African Utopia at the end of the coronavirus tunnel – Zimbabwe Independent

IN 1990, when Cameroons football team did the unthinkable and beat Argentina in the World Cup, the proportion of the worlds population living below the poverty line was 37,1%. Fast-forward 35 years later to 2015, following a global adoption of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), this figure now stands at 9,6%.

Cesar AMba Abogogovt minister

The concept of a universal benevolent dictator a classic assumption in beginner economic courses to escape the complexities of real-world decision-making such a person would no doubt have said The world is doing infinitely better!

But on the contrary, the world has not been doing as well as it should. The fact is, there have been warning signs all along.

The proportion of people living below the poverty line in sub-Saharan Africa in 2015 was an astonishing 41%, about the same as the global rate of extreme poverty in 1981.

On October 17, 2018, the then president of the World Bank Group, Jim Yong Kim, presented a report titled Poverty and Shared Prosperity 2018: Piecing Together the Poverty Puzzle. With rigorous data but in a simple and direct way, the report clearly indicated that global conditions were not in place to bring the rate of extreme poverty below 3% by 2030.

The most alarming case in point was, where even in the most optimistic of scenarios, the poverty rate would continue to be in double digits.The report was a pitcher of cold water in my state of mind. But it was not the first time Jim had jolted me. A few years earlier in 2015, in Lima, Peru, at the Annual Meetings of the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank, during a panel moderated by Femi Oke, the British journalist of Yoruba descent, Jim Yong Kims projections caught my attention.

In attendance were Peruvian President Ollanta Moises Humala Tasso; Ban Ki-Moon, UN Secretary-General; Christine Lagarde, IMF managing director; and Justine Greening, UK Secretary of State for International Development.

For 90-minutes, they spoke eloquently about the type of partnerships that would be needed to make Agenda 2030 a reality; the international cooperation that would be deployed; the necessary financing mechanisms and formulas; and the creativity and citizen action required.

Gathered in this august venue, the guardians of the global architecture responsible for eradicating poverty spoke convincingly and articulately about the world of tomorrow. Collectively, they concluded that by 2030, we would end up, to quote Oscar Wilde, in a country called Utopia. The Road to Lima was a party.But barely three years later as 2018 dawned, the same global architecture presented us with a new story: The end of Utopia.

In December 2019, the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) launched its Human Development Report titled Beyond Income, Beyond Averages, Beyond the Present: Human Development Inequalities in the 21st Century. As with the World Bank, the conclusion was straightforward and clear: while humanity is progressing, something is just not working in our globalised society. A new generation of inequalities, beyond basic capabilities, is emerging and threatens to render people living in developing countries obsolete in the future.

Combining the alarming 2018 World Bank report with the no less alarming 2019 UNDP report, the picture is not one of optimism: not only was the aspiration to eradicate poverty by 2030 not going to be met, but a new inequality gap was opening up as well.

These challenges had previously been the focus of the World Economic Forum Regional Strategy Group (WEF RSG), of which I had had the privilege of being a member.

One of the ideas behind the WEF RSG was very simple and irrefutable: Africa must leapfrog into the Fourth Industrial Revolution or risk being left behind inexorably.

In 2019 as well as in previous years, several countries, including Equatorial Guinea, my country, made important policy decisions to define and prioritise national development aspirations in alignment with the UNs Agenda 2030 and the African Unions Agenda 2063.Additionally, to take advantage of the Fourth Industrial Revolution we scaled up our investments in ICT and technology and in developing the capacity of our youth. And then, Covid-19 arrived!

In just a few short months the world has changed. When we return to normal, it will be a new normality and a brave new world.Covid-19 is an existential crisis. It is severely testing Africas social, economic and political resilience. In a post-Covid-19 world, the continents leaders will therefore have to rethink many prior assumptions and find new balances for individual and collective behaviour.

What I am absolutely certain of is that opportunities will emerge. Innovative minds previously imprisoned by institutional inertia and interest groups will rise to the challenges that we collectively face.What will the brave new world post-Covid-19 look like in Africa? The African Development Bank estimates that Africa will lose between US$35 and US$100 billion due to the fall in raw material prices caused by the pandemic.

WEF estimates that global losses for the continent will be in the order of US$275 billion.There is a real risk therefore that Africas inequality gap will worsen in the coming years.

Ever since the virus crossed the continents borders, regular bilateral and multilateral consultations among African finance ministers have philosophically revolved around the need to rethink our multifaceted responses to Covid-19 and other future threats that have equal or greater potential for disruption.

Today, African States are developing strategic and in-depth approaches to human development, regional integration, digitalisation, industrialisation, economic diversification, fiscal and monetary policies, and international solidarity. In short, they are rethinking the causes of the continents underdevelopment and coming up with feasible solutions. The outcomes will undoubtedly be good for Africa and for all humanity.

To better understand the scenarios before us, there are three sparks that could light a flame in the brave new world that is before us:In 2001, African leaders pledged to invest around 15% of their budgets in health. By 2020, only five countries have fulfilled this promise. No one doubts today that the health sector in Africa will be strengthened by the Covid-19. There are decisions that can no longer be postponed. In mid-March, a Togolese activist, Farida Nabourema, mocked African elites who used to go to Europe to have their ailments treated, saying: I would like to ask our African presidents who travel to Italy, Germany, France, the UK and other European countries for medical treatment, please when are you leaving? On April 2, Bloomberg published an article titled Trapped by Coronavirus, Nigerias Elite Faces Squalid Hospital, signed by journalist Dulue Mbachu. Things are going to change.

The vast majority of African countries, after Covid-19, will have to put in place social protection systems to mitigate the suffering of the continents most disadvantaged. Kenya and Equatorial Guinea offer excellent examples of countries that have regulated and put in place social protection systems that will survive and outlast our battle against this common enemy.

The continents poor pharmaceutical capacity has been a source of amazement to locals and foreigners alike. Bangladesh, a poorer country than many African countries, produces 97% of the national demand for medicines, in contrast to Africa which is almost 100% dependent on imports.

This last note has triggered another debate: the necessary industrialisation of Africa, to transform and add value to the continents vast and valuable raw materials.

Many African countries have already been deprived access to Covid-19 essentials. But there is much reason for optimism. African leaders recently lauded artemisia annua tonic that Andry Rajoelina, President of Madagascar, presented to the world as Africas solution to Covid-19 .Our enthusiasm as Africans, is rooted in wounded self-esteem. For way too long, we have been victims of marginalisation. The power to regain our dignity has too often been stripped away.

Today, nestled in the souls of all Africans is an unshakable faith that the most important resource that Africa needs in order to rise up, is none other than Africans themselves.

No one will help us if we do not help ourselves. Africa is no longer asking to be taught how to fish. Africa is already rowing towards the utopia enunciated in the UNs SDGs and the Africa Unions Agenda 2063.

In spite of dire predictions and narratives, humanity always has a way of ending up in that country called utopia. Africa is humanity.Abogo is Equatorial Guineas Minister of Finance, Economy and Planning and member of the Regional Action Group for Africa of the World Economic Forum.

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African Utopia at the end of the coronavirus tunnel - Zimbabwe Independent

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