African Economic Conference’s New Deal for Addressing Poverty

Fri, Nov 6, 2015
By publisher
4 MIN READ

10th AEC Special Coverage, BREAKING NEWS

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Economic Experts and researchers at the ongoing 10th African Economic Conference in Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of  Congo are of the view that increasing government spending on vulnerable groups will help to address poverty in the region

INCREASING government spending on healthcare, education and support to vulnerable groups like the elderly has emerged at the top of the agenda for a new deal sought by experts attending the 10th African Economic Conference (AEC) from November 2-4 in Kinshasa, to address rising poverty and inequality in Africa.

Amid growing fears that policies to ensure economic growth for all are lacking, economists are seeking a “Kinshasa Consensus” to deal with the possible loss of Africa’s economic gains.

“We need to act. It is clear it is not enough to record growth. We have experienced double-digit economic growth but fair distribution of remains,” President Joseph Kabila said in a speech delivered for him by Senate President Leon Kendo Wa Dondo, at the opening session of the African Economic Conference on Monday.

The issues proposed for approval in the Kinshasa Consensus include an African Single Currency Federation to cushion the poor from local currency depreciation linked to foreign exchange markets.

Local currencies across Africa have weakened by up to 20 per cent against the world’s major currencies since early 2015. Fear is also rising drought and crop failure will spread food insecurity and poverty.

“Africa should get away from the business as usual and use aggressive industrial investments,” Carlos Lopes, the Executive Secretary of the UN Economic Commission for Africa (ECA), said Monday. “We should take advantage of these inequalities and modernize our cities for the future.”

The 10th African Economic Conference, which is being dedicated to “Addressing Poverty and Inequality in the Post-2015 Development Agenda,” is examining the reasons behind the failure of high growth rates in Africa to control poverty.

Policymakers, donor organizations and international economic policy planners agreed elements such as policy-specific approaches to increasing production of minerals were still required even if the prices were down by 14 per cent due to reduced demand from key importers in China and elsewhere.

President Kabila said efficient service delivery – such as increased access to water, education and progress in more areas – would enable the Democratic Republic of Congo to normalize relations with donors, grow its economy and continue to modernize key roads and electricity infrastructure.

Organized jointly by the African Development Bank (AfDB), the UN Development Programme (UNDP) and the UN Economic Commission for Africa (ECA), the conference is discussing how Africa could use focus its policies on industrialization.

Rampant poverty in Africa dropped drastically in 22 out of 29 countries, according to Bartholomew Armah, ECA’s Chief of Planning Section.

The return of poverty is mostly linked to the income inequality. At least 70 per cent of African countries reduced poverty due to rising incomes, but did not reduce income gaps.

In the Kinshasa Consensus, the economic experts have argued a re-examination is required to determine whether the use of traditional measurements such as the per capita income actually provided accurate measurements of the national income.

Armah said the new policies are required to help improve financial and human capital. This could be done by laying more emphasis on vocational training to improve the ability of the youth to find jobs.

To succeed in the job-creation venture, the economists proposed the use of financial policies to support economic growth. They also proposed effective policy responses that would support job-creation in industries that require more labourers. This would respond to the challenge of having economies growing without creating jobs.

Armah said studies by the World Bank have shown most African countries grew, but job-creation declined from 57.7 per cent to 44.4 per cent between 2000 and 2012.

To deal with this trend, it was proposed the governments should remove tax waivers. They also sought mechanisms to ensure all taxes are directed to the government. The government should also seek to direct revenue from taxes to sectors that can ensure steady growth as a way of escaping volatile international currency price fluctuation.

— Nov 16, 2015 @ 01:00 GMT

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