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Investing in Africa Sir Paul Judge 20th November 2012 Africa Africa is a Rich Continent Sadly many of the people are still poor 3 2000 2011 Africa by Numbers •54 sovereign states •1 billion people •US$2 trillion GDP •7 African countries among the 10 fastest growing economies •5.5% Africa’s share of global FDI projects •US$85 billion funding for African infrastructure in 2010 5 World Population (bn) World Population (million) 2010 2030 2050 2010-50 % Change Asia 4,167 4,917 5,231 26% Africa 1,033 1,524 1,998 93% Europe 733 690 729 -1% Latin America/Caribbean 589 723 691 17% Northern America 352 410 448 27% 36 45 51 42% 6,909 8,309 9,150 32% Oceania World World Population (bn) 0.8, 13% 2000 0.3, 6% Europe/ex-USSR Western Offshoots 3.6, 60% 1.3, 21% L. Am/Africa Asia 0.7, 8% 0.4, 5% 2050 Europe/ex-USSR Western Offshoots 5.2, 58% 2.6, 29% L. Am/Africa Asia Supporting Education "Education is the most powerful weapon you can use to change the world“ Nelson Mandela (1918 - ) African Children Aged 5-14 These countries represent about a third of Africa’s population Population Percentage 5-14 Pop. (m) Aged 5-14 (m) Nigeria 131.5 27.3% 35.9 Tanzania 38.3 26.8% 10.3 South Africa 47.4 21.6% 10.2 Kenya 34.3 26.1% 9.0 Uganda 28.8 29.7% 8.6 Ghana 22.1 25.0% 5.5 Malawi 12.9 29.2% 3.8 Zambia 11.7 28.6% 3.3 Sierra Leone 5.5 25.5% 1.4 Gambia 1.5 24.9% 0.4 334.0 26.5% 88.4 Total DIGITAL DIVIDE- THE REALITY UK has 10 million school pupils Computers per pupil: Primary schools: one for 7 pupils Secondary schools: one for 4 pupils Africa has 250 million school pupils 95% of students in Africa graduate never having touched a PC The cost of infrastructure, hardware and curriculum development is prohibitive for developing country governments “The gap between Information ‘Haves’ and ‘Have-nots’ is widening, and there is a real danger that the world’s poor will be excluded from the emerging knowledge-based global economy” Kofi Annan Investment Climate • 35 African countries ahead of China in the EIU’s Democracy Index • 35 countries ahead of Russia on Transparency International’s Corruption Perception Index • 17 African countries ahead of India on the World Bank’s Doing Business Index FDI inflows 14 Global and by group of economies, 1995 - 2011 USD billions World 2000 1800 Developed economies 1600 Developing economies 1400 1200 Transition economies 1000 800 600 400 200 0 1995 1997 Source: UNCTAD 1999 2001 2003 2005 2007 2009 2011 Africa - FDI inflows and outflows 15 As a % of world total % % 5 4.5 4 3.5 3 2.5 2 1.5 1 0.5 0 2005 Source: UNCTAD 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 Africa - FDI inflows 16 In USD billions 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 FDI inflow into Africa Source: UNCTAD 2010 2011 FDI Projects in Africa 17 1000 901 857 800 747 675 600 421 400 200 0 2007 Source: Ernst & Young 2008 2009 2010 2011 FDI flowing in a diverse range of sectors 18 Manufacturing and infrastructure-related activity account for a significant proportion of FDI Capital (proportion, 2003 - 2011) Extracti on, 27.6% Service s, 4.0% Other, 0.2% Manuf acturin g, 29.9% Infrastr ucturerelated, 38.3% Source: Ernst & Young New projects (proportion, 2003 - 2011) Other, 1.5% Services , 50.9% Manufa cturing, 24.6% Infrastr uctureExtracti related, 13.0% on, 9.9% Africa - FDI inflows 19 2005 - 2011 USD billions 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 2005 2006 2007 2008 Eastern Africa Central Africa Southern Africa Western Africa Source: UNCTAD 2009 2010 2011 Northern Africa Top 15 African country destinations 20 Attract 82% of new FDI projects since 2003 1000 924 827 19 16 800 13 563 600 537 10 328 317 307 7 282 207 200 178 141 134 128 119 96 4 80 % share of total Botswana Mozambique Zambia Tanzania Uganda Libya Ghana Kenya angola Nigeria Tunisia Morocco Egypt Algeria New projects Source: Ernst & Young SA 0 Other countries… 400 1 Investments in Africa – Consumer Deli Foods Vehicle Aureos Africa Fund Investment amount $10.1m Country Nigeria Transaction type Strategic minority/ growth capital Sector Packaged Food – Biscuit Manuf. Investment date November 2008 •Deli Foods Limited is a biscuit manufacturing company. It produces over 10 varieties of biscuits including McVities biscuits, which it produces under a contract-manufacturing arrangement with United Biscuits (UB) of the U.K . •Deli is a well run, profitable company operating in a growing industry that is driven by strong demand for affordable packaged foods which are locally manufactured. •Company's own-brands account for circa 85% of the total annual turnover with strong brand in the mass-market segment. 2.1x MoC / 42% IRR Investments in Africa – Consumer Brookside Dairy Vehicle Aureos Africa Fund Investment amount $18.5m Country Kenya Transaction type Strategic minority/ growth capital Consumer Staples - Diary Description/Investment Rationale Sector products Investment date February 2009 •Brookside is the largest privately owned dairy in East Africa with operations in Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania. It also exports products to Rwanda, Burundi, Egypt and the Middle East, as well as to the Indian Ocean islands. •Aureos invested in Brookside as a part of an acquisition of a complementary dairy business, which increased both the capacity and the number of brands managed by the Company. 21% revenue growth 2009-2011 27% EBITDA growth 2009-2011 Multi year data not available yet for comparison 22 performance analysis Investments in Africa – Materials (Cement) Ciments Du Sahel (CDS) Vehicle Aureos Africa Fund Country Senegal Sector Materials- Cement Investment amount Transaction type $13.7m Strategic minority/ Growth Capital Investment date February 2009 •CDS is the second largest cement producer in Senegal which operates a plant that has an annual capacity of 2.5 MT of cement. •The Fund's investment was used to support the company's capacity expansion in order to take advantage of the huge market opportunities in the region. •The company has strong fundamentals; high potential for attractive returns to investors and has cross border potential. 28% revenue growth 2009-2011 29% EBITDA growth 2009-2011 23 Investments in Africa – Industrials Southey Transaction Summary Vehicle Country Aureos Africa Fund South Africa Industrials - Industrial Sector Congl.Rationale Description/Investment Investment amount Transaction type $12.8m Change of Control Investment date July 2009 •Southey was established in 1939 to offer industrial painting and contracting services to mines and heavy industry. •The Group has grown into South Africa’s largest industrial painting, blast cleaning and contracting services company servicing major industrial, infrastructural installations and mining operations. •The investment offers Aureos the opportunity to invest in a diversified portfolio of assets which are able to generate stable earnings and provides significant growth prospects. 27% revenue growth 2009-2011 19% EBITDA growth 2009-2011 24 Project Vision Togo The Jewel of West Africa 13th July 2012 Total Population (Millions) Year Low Medium High 2010 6.0 6.0 6.0 2011 6.1 6.2 6.2 2013 6.4 6.4 6.4 2015 6.6 6.7 6.7 2020 7.2 7.3 7.5 2025 7.7 8.0 8.3 2030 8.2 8.7 9.2 Population By Age Group (000) Age: 0-4 5-19 20-64 65+ Total 2000 0.8 1.8 2.0 0.2 4.8 2005 0.8 2.0 2.4 0.2 5.4 2010 0.9 2.2 2.8 0.2 6.0 2015 0.9 2.3 3.2 0.2 6.7 2020 0.9 2.5 3.7 0.3 7.3 2025 1.0 2.6 4.2 0.3 8.0 2030 1.0 2.7 4.6 0.4 8.7 2030/10 112% 123% 168% 191% 144% Annual Real GDP/Capita Growth Forecasts ($) 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2026 2027 2028 2029 2030 5% 6% 7% 535 550 578 606 637 669 702 737 774 813 853 896 941 988 1,037 1,089 1,143 1,201 1,261 1,324 1,390 535 550 583 618 655 694 736 780 827 877 929 985 1,044 1,107 1,173 1,243 1,318 1,397 1,481 1,570 1,664 535 550 589 630 674 721 771 825 883 945 1,011 1,082 1,158 1,239 1,325 1,418 1,517 1,624 1,737 1,859 1,989 Total Real GDP ($bn) Population (000) 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2026 2027 2028 2029 2030 6,028 6,155 6,283 6,413 6,543 6,674 6,807 6,940 7,074 7,208 7,343 7,477 7,612 7,747 7,881 8,016 8,150 8,284 8,418 8,551 8,684 5% 6% 7% 3.22 3.39 3.63 3.89 4.17 4.46 4.78 5.12 5.47 5.86 6.26 6.70 7.16 7.65 8.17 8.73 9.32 9.95 10.61 11.32 12.07 3.22 3.39 3.66 3.96 4.29 4.63 5.01 5.41 5.85 6.32 6.82 7.36 7.95 8.57 9.25 9.97 10.74 11.57 12.47 13.42 14.45 3.22 3.39 3.70 4.04 4.41 4.81 5.25 5.73 6.25 6.81 7.42 8.09 8.81 9.60 10.45 11.37 12.37 13.45 14.63 15.90 17.27 Project Sectors Governance Business Development Agriculture Mining Tourism Transport Energy Telecomms Education Health Governance Vision • By 2020 the most respected country in coastal West Africa – Constitutional stability – Rule of law – Government management – Government effectiveness • People are content with the government • Overseas investors see Togo as a country which provides predictable returns Political Stability • Ensure Election Commission is seen to be independent • Ensure free and fair Parliamentary elections in the autumn with external African Union, European Union and United Nations observers certifying them • Free and fair Presidential election in 2015 Rule of Law • Set up Independent Commission Against Corruption (ICAC) with international board • Ensure Supreme Court for all criminal and civil cases is seen to be independent using Togolese lawyers returning from overseas as necessary • Increase number of local courts with trained magistrates • Improve police training and conditions Attracting Foreign Direct Investment “Q: What is your strategy to attract foreign investors? A: Togo has an image problem today. It is the result of the long years of crisis in this country. It is imperative that we rid ourselves of the bad image of the past, in order to win the confidence of foreign investors, to make them look at Togo with fresh eyes and to understand the extent of the positive changes that have happened in this country in recent years…” Faure Essozimna Gnassingbe FDI flows into Africa from 2003-2011 No1: South Africa $827bn (16% of total, $ per capita) No6: Nigeria $307bn (5.9% of total) No9: Ghana $178bn (3.4% of total) No49: Togo $5bn (0.1% of total) Source: Quote from New Togo, new governance, new business climate. African Business. May 2011, Issue 375, p3535; FDI Data from E&Y Africa Attractiveness Report 2012 and World Bank Group FDI 41 Attracting Foreign Direct Investment Summary Action Plan 1. Finalise the New Investment Code 2. Set-up an Investment Promotion Agency (IPA): A One-Stop Window Portals for the various priority sectors / market opportunities Use current Centre for Business Formalities 3. Define a strategy for resource mobilisation 4. Ensure adequate local skillset 5. Do not overlook Intra-Africa FDI Targets for FDI : have a % of GDP and % job creation as targets Approach: brand and market Togo: market opportunities, priority sectors, business environment, websites, marketing, public relations… Key issues to address: ensuring FDI benefits the country and its people Timing: 2012-2030 Potential source of funding: UNCTAD 42 AGRICULTURE The Roots of Togo Olivier du Lac National Priority • 75 % of working population, around 40 % of GDP • Average farm < 2 ha, 90 % of the poor are subsistence farmers • Only 10 % of farmers use animal assisted ploughs • Very low mechanisation: 1 Tractor for every 30 K Ha • 84 % of cultivated land receives no fertiliser • Insufficient national integration and coordination • 1 million Ha of free arable land • Blessed with diverse landscapes and fertile soils Project Vision: (2012-2030) A smallholder revolution will take root in Togo, and ‘trickle-up’ through the economy. 1. Staple foods, ensuring food security 2. Efficient decentralisation 3. Livestock, reduction of imports and nascent exports 4. Tree crops, capitalising on quality Important Known Mineral Potential Phosphates – Unconsolidated phosphate: 70m t, P2O5 36 % content; – Carbonate phosphate: > 2,000m t, P2O5 20 % content; Marble – Important reserves, good quality: some deposits > 800m t Limestone – Substantial good-quality limestone reserves (> 200m t) Iron ore – 500m t grading 30-40 % Manganese – 6.3m t grading 14.1 % Identified sites for Chromite, Bauxite, Nickel… 46 Fair Revenues for the Country and for Companies Auctioning or bidding for tender with supervision by the International Advisory Board Appropriate fiscal framework – State equity participation (20%) + buy additional shares at market price – Corporate tax on profits, – Progressive Royalties e.g. 3% on business planned commodity market price, progressively up to 15% if price rises Royalties to be used – By the Government – Local Communities Development Fund – Mineral Development and Liability Fund 47 Why Tourism Local • Consumed at the point of production • Promoting Cross-cultural Awareness Global • Developing communities poor in resource but rich in culture Special • Upgrading the economy to a higher value chain with a service Add Value orientation Build New Hotels (2012-2030) 5 Star Hotel 4 Star Hotel COST (100 rooms/hotel) 5 Star Hotel 4 Star Hotel Total Cost 5 Star Hotel 4 Star Hotel Country Brand Star Uganda Hilton 5 Rwanda Hilton 4 2011 0 0 2015 1 2 2020 2 4 2025 4 8 2030 6 15 2011 42 22 2015 45 25 2020 52 29 2025 60 34 2030 70 39 2015 45 50 2020 52 58 2025 121 134 2030 140 273 2011 Cost ($m) Time Room Developer 150 Feb-12 300 Aya Foundation 30 Feb-11 160 Opulent Fund Aya Invsetment Hilton Rural & Urban Availability % of Population with Access to Electricity Targeted Growth Rates – Electricity Penetration • Target = 100% of the population to have access to electricity • Rural • Mainly decentralised energy systems • Urban • Mainly centralised energy systems Kerosene Lamps • Low level of light • Solar lamp is 10x – 20x stronger • Air pollution • High oil costs • Dangerous for children • Strains their eyes studying by weak light at night Sources: Niama’s report • Cause major burn accidents every day Micro Solar Kits • “Whole villages can become self-sufficient once someone has a home solar system." • Allow children to study in the evening • Access to information through radio and television • Charge mobile phones, laptops, possibly small refrigerators Sources, CNN, Rural Energy Foundation3 Vision for Telecoms Inclusive Society Telecom’s Role Implied Priorities Growing Economy Jewel Of The Crown Telecom as a social tool Telecom as a business tool Platform for new business Affordability of services Reliable business grade services Full suite of services available universally 3 Year 8 Year 18 Year Business Development: M-Pesa Coastal Cables Developing Togo’s Transport “Insufficient infrastructure is one of Togo’s biggest obstacles to stronger growth” US Treasury Official Neal Wolin, 9th May 2012. Road Air Marine Rail Air Transport And Tourism Promote Lome airport together with tourist business (Thomas Cook & Monarch in The Gambia) + VISA on arrival Develop the Niamtougou, Kara airport with the local tourist trade as a destination, plus serve local communities including Benin. Progressively pave other runways with tourism trends Private financed Development of nature reserves Tour operators Rail Transport - Delivery Commission detailed investigation into rail viability, route & gauge Phase 1: Lome – Blitta (340km) (rehabilitation), linking mines Phase 1.2 Lome – Kpalime (120km) optional for mine access Phase 2: Blitta – Niamtougou (190km), linking major towns Phase 3: Niamtougou – Dapaong (190km) (North Togo border) Phase 4.1 Burkina Faso, Ouagadougou (300km) Phase 4.2 Niger, Niamey (400km) (4.2) (4.1) (3) (2) (1) Total Togo rail: 720km + 120km Burkina Faso & Niger: 700km Note: Indicative route shown on the map – detailed route planning would be required, considering relief, ground conditions, centres of population, mineral reserves etc. Education Overview • Enrolment rates – Primary (net) 91.8% – Secondary (net) 24.7% – Technical and Vocational training 7.8% • Low completion rates and high repetition rates – Primary completion 73.7% – Progression to secondary school 70.5% – Primary repeaters 22.1% – Secondary repeaters 22.9% School Investment By 2030: • Primary education: – 16,000 teachers to be trained – 2487 new schools, $60,000 per school, total cost $144 million, average $8.3 million per year (138 schools) • Secondary education: – 14,400 teachers to be trained – 2400 new schools, $103,000 per school, total cost $247 million, average $13.8 million per year (133 schools) Overview and Key Metrics 5.76% 1.30% All Causes of Death Communicable Diseases Non-communicable Diseases 39.16% 53.78% Violence & Injury Other Leading Communicable Causes of Death 14.69 HIV/AIDS 11.36 47.4 Influenza & Pneumonia Tuberculosis 11.31 Diarrhoeal diseases Malaria 7.72 7.52 Other Physicians • • • • Need 4,300 doctors by 2030 It costs $80,000 to train each doctor Total of $344 million or $17 million per year 9.7% of health budget Other alternatives Import doctors Export specialization Project Vision Togo The Jewel of West Africa 13th July 2012