Strong investment flows to Africa will sustain high
economic growth on the continent even amid low oil prices and a slowdown in
China, African Development Bank President Akinwumi Adesina said.
Africa may grow 4.4% this year despite increasing current
account and fiscal deficits caused by falling export revenues and depreciating
currencies, Adesina said Jan. 31 in an interview. GDP rose 4.5% in 2015,
according to the Abidjan, Ivory Coast-based lender.
“It’s not all doom and gloom at all,” Adesina said in
the Ethiopian capital, Addis Ababa. “Africa is not unraveling by any means.”
At least 10 African nations including South Africa and Angola
are heavily exposed to reduced demand from China, as it accounts for about 30%
or more of their exports, according to International Monetary Fund (IMF)
data.
Nigeria, Africa’s largest economy, is struggling to cope with
crude prices that have fallen more than 70% since their June 2014 peak to below
$40 a barrel.
Regarding electricity access, Adesina said the AfDB will
focus on energy, infrastructure, industrialisation and agro-industry during his
term, which began in September and could be as long as 10 years.
One ambition is to provide electricity access to all Africans
by 2025, partly through the bank investing $12 billion in energy projects over
the next five years and leveraging another $50 billion from businesses, he
said.
African governments need to raise their investment in energy
from 0.3% of gross domestic product to 3.4% to help achieve this goal, Adesina
said. Investments should be financed using domestic resources such as taxes or
pension funds rather than external borrowing, he said.
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