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North African cities are
leading the way as the continent and its growing middle class lay down
"solid economic roots" which are very appealing to investors,
according to a new report published Tuesday.
The report highlighted 20
African "cities of opportunity" with the Egyptian capital Cairo
heading the list, with Tunis, Casablanca and Algiers also in the top five. DOWNLOAD HERE
AFP reports:
Coming in third place
only Johannesburg, the largest city in South Africa, breaks northern Africa's
monopoly of the top five cities as ranked in the report by accountancy firm
PricewaterhouseCoopers.
"The preponderance
of North African cities at the top is mainly due to the length of time they
have been established. This has given them time to develop infrastructure,
regulatory and legal frameworks as well as establishing socio-cultural
ecosystems," the report said.
Johannesburg, formed more
recently in 1886, "was developed rapidly for political reasons,"
allowing it develop infrastructure and services are comparable to the more
established African cities.
"With five percent
growth, dynamic demographics and a growing middle class, Africa is
exceptionally appealing to investors," said the PwC report, launched
Tuesday at the Africa CEO Forum 2015 in Geneva.
- 'Historic crossroads' -
Africa is at "an
exceptional, historic crossroads, if there was ever a moment for an entire
continent to seize the day, this is it," it added.
In choosing its 20
"cities of opportunity" -- limited in the report to one city per
country -- the researchers considered four main indicators: economy,
infrastructure, human capital and demographics.
Along with technical
advances and demographic change a major trend identified by the report was urbanization.
"By 2030, half of
Africa's population will live in cities which are where economic activity and
growth will be focused as well as becoming communication centres and a hub for
social trends," the report said.
PwC's Africa Business
Group Leader Paul Cleal said the study should help answer the questions of
potential investors in the continent and help city politicians and officials
improve their competitiveness.
Cairo's infrastructure
was particularly praised, while Tunis ranked top in the "human capital"
category -- which included health systems, graduate numbers and literacy and
numeracy.
The report also looked at
other criteria such as GDP growth, ease of doing business and the ability to
attract foreign direct investment.
In this list Dar Es
Salaam, Lusaka, Nairobi, Lagos and Accra polled well.
"Most of the African
cities with promise can (and will) climb to join those cities at the top of our
overall ranking, with a little effort and organization," the report said.
"Moreover, many of
them have already become key regional platforms such as Dar es Salaam and
Douala as ports, Accra for telecommunications, Lagos for Culture and Nairobi
for financial services."
But the report also said
Africa still has "fundamental problems".
These challenges ranged
from "disease (whether AIDS, Ebola, or river blindness) to internecine
conflict" as well as a decline in commodity prices down to the most basic
requirements of urban infrastructure, clean water, ample electricity, public
transport.
The complete top 20 list
of Africa's "cities of opportunity" was:
Cairo, Tunis, Johannesburg,
Casablanca, Algeria, Accra, Nairobi, Lagos, Addis Ababa, kampala, Dakar,
Abidjan, Kigali, Lusaka, Dar es Salaam, Douala, Antananarivo, Maputo, Kinshasa
and Luanda.
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