The African Development Bank President Akinwumi Adesina stated that Africa remained fertile ground for investment and it’s the next business frontier, but much hinged on the continent’s ability to boost its healthcare sector.
President Adesina revealed this whist speaking during the Africa Investment Conference, a virtual one-day event organized by the UK Department for International Trade, which brought together the UK and African business and government leaders to discuss investment and partnership opportunities.
President Adesina urged British investors to pay attention to Africa because “that’s where the next frontier is”.
Four sectors were under the spotlight: sustainable infrastructure, renewable energy, financial and professional services, and agriculture and agri-tech.
As part of the conference, Emma Wade-Smith, Her Majesty’s UK Trade Commissioner for Africa, joined Adesina in a fireside chat on the theme ‘Building back better – utilizing UK private sector strengths and values, and business-to-business opportunities working with UK government and others going forward’.
President Adesina pointed out that Africa still possessed the same fundamentals that had driven the continent’s phenomenal growth over the past decade.
“The fundamentals in those phenomenal growth rates in Africa are still there…Africa still leads in terms of ease of doing business…It’s very exciting, the digital explosion that you see in Africa today” .
Adesina
The panelists indicated that the continent offered ample opportunities in terms of natural resources, vast tracts of arable land, and a young and rapidly urbanizing population. The potential presented by the newly launched African Continental Free Trade Area was also highlighted.
Africa’s economy shrank by 2.1% in 2020 and is expected to grow by 3.4% in 2021 as the global economy recovers from the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic.
During their exchange, Wade-Smith tapped Adesina’s views on the impact of vaccines on Africa’s economic outlook, which Adesina believed will take a long time for the impact of the vaccine to be felt in the continent.
Wade-Smith said she was heartened to learn that 10 of the fastest-growing economies were still in Africa, adding that there was not enough awareness of how much innovation was happening in the region. She said there was an opportunity to blend African and UK innovation.
“I’ve been struck by how many opportunities there are” .
Wade-Smith.
Africa, according to the African Development Bank, has a mere 365 pharmaceutical companies, compared to 7,000 in China and 11,000 in India, as individual countries with comparable population sizes.
Other participants included UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson, Minister for Africa James Duddridge, Minister for Investment Gerry Grimstone, as well as business leaders from Standard Bank, pharmaceuticals firm AstraZeneca, and mobile operator Vodacom.
Johnson told the conference that although “many things have changed” since last year, “there is one thing I can tell you that has not changed: that is my ambition for the UK to be Africa’s investment partner.”
The conference follows last year’s successful UK-Africa Investment Summit, hosted in London by the Prime Minister, where 27 trade and investment deals worth £6.5 billion and commitments valued at £8.9 billion were announced. At the time, Africa was home to eight of the world’s 15 fastest-growing economies amid a groundswell of optimism about its economic upswing.