Africa′s Economy Growing But Still Trails World Growth

The World Economic Forum for Africa has opened its annual meeting to mixed news about the state of business on the continent. Africa is experiencing its greatest growth since the 1970s, but it isn't growing fast enough to eliminate poverty, and Africa continues to trail other regions in the global marketplace. For VOA, Terry FitzPatrick reports from Cape Town.

More than 800 business and political leaders have gathered in Cape Town to take stock of Africa's business climate and develop strategies to improve the continent's performance. After decades of stagnation, Africa's economy is poised to grow by an estimated 6.2 percent this year. South Africa's president Thabo Mbeki opened the forum on an optimistic note.

"In many ways it's not a poor continent," he said. "It's a continent that is catching up with the world."

Economists say powerhouse countries, such as South Africa, Algeria, and Nigeria, are able to compete in the global marketplace. But 25 other countries that were analyzed for the forum's Africa Competitiveness Report lag behind the rest of the world. Economist Jennifer Blanke co-authored the study.

"Although improvements are being made in Africa, and there's no doubt that the macroeconomic environment is looking better and better, the problem is that the rest of the world is moving faster," she said. "Asian countries are just flying by, developing Asia. "

Experts at the forum note that Africa's current growth spurt is fueled largely by external factors, such as the high price of natural resources like minerals and petroleum and international debt relief.

They say sustainable growth will depend on internal factors like better infrastructure, improved governance, better schools, streamlined business laws and lower levels of corruption.

Delegates from India and China are attending the forum to offer advice about how to reach the higher levels of growth their countries enjoy.

"One of the important aspects that has fueled the growth in India has been a large domestic market," said Malvinder Singh, the Chief Executive Officer of Ranbaxy Laboratories in India. "And if you look at Africa as one marketplace and create a harmonized marketplace, I certainly believe it's large enough to have a lot of competitive growth in terms of products and services."

Not all business leaders believe Africa can copy the successful strategies of India and China. Among the skeptics is one of South Africa's leading business figures, Tokyo Sexwale.

"There is nothing for Africa to replicate or duplicate. Africa will have to find its own way," said Sexwale. Sexwale notes that Africa contains more than 50 countries that must learn to work together to compete in the global economy. The Economic Forum continues through Friday.

Source: voanews.com

Publication date: 6/14/2007

 


Receive the daily newsletter in your email for free | Click here


 

Other news in this sector:

11/20/2009 Dollar Falls Against Yen, Rises Against European Majors
11/20/2009 Chile Peso Ends Firmer At 16-Month High, Shrugs Off GDP Data
11/20/2009 German Economy Minister - economy recovery hopes 'justified'
11/20/2009 Singapore economy expands for 2nd straight quarter
11/20/2009 Malaysia - Closer farm ties with Pakistan
11/19/2009 Chile peso up slightly after hitting 17-month high
11/19/2009 Canadian Dollar Bounces Back Against Greenback And Yen
11/19/2009 Obama fails to breach China's greatest wall: the price of its currency
11/19/2009 Euro higher as officials try to support dollar
11/19/2009 Venezuela’s 2009 GDP May Shrink 2.2%, Rodriguez Says
11/19/2009 Thai economy may grow 5 pct in 2010-deputy PM
11/18/2009 Growth in German and French economies
11/18/2009 Taiwan's consumer prices remain stable-c.bank
11/18/2009 U.K. Oct. annual consumer price inflation up 1.5%
11/18/2009 European Currency Tumbles To 2-month Low Against British Pound
11/18/2009 Dollar, Yen May Rise as U.S. Output Report Deters Risk Demand
11/17/2009 Tunisia,Poland to strengthen bilateral cooperation
11/17/2009 Japanese economy emerges from recession
11/17/2009 U.S. economy: sales rebound from year’s biggest drop
11/17/2009 Austria October consumer price inflation rises

 

 

Leave a comment:

Name: *
Email: *
City: *
Country: *
  Display email address
Comment: *

 

Announcements

Job offersmore »

Specialsmore »

Recent commentsmore »

Top 5 - yesterday

Top 5 - last week

Top 5 - last month

Remaining news more »

Economic newsmore »

Exchange ratesmore »