By Winnie Byanyima
Several African
countries are amongst today’s fastest growing economies in the world, boosted
in many instances by new discoveries of oil, natural gas and strategic mineral
reserves. Extreme poverty on the continent is in decline, and progress towards
meeting the Millennium Development Goals has accelerated. A number of very poor
African countries, including Malawi, Sierra Leone, and Ethiopia have made
recent and substantial improvements in their levels of income equality.
Yet Africa’s
impressive growth is not shared by millions of its people. Sub-Saharan Africa
is home to a third of the world's
poorest people, and six of the top 10 most unequal countries in the
world. Where income
inequality is high, the benefits of economic growth are inaccessible to poor
people. Poverty and exclusion are bad for social stability, preventing productive
investment and undermining growth itself.
The continent’s
potential is also being undermined by illicit capital hemorrhaging out of
African countries – often in the form of tax evasion
and trade mispricing by multinational oil, gas and mining companies, and in
collusion with corrupt elected officials. In
2010, Africa’s oil, gas and mineral exports amounted to $333 billion in 2010.
But estimates of illicit financial outflows from
Africa are estimated as up to $200 billion annually, dwarfing the
development aid it receives.
Together, income
inequalities and illicit capital flows are cheating Africa of its wealth and
potential for the investments in education, agriculture and healthcare needed to
support productive citizens.
This month in Cape
Town, African business and government leaders met at the World Economic Forum
on Africa. My message to them was: For Africa to meet its real potential, you
must stand behind the millions being left behind by economic growth. Otherwise,
social and economic progress on the continent will be undermined.
The European Union
last month agreed a deal on a law that will make oil, gas, mining and logging
firms companies declare payments to governments in the countries where they
operate. This bolsters similar, recent legislation in the United States under
the Dodd-Frank financial reform law, and is
excellent news. Transparency is a great disinfectant.
It will put pressure on governments to
account for how they spend money they receive from fees and royalties.
Some African states are making some of the right moves to
manage resource wealth responsibly. In Ghana, the Petroleum Revenue Management
Act has compelled quarterly disclosures of payments and production figures
while in Liberia the voluntary Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative
(EITI) has been turned into a binding statutory requirement.
But Africa can’t
do it alone. The private sector is the engine of Africa’s economy, and if working
responsibly, holds the key to fair and sustainable economic development. Companies’
policies and practices must respect the rights of the people in the countries
where they operate. Communities affected by extractive projects must be
informed and consulted, and given the opportunity to approve or reject proposed
operations.
For their part, Africa’s
development partners can deliver aid which will promote good governance, and support
civil society to keep their leaders accountable.
We are witnessing
a scramble for Africa’s natural resource reminiscent of the period of the
industrial revolution in Europe. It is urgent and imperative that policies are
in place in each country to protect the rights and interests of African people,
most especially those living in poverty. To sustain high growth rates, priority
must be placed on forging inclusive policies that ensure that growth is both
equitable and sustainable. Much more of the proceeds of the African resource
boom need to go directly into education, health and nutrition and improving the
productive capacities of the poorest citizens. If not, efforts to boost
economic growth in a sustainable way will be undercut.
It is time for a
new, fair deal for poor people in Africa, one that gets Africa’s resources
working for all its people.
Winnie Byanyima is the Executive Director of Oxfam
International
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