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Investing and Doing Business in West Africa: Key Drivers and Perspectives Rolake Akinkugbe West Africa Specialist/Head of Energy, Ecobank Research West Africa Global Banking and Investment Forum, 5 November 2012 Section 1 Investing & Doing Business in West Africa: Some Strategic Perspectives Presentation Outline • • • • • • • • Macroeconomic drivers Key & Future Growth Sectors Trade Infrastructure (Transport & Power) Institutional Reforms Human Capital & Demographics The Trade Solution? The Ecobank Experience in West Africa Macroeconomic drivers of investment in West Africa Real GDP Growth percent change Real GDP Per Capita US$, 2000 prices 11 1000 Oil exporters Oil importers 9 900 7 5 • Sub-Saharan Africa continues to grow strongly – both oil importers and oil exporters. Growth remains strong in real terms – compared to North America for example. • West Africa is ‘micro-Africa’: oil exporters, oil importers, fragile countries, landlocked and coastal countries 800 3 700 1 -1 600 -3 East Asia Sub-Saharan Africa North America -5 05 06 07 08 09 500 10 05 11 12e 06 07 08 09 10 11 12e Sub Sahara Africa Real GDP Growth percent change CFA Franc Zone 9.0 8.0 • While the predominant categories: oil exporters, WAEMU zone, etc will enjoy relatively buoyant growth…… • However in 2013, oil importers will see increases in real GDP growth rates while oil exporters will see decreases WAEMU 7.0 6.0 Oil-exporting countries 5.0 4.0 Oil-importing countries 3.0 2.0 Landlocked 1.0 0.0 08 09 10 11 12e 13f Coastal • Primarily reflecting an expected moderation in global oil prices in 2013 • Landlocked countries in the Sahel have fled the impact of drought Unbundling the groups presents a more dynamic picture • Dips in growth over the last 4 years attributable to financial crisis, instability in Cote d’Ivoire ECOWAS Real GDP Growth percent change 7 6 6.12 5.8 5.4 5.2 4.6 5 4 • (Simple) average real GDP growth in the ECOWAS will rise to around 6% in 2013 3.4 3 2 1 0 08 09 10 11 12e 13f Select ECOWAS Real GDP Growth Percent change Iron ore production boost 25.0 Oil and gas production boost 20.0 15.0 • Growth still largely resource-driven for West Africa 10.0 5.0 0.0 08 09 10 11 12e 13f -5.0 -10.0 Ghana • Unbundling the groups presents a more diverse picture. Examples: • Sierra Leone’s resource driven surge in 2012 • The impact of drought in the Sahel • The implications of political instability for growth – Mali Sierra Leone Mali Côte d'Ivoire Sector Components of GDP Asia: Components of GDP percent Agriculture West Africa: Components of GDP percent Agriculture Industry Industry Services Services 100% 100% 90% 90% 80% 80% 42% 70% 58% 70% Key challenge is to transform this sector of the economy: 60% 60% 50% 50% 40% 40% 47% 30% 30% 20% 20% 10% 10% 11% 0% 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 31% 10% 0% 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 It requires a 20 percentage point increase to match Asia • Energy – West Africa’s energy exports have risen relatively steadily since the mid-1980s, and now account for around 3.5% of daily global oil output. Clean technology • Soft Commodities – opportunities A region that’s heavily dependent on food imports presents huge investment • Mining & Metals - The number of active mines in West Africa came to 107, 69 in East Africa, 49 in Southern Africa, and 39 in Central Africa. West Africa’s total is also well above the 21 companies actively mining the DR Congo. • ICT - Currently, the West African region still lags behind Southern and East Africa in ICT infrastructure The Consumer Sector The size of the food and consumer goods market in West Africa could reach US$60 billion by 2020 • The West African middle class has grown from 58 million in 2000 to 100 million in 2011, reflecting the successful implementation of economic and structural reforms over the last decade. Country Nigeria Population (2009) 151m 2010 Consumer Spending 2020 Consumer Spending* $115bn $167bn • The size of the food and consumer goods market in West Africa could reach US$60 billion by 2020. Ghana 24m $15bn $29bn Senegal 13m $10bn $16bn • Retail giants are seizing the opportunity, including Shoprite Holdings, Pick n Pay Stores, Massmart and Woolworths Holdings Ltd. • Local players are expanding to catch up in what is becoming an increasingly competitive market. • Consumer goods companies are growing but dirt roads, and inefficient rail systems and harbors make West Africa a logistical headache for consumer goods companies Agro-processing in West Africa Key commodity export/processing hubs • Cocoa: West Africa produces 70% of the world’s cocoa, but processes only 20-40% of beans. Global demand is growing by 5% / year. • Cotton: West Africa produces 15% of the world’s cotton. An estimated 500 million to 1 billion USD is required to expand ginning capacity & textile production. • Coffee: Growing production • Sugar: Plantations are becoming multi-purpose (raw or refined sugar, bio-ethanol and/or cogenerated electricity). Over 3 billion USD planned investment from now to 2015. Cotton Grains • Flour: Nigeria is emerging as Africa’s hub for importing & processing cereals into flour, with a 1.25 billion USD projected investment. Coffee Sugar Ports Cocoa 8 There are huge opportunities to finance West Africa’s imports Petroleum products make up most of the value, but food is surging Imports by region, US$ m, 2011 3,000 Imports of petroleum products, US$ m ,2011 2,500 Region 2,000 1,500 Total ECOWAS 16,422 SADC 13,379 EAC 7,680 Total 37,481 1,000 500 Wheat Rice ECOWAS Sugar Fertiliser SADC Cement Maize EAC Sources: Intracen, Ecobank Research. 9 Intra-African Trade ECOWAS fairs marginally better than the EAC SSA’s trade with the world, 2010 Intra-regional trade, US$, 2010 Region AMU CEMAC CFA Franc Zone COMESA EAC ECCAS ECOWAS SADC WAMZ Africa Total (US$ m) 7,187 631 5,552 12,770 3,915 925 15,262 28,419 3,949 86,184 % of total trade 3.2 1.6 7.1 6.2 8.3 0.9 8.9 12.1 9.9 10.9 EU China 32% 35% USA India 2% 4% Brazil 13% 14% Others Sources: Intracen, AfDB, Ecobank Research. • Intra-regional trade totaled US$86.2bn in 2010, just 10.9% of SSA’s trade with world • Most developed intra-regional trade occurs in SADC, ECOWAS & EAC • In contrast ECCAS and CEMAC intra-regional trade is negligible • Huge potential for boosting trade flows between major trade blocks, notably ECOWASCFA Franc Zone 10 Infrastructure in West Africa (Transport & Logistics) West Africa 2012 Logistics Performance Index (LPI) – (5 = highest 1 = lowest) Country Senegal Ghana Benin Nigeria Cote d'Ivoire Niger Gambia Guinea Liberia Mali Burkina Faso Togo Sierra Leone Guinea Bissau 4 Infrastructure 2.64 2.52 2.48 2.43 2.37 2.28 2.17 2.1 2 2 1.89 1.82 1.61 1.56 • • • • The LPI measures the logistics friendliness of 155 countries, regards to trade facilitation The LPI highlights infrastructure shortcomings in West Africa, though picture is mixed SA is 3.42, but Senegal performs better than Tanzania (2.00), Gabon (2.09), and even Botswana (2.09) Long-standing trade routes exist along the West African coast (Dakar-Lagos) and from coastal countries to the interior (Côte d’Ivoire to Burkina Faso/Mali) 2012 Logistics Performance Index (LPI) for West Africa’s biggest economies vs. EAC & SA 3.5 Senegal 3 Ghana 2.5 Cote d'Ivoire Nigeria 2 Kenya 1.5 Tanzania 1 Uganda 0.5 South Africa 0 Overall LPI Customs Infrastructure International Shipments Logistics Competence Tracking & Tracing Timeliness Infrastructure in West Africa (Power) Commercial Energy Consumption Mix (%) - 2010 • • 100 • 90 • 80 70 Renewables 60 • Nuclear 50 • Coal 40 Hydro 30 20 Natural Gas 10 Oil • • 0 Benin Cote d'Ivoire Ghana Nigeria Togo SSA Own Generation as a Share of Total Installed Capacity by SSA sub-region, 2010 % of installed capacity Southern Africa 6% ECOWAS region – power supply & demand imbalances On average across each individual West African country, two inputs account for 9% of total generation capacity The issue is one of attracting investment into energy infrastructure. The West Africa Power Pool (WAPP) has been successful in attracting some investments in transmission West Africa’s overall capital productivity lower than South America’s primarily due to the low quality of power supply Own generation constitutes a significant proportion of total installed power capacity in the region—as much as 51% in West Africa Significant opportunities exist in boosting the regional trade in electricity Expansion of transmission and generation facilities over the next 10 years will cost around US$30 billion, and at least half of that is expected to come from the private sector. Infrastructure contribution by sector in West African economies (2011) Power Mali Central Africa 20% Customs clearance Senegal Transportation West Africa 51% Burkina Faso East Africa 23% ICT Benin 0 20 40 60 80 % contribution to total factor productivity (tfp) Water 100 Institutional & Business Reforms in West Africa • • • • The challenges in West Africa are no longer ‘hard’ historical challenges but ‘soft risks’. In the survey chart below, the following are ranked from a business cost and likelihood perspective and likely impact on business Power supply, regional trade barriers, bureaucracy, were deemed more likely Generic chart; much will depend on operating sector In addition to the opportunity, the West Africa region presents investors with a wide a variety of business challenges EXPROPRIATION WARFARE AND TERRORISM IMPACT CORRUPTION POLITICAL UPHEAVAL CLASHES WITH LOCAL COMMUNITIES CRIME POWER SUPPLY SHORTAGES HIDDEN POLITICAL INTERESTS REGIONAL TRADE BARRIERS LABOUR DISPUTES UNFAIR CONTRACTS / TAXATION FACILITATION PAYMENT DEMANDS LIKELIHOOD BUREAUCRATIC BLOCKAGES West Africa: Business climate Senegal 200 Mali 150 200 100 150 50 100 0 50 Guinea Burkina Faso 200 150 100 0 Nigeria 50 200 0 150 200 Côte d’Ivoire 150 200 100 150 50 100 0 50 100 50 Ghana 200 0 150 100 0 50 0 Ease of doing business Starting a business Getting electricity Getting credit Protecting investors Source: IFC / World Bank 2012 14 Doing Business in West Africa: The Facts and Figures Doing Business Rankings, 2012 (1= easiest, 185 = hardest) Singapore Ghana Cape Verde Nigeria Sierra Leone Gambia, The Liberia Regional Average Mali Burkina Faso Togo Senegal Benin Niger Cote d'Ivoire Guinea Guinea-Bissau -15 1 64 122 131 140 147 149 151 151 153 156 166 175 176 177 178 179 35 85 135 185 In 2012, Sierra Leone was the only West African country, recognised in the top 10 economies with the most improved business environment (WB, Doing Business 2012) Gap between top performers such as Ghana and rest of the pack is still wide, and regional average still low at 151 However OHADA* saw business start up costs have decreased by 67% of the average per capita income, while property registration times decreased by 28% In certain categories some West African economies are comparable to the world’s best performers; starting a business in Senegal takes only 5 days, same as in Canada and faster than in France. Construction permits in Burkina Faso take only 98 days, 3 month faster than the European Union average. Burkina Faso closed the most gap to the frontier of best regulatory practices for local entrepreneurs out of any West African country *OHADA: Organisation for the Harmonisation of Business Law; Benin, Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad, Comoros, Republic of Congo, Côte d'Ivoire, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Mali, Niger, Senegal, and Togo Demographics & Human Capital West African’s are amongst the most mobile people in SSA • • • • • • • • West Africa: 320 million (2012) – 400 million (2025) – 500million (2030) • West Africa’s working age population/labour forces could be 125 million by 2025 • Key challenging will be transforming ‘youth bulge’ to the ‘economically active’ to boost tax and consumer bases • There needs to be a corresponding boost to the manufacturing base Around 320 million, could exceed 400 million by 2025 West Africans who were at least 20yrs old in 1960 now represent only 3% of the population By 2050 West Africa will host more people than North America, and as many as Latin America or Europe Intra-regional migration is seven times higher than migration towards Europe Infact, outside of Nigeria, 15% of the region’s population do not live in their country of birth West Africa offers a potential demographic dividend; wide market area, and a big consumer population to investors, but this dividend is not a given East Asia’s ‘demographic dividend’ accounted for up to a third of East Asia’s economic miracle Regional Trade: Key to improving investment conditions in West Africa? • • • • • Intra-regional trade have been on the whole found to have a higher job creation impact than extra-regional exports; Benin, Ghana, Senegal, and Togo, who export manufacturing products to the region, have substantially higher productivity on their regional exports than their global exports. For many countries, in particular those with a high manufacturing share in regional exports, these effects can be expected to be stronger for regional than for global trade. STABILITY The strongest impact were found to be in manufactured goods and agricultural commodities that were exported regionally Help to tackle the growth without development problem. However, regional exporters do continue to face substantial trading costs in the region (vs. global exporters) Average productivity values (PV) of exports by destination region, 2010 (US$) TRADE JOBS GROWTH With the exception of Burkina Faso, all countries in the region had a rather high PV for regional exports above $7,500. Also, the PV on regional exports to ECOWAS achieved the highest or second highest PV across all regions, often along with exports to the rest of SSA, for all countries but Niger. The Ecobank Experience in West Africa • Present in 37 countries (35 in Middle Africa, operating in 32) • Leading pan-African full service banking group • International offices established in Paris (2009), Dubai (2010) and London (2011) • Listed on 3 stock exchanges: NSE, GSE and BRVM • We took the long-term view, and set up shop during one of the most difficult times in the West Africa’s history – the 1980s (first mover advantage?) • We embarked on a growth strategy that cut across Anglophone, Lusophone and Francophone Africa • Admittedly, we had a large risk appetite, but also took the view that we would never leave any country, except forced out • We found the opportunities in the gap between risk perception and reality • Diversification was key to spreading and managing risk • Now operate in 32 countries in West, Central, East and Southern Africa. • Financing and promoting regional trade is a strategic focus on the business Thank you