MIDRAND,
South Africa, November 11, 2009
– A study conducted in 24 African countries
shows that the poor state of infrastructure in Sub Saharan Africa – its electricity,
water, roads, and information and communications technology (ICT) – cuts
national economic growth by 2 percentage points every year and reduces business
productivity by as much as 40 percent.
“Africa’s Infrastructure: A
Time for Transformation” finds that Africa has the weakest infrastructure
in the world, but ironically Africans in some countries pay twice as much for basic
services as people elsewhere. This study argues that well functioning infrastructure is essential
to Africa’s economic performance and that improving inefficiencies and reducing
waste could result in major improvements in African’s lives.
The report estimates
that US$93 billion are needed annually over the next decade, more than twice what
was previously thought. Almost half of this amount is needed to address the
continent’s current power supply crisis that is hindering Africa’s growth. The
new estimate amounts to roughly 15 percent of the continent’s gross domestic
product (GDP), comparable to what China invested in infrastructure over the
last decade.
The study found that existing spending on
African infrastructure is much higher than previously known, $45 billion a
year. Also surprising was the fact that most of this is domestically financed
by African tax payers and consumers. The study also found that there is also
considerable wastage to address; a number of efficiency improvements could
potentially expand the available resources by a further $17 billion.
However, even
if major efficiencies are gained there is still a funding gap of $31 billion
every year, much of it for power and water infrastructure in fragile states. Relative
to the size of their economies, the funding gap is daunting for the region’s low-income
countries (who would need to spend an additional 9 percent of their GDP) and
particularly for the region’s fragile states (who would need to spend an
additional 25 percent of their GDP). Resource-rich
countries like Nigeria and Zambia face a more manageable funding gap of 4 percent
of GDP. Particularly now with the global financial crisis, investing in African
infrastructure is critical for Africa’s future.
“Modern infrastructure is the
backbone of an economy and the lack of it inhibits economic growth,” says Obiageli
Ezekwesili, World Bank Vice President for the Africa Region. “This report
shows that investing more funds without tackling inefficiencies would be like
pouring water into a leaking bucket. Africa can plug those leaks through
reforms and policy improvements which will serve as a signal to investors that
Africa is ready for business.”
The report recommends addressing the $17 billion annual efficiency gap and closing the remaining
$31 billion annual funding gap for
African infrastructure. Closing the efficiency
gap requires improving management of utilities, ensuring adequate
maintenance, promoting regional integration, recovering costs while recasting
subsidies to enable broader access, and improving allocation and spending of
public resources. To close the funding
gap a wide range of sources will need,
including public budgets, resource rents, local capital markets, private sector
and non-OECD finance, as well as traditional donor assistance.
Countries with the greatest infrastructure needs are often the
least attractive to investors. Many of the countries in Africa will probably
take longer than a decade to catch-up on infrastructure and will probably have
to use lower cost technologies. But action is needed urgently, the report
argues, and the global financial crisis is underscoring the need for a massive
effort to overhaul Africa’s infrastructure.
“Africa’s
Infrastructure: A Time for Transformation” takes a holistic look at four crucial
sectors – energy, water, transport, and ICT – that underpin national economies
and are critical for reducing poverty in Africa. Prioritizing these sectors, increasing
investments, and improving efficiency can help African countries avert the
worsening impacts of the financial crisis and begin laying the foundations for
future growth as the global economy rebounds.
·
Power: Inadequate access to
energy is the single largest impediment to economic growth. No country in the
world has developed its economy without abundant energy supplies. Chronic power
shortages affect 30 Africa countries; the entire installed generation capacity
of 48 Sub Saharan African countries is 68 gigawatts, no more than Spain’s, and 25
percent of that capacity is unavailable because of aging plants and poor
maintenance. At US$0.18 per kilowatt-hour on average, Africa’s power is
expensive to produce by global standards, yet regional trade could
significantly lower costs.
·
Water: High hydro-climatic
variability, inadequate storage, rising demand, and lack of transboundary
cooperation undermine the African water sector. Less than 60 percent of
Africa’s population has access to drinking water and only a handful of
countries are on track to reach the Millennium Development Goals. With more
than 60 transboundary rivers in Africa, developing large-scale infrastructure
to manage water use and avoid conflicts is a huge challenge. Over the last 40
years, only 4 million hectares of new irrigation have been developed, compared
to 25 and 32 million hectares for China and India respectively.
·
Transport: Ineffective linkages
between different transport modes (air, road, and rail), declining air
connectivity, poorly equipped ports, ageing rail networks, and inadequate
access to all-season roads are key problems facing Africa’s transport system. Only
40 percent of rural Africans live within two kilometers of an all-season road,
compared to some 65 percent in other developing regions. Improving road accessibility in rural areas
is critical to raising agricultural productivity across Africa. Limited competition in the trucking industry
keeps road freight tariffs unnecessarily high, while red tape along
international trade corridors, keeps the movement of freight below 12
kilometers an hour –as fast as a horse and a buggy – even though truck speeds
can be 60 km/hour.
·
ICT: The number of African mobile
phone users has increased from 10 million in 2000 to more than 180 million in
2007. During 1992-2005, private sector investment in ICT infrastructure topped
$20 billion but high prices of services remain a problem. In 2007 the average
price of prepaid mobile services cost $12.58 a month in Africa, six times the
$2 cost in Bangladesh, India, and Pakistan.
The study – conducted by a partnership of institutions including the African Union Commission,
African Development Bank, Development Bank of Southern Africa, Infrastructure
Consortium for Africa, the New Partnership for Africa’s Development, and the
World Bank – is one of the most detailed ever
undertaken on the African continent. Surveys were conducted among 16 rail operators,
20 road entities, 30 power utilities, 30 ports, 60 airports, 80 water
utilities, and over 100 ICT operators, as well as the relevant ministries in 24
countries. The results were derived from
detailed analysis of spending needs (based on country-level microeconomic
models), fiscal costs (which involved collecting and analysis of new data) and
sector performance benchmarks (covering operational and financial aspects as
well as the country’s institutional framework).
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