region is the need to integrate burgeoning manufacturing, agriculture, tourism, and transport markets with the rest of the world. To leverage this potential, the IMF emphasizes the need to "fill the infrastructure gap, lower tariff and nontariff barriers, and improve the business climate and access to credit."

Democracy is a leading driver of growth, according to the United Nations, which credits democratic leadership with more responsive government in sub-Saharan Africa.

Connectivity is also transforming the continent, reports the UN. Between 2000 and 2012, African mobile phone subscribers increased by about 2500 percent.

Together, this adds up to a region, as Obama put it, "on the move." The 200 American investors accompanying Obama on Saturday sends a strong signal that the flow of US support may soon look a little different.

"What happens in Africa is going to affect the world," Obama said.

https://news.yahoo.com/why-200-american-investors-joined-obama-kenya-182010986.html
 
China in driving seat as Ethiopian capital gets new tramway

China in driving seat as Ethiopian capital gets new tramway
September 20, 2015 1:10 PM

Addis Ababa (AFP) - Sub-Saharan Africa's first modern tramway opened in the Ethiopian capital on Sunday, marking the completion of a massive Chinese-funded infrastructure project hailed as a major step in the country's economic development.

Even before the ribbon was cut, several hundred residents were queueing for a ride on the Chinese-driven trams, which have the capacity to carry 60,000 passengers a day across the capital of Africa's second most populous nation.

The two line, 34-kilometre (21 mile) system was built by the China Railway Engineering Corporation (CREC) . The project cost $475 million, 85 percent of which has been covered by China's Exim bank.

"I'm very excited and very proud as an Ethiopian. We have been waiting for this for a long time. It will curb the transportation shortage," said Dereje Daba, who had waited for two hours to become one of the first passengers on the new line.

Currently working in a café in the city centre, he said the tram would cut his daily commute from one hour to just 20 minutes. So far only the north-south line is open, with the east-west line due to open next month.

The tramway is designed to relieve the mounting strain on the city's roads, where up to now public transport for the five million and growing population has consisted of aged buses and so-called "blue donkeys" -- a network of cramped, polluting minibuses.

"I have had many problems with the blue donkeys, with the long lines and the fights to get a seat. I hope this will no longer be a problem," said Tigist Dekele, a young woman who lives in the city.

Ticket prices have also been set at the low, accessible rate of no more than $0.30.

The light rail has been hailed as a milestone in fast-growing but impoverished Ethiopia's development, and part of a cluster of major infrastructure projects -- most of them also Chinese-funded -- that include railway lines, motorways and dams.

The project is also a symbol of China's continued strong economic presence on the commodity-rich African continent. Beijing even built the $200 million African Union headquarters in Addis Ababa in 2012 as a gift expressing "friendship to the African people."

Ethiopia's transport minister, Workneh Gebeyehu, said the tramway project would also boost Ethiopia's bid to make the city -- already the seat of the African Union -- the undisputed continental hub.

"This is a sign of modernity. This is a very modern train that will serve the capital city of Africa. We are very proud of that," he said. "The light rail is not for commercial purposes. Tickets are very cheap. It will serve the people with low income."

Authorities have also promised the scheme will not be beset by power cuts, with a separate power grid set up to feed the lines.

https://news.yahoo.com/china-driving-seat-ethiopian-capital-gets-tramway-171023649.html
 
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