Nigeria’s Dr
Adesina (L) took over from Donald Kaberuka his predecessor (R) yesterday
|
The African Development
Bank (AfDB) will focus in coming years on tackling Africa’s chronic power
shortages to try to unlock the continent’s economic potential and end its
vulnerability to fluctuations in commodity prices, its new president said
yesterday. Nigeria’s
Akinwunmi Adesina took the helm as the eighth president of the continental body
yesterday at Abidjan, the Ivoirien capital headquarters.
“Africa
could easily be growing at double-digit GDP rates if we solve this problem of
energy,” said Adesina, the immediate past minister of agriculture who added:
“Energy poverty on the continent has to be solved as a matter of urgency, as a
matter of scale. This is going to be my most important priority,” according to
a Reuters report.
Vice
President Yemi Osinbajo led the Federal Government delegation to the ceremony.
The Nation report continues:
Though
it boasts nearly a billion people, sub-Saharan Africa consumes about as much
power as Spain, with less than five per cent that number, due to poor
generating capacity and limited transmission networks. Two-thirds of Africans
have no access to electricity.
The
lack of reliable power grids is a major obstacle to industrializing the
continent’s economies at a time when Africa hopes to make a transition from
commodities producer to a manufacturing hub and challenge Asia where labour
costs are rising.
According
to the International Energy Agency, Africa requires an additional US$450
billion in power sector investment to halve blackouts and achieve electricity
access for all in urban areas by 2040.
As
of 2013, the bank – founded in 1964 and funded by African nations and
shareholder countries outside the continent – had lent 67.22 billion Units of
Account or about US$94 billion.
A
development economist with a doctorate from Purdue University in the United
States, the 55-year-old was elected in May to head the Ivory Coast-based
institution for a five-year term.
“Africa
has to industrialize,” he said. “We have to add value … so that (Africa) does
not expose itself to the continued volatility … of global prices for
commodities.”
Africa
needs to mimic China and other Asian countries’ use of an abundant supply of
cheap labour to take advantage of globalization and attract investment, Adesina
said. And as wages rise in China and elsewhere in Asia, Africa can offer a
competitive edge with its cheaper workforce.
Wages
in China have increased by over 10 per cent annually over the past decade,
according to China’s National Bureau of Statistics.
“There’s
a lot of opportunity in Africa today to take advantage of these wage
differentials, especially in terms of light manufacturing, textiles, footwear
and others,” he said.
Osinbajo urged
African leaders to discard economic ideas and myths holding them bound to a few
options.
He
called on them to embrace creativity, innovation and change towards charting
the pathway for growth and development in the continent.
According
to him, the western economies, particularly United States have toed the path to
emerge from the economic meltdown in 2008.
Osinbajo
said: “In 2008 western economies faced with what Ben Bernanke described as
the ‘deepest financial crisis since the Great Depression’ abandoned
conventional free-market thinking and embraced State-bankrolled stimulus plans
to forestall the imminent collapse of their economies.”
“This
proved once and for all that the monster called the economy cannot be allowed
to prowl the streets with its free-wheeling struts without the leash of a
trainer.”
Osinbajo,
who represented President Muhammadu Buhari, queried: “Do African economies not
require a different paradigm? How can trickle down paradigms work when half of
our populations are extremely poor?. Do we not need some attention to
social investment?”
He
said that conditional cash transfers to the poorest segments, universal primary
healthcare schemes, school feeding programs, can energize local economies and
create important multipliers in the economy.
The
Vice President however expressed some optimism that the African Development
Bank, given its recent achievements under the out-gone President, Donald
Kaberuka, can greatly assist Africa address some of its socio-economic
problems.
Under
the new leadership of Dr. Adesina, he said that the AfDB needs to redouble its
efforts in addressing the needs of the fragile areas, through institutional
support, emergency assistance, and bold pro-poor interventions in health,
education and agriculture.
Osinbajo
also urged the new AfDB President to focus on how economic policy can
produce economic empowerment for women, and all people who have become disempowered
and whose voices are seldom reflected in the rhetoric of policy.
The
new AfDB President, at the occasion unfolded a 5-point agenda which would be
given utmost priority in the next five years.
He
listed the priority areas as Light Up and Power Africa; Feed Africa; Integrate
Africa; Industrialize Africa and Improve quality of life for the people of
Africa.
Adesina
said that unlocking the potentials of Africa for Africans will be his goal at
AfDB.
Dr.
Adesina, who was Nigeria’s immediate past Minister of Agriculture, became the
eighth President of the AfDB and the first Nigerian to occupy the office since
the creation of the Bank in 1963.
He
took over from Kaberuka, who served for 10 years from 2005 to 2015.
Present
at the ceremony were the President of Cote D’Ivoire, Allasane Quattara and his
Prime Minister, Daniel Kaplan Duncan.
Also
at the inauguration were Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Governor Godwin
Emefiele, Governors Abdullahi Ganduje (Kano), Darius Ishaku (Taraba), Aminu
Tambuwal (Sokoto), ex-Ekiti State Governor Kayode Fayemi and former Finance
Minster Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, business Mogul Aliko Dangote and United Bank
for Africa (UBA) Managing Director Philip Oduoza and Nigeria’s Ambassador to Cote D’Ivoire,
Mrs Ifeoma J. Akabogu-Chinwuba.
No comments:
Post a Comment