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This is Africa’s moment… But for how long? And how to take the best and most sustainable advantage of it? 1 1. World Growth is Changing its Engine 2 Development is the success of the twentieth century Relative poverty is Education is in fast declining sharply progress Child mortality is declining 3 MDGs are in real progress Millennium Development Goals Indicators 4 As well as HDI 5 Developing countries are becoming the engines of growth for the world 6 OECD countries will face a difficult adjustment and the US above all 7 World’s demand structure is shifting Changes in absolute volumes of GDP – source OECD 8 Many are lagging behind but more and more are catching up 9 And more is to come 10 2. Four main development models based on world inequalities shape the modern growth • • • • 2.1 The “Dutch disease vanquisher” model 2.2 The “double surplus sweatshop” model 2.3 The “sweatwalker” model 2.4 The “@sweater” model 11 2.1 The “dutch disease vanquisher” model 12 2.2 The double surplus sweatshop models (i) Killing the old double deficit models and theory Debt crisis and economic collapse in 80’s Latin America (please do not forget Africa’s failure) Crise de la dette et effondrement de la croissance en Amérique latine 13 2.2 The double surplus sweatshop models (ii) The reign of double surpluses 14 2.3 Exporting men: the emergence of the sweatwalker model 15 2.4 Newcomers to fast growth pattern: from @sweaters to globalservice sweaters After the world’s factory, the world’s desk (and hospital)? 16 3. High growth and rapid increase of welfare apparently shape the world, but… the inversion of scarcities questions the sustainability of this successful pattern 17 3.1 The great demographic shift, or Man as a disposable commodity 18 3.2 The end of nature Overshooting: mankind’s footprint Nature as a competitive asset 19 Kribi waterfalls, Southern Cameroun 4. The three main channels for unsustainability 20 4.1 Macroeconomic un-sustainability: the global link 21 Global imbalances in a world of reversed scarcities generate financial volatility, private and public unsustainable indebtment pressure, exchange rate wars, and ultimately lead into global recession 22 4.2 Social un-sustainability: both North and South It is mainly rooted in inequalities and low employment generation growth 23 Source: MDGs Report 2010 All linked Food riots in Haiti, Apil 2008 Riots in French suburbs, 2005 Subsaharan migrants on their way to Europe Al Qaida au Maghreb Islamique (AQMI), October 2010 24 4.3 Environmental unsustainability: the major structural economic realignments The environmental Kuznets Law Carbon emissions, biodiversity loss, local and global pollutants… all wrong directions: back to the club of Rome? The laws of relative and absolute impacts 25 From the economics of flows to the economics of assets co Commodities, space, air, water, land: from expansive to expensive UNCTAD, Trade and Environment Review 2009/2010 26 Genuine growth, hidden realities Pierre-Noël Giraud, Denis Loyer, Capital naturel et développement durable en Afrique, octobre 2006 27 Towards a slow and dirty growth path? 28 2. This is Africa’s Moment (but how long will it be?) 29 Streets of Lagos Africa is the major question mark of sustainability for the second half of the century • Growth and demographic patterns make it the combination of India and China in social, environmental and macroeconomic challenge • Africa’s size is the addition of Europe, the US, China, India, and more: it is the cornerstone of the twentieth century assets economy • Africa is already a disputed territory between the “new hungrys”: its fate is structured south-south World population by region 2 000 1 800 1 600 1 400 1 200 1 000 800 600 400 200 0 1950 1960 1970 Subsaharan Africa 1980 1990 China 2000 2010 2020 India 2030 2040 Europe 2050 30 Growth has resumed Economic Growth, by region, 1980-2010 8 6 4 2 0 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010e -2 -4 World EU Subsaharan Africa 31 And should last (for some time) Africa dependency ratio 100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 1950 1960 1970 Subsaharan Africa 1980 1990 2000 2010 East Asia 2020 2030 2040 2050 Europe Note: the dependency ratio is the ratio between the "dependent" population (aged 0-14 years old and 65 more) and the population in “working age"(between 15 and 65). It is expressed as the number of "dependent" for 100 people in working age . East Asia = China, Northern, southern Korea, Japan Mongolia Korea. Europe including Russia. Source: United Nations, World Population Prospects: The 2008 revision (median scenario), 2009. 32 A potential horizon of thirty years?… Urban population (% of total) 65 60 55 Africa 50 SSA 45 SSA less SA 40 North Africa 35 South Africa 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 30 33 It is producing real impact GDP per capita 4000 3000 2500 Africa 2000 SSA 1500 SSA less SA 1000 North Africa 500 South Africa 0 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 Constant 2000 US$ 3500 34 Africa is also carried by the global move towards the universal middle class Countries East Asia & Pacific China Latin America & Caribbean Middle East and North Africa South Asia India Sub-saharan Africa Number living between $2 and $13 per day 1990 2005 315,5 1117,1 173,7 806 276,7 362,1 170,2 240,1 192,7 380,2 146,8 263,7 177,7 197,1 Percent of the population 1990 2005 19,8 59,3 15,3 61,8 63,2 65,8 75,5 78,7 17,2 25,8 17,3 24,1 22,8 25,8 35 A class that is joining the global consummer’s feast Household final consumption expenditure per capita growth 8 East Asia & Pacific 6 (annual %) OECD 4 2 Latin America & Caribbean 0 South Asia -2 Sub-Saharan Africa -4 36 Thanks to fiscal space… Cash surplus/deficit 6 4 Africa ASS 0 -2 AFN 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 (% of GDP) 2 ASS less SA SA -4 -6 37 Leading to lower endebtment Central government debt, total 100 90 80 Africa 60 SSA 50 40 North Africa 30 20 10 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 0 1995 % of GDP 70 38 And improved external accounts Overall balance 7000 Africa 6000 Sub saharan Africa 4000 3000 North Africa 2000 1000 Sub saharan africa less SA 0 -1000 SA -2000 -3000 Current account balance 15 10 Africa 5 SSA 0 -5 SSA less SA 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 % of GDP US Dollars, million 5000 North Africa South Africa -10 -15 39 Overstated hopes? A McKinsey report, 2010 Emerging Africa: a book by Steven Radelet, formerly CGDEV, 2010 40 Actually Africa has to accelerate public investment… Gross public investment 12 Africa 8 Sub-Saharan Africa (developing only) 6 Sub-Saharan Africa 4 South Africa 2 North Africa 0 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 (% of GDP) 10 41 As well as private! Gross private investment 30 Africa (% of GDP) 25 20 Sub-Saharan Africa 15 Sub-Saharan Africa excluding South Africa 10 5 South Africa 0 1995 1997 1999 2001 2003 2005 2007 Source: World Bank 42 It will also face huge environmental and social challenges… • How many wars and civil wars due to migration led conflicts in 2050? • No more land and water – and expensive energy in 2050? • How many failed states still in 2050? • One billion Africans below 2 usd a day in 2050? • And how many “dependant”? (on which economic model base?) 43 One major question is what model will bring Africa its fastest and most sustainable pace of growth? • The resources model still carries huge macro and environmental challenges • The double surplus model may not be under reach anymore • The @sweater and the sweatrunner models cannot fix it all • Is there a room for a domestic market making oriented policy? 44 key structural “benchmark policies” are “no mistake” options • An energy policy that reduces dependency • An urban and transportation policy that ensures productivity gains and environmental upsides • “externalities generating” policies have to be favored: the case of water and health • Africa has to take care of its elites, and has still to generate its own private sector • A financial market that allows domestic currencies long term funding 45 ADB matters • ADB has to and can carry an african vision of development • It links from South to North • Its volumes matter • Its instruments can make a difference • It has imposed itself over the past years as the premier bank of Africa 46