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A PERSPECTIVE on FINANCE, ACCUMULATION

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A PERSPECTIVE on FINANCE, ACCUMULATION & GROWTH IN AFRICA Gyekye Tanoh TWN AFRICA IDEAs International Conference on Financial Instability & Inequality – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: A PERSPECTIVE on FINANCE, ACCUMULATION


1
A PERSPECTIVE onFINANCE, ACCUMULATION GROWTH
IN AFRICAGyekye TanohTWN AFRICA
  • IDEAs International Conference on Financial
    Instability Inequality Sanya, February 2016

2
What the Mainstream View Says
  • Since sub Saharan Africa (SSA)s Financial
    Systems are underdeveloped and barely integrated
    into Global Financial markets (with some
    exceptions, esp RSA), so largely immune to the
    kinds of turbulence manifested in the Global
    Financial Crises
  • The effects on Africa are only transmitted
    through Trade channels and the Business cycle
  • SSA Financial Systems remain Bank centred the
    main challenge is liberalization and regulatory
    reforms through enabling institutions, policy,
    incentives and competition to increase supply of
    Global Flows the best practices for reversing
    Domestic Financial Repression Mis-management
    (Government over-borrowing over-spending) to
    Finance Africas Development and dynamise
    incremental win-win integration
  • Financial Deepening will also crowd in the
    domestic private sector and enable Financial
    Inclusion of the poor, thereby be
    poverty-reducing as well
  • Orthodox Public Financial management
    Liberalisation already self-evident success
    rising FDI, increased access/participation in
    international private financial markets including
    sovereign bond issues, rising credit to private
    borrowers, IMFs New Frontier of Finance, part
    of the story of economic growth and the Africa
    Rising narrative

3
BUT Beneath the headlines.
  • While FDI has grown enormously (albeit still a
    fraction of Global FDI), more than 70 to less
    than 20 of SSA economies overwhelmingly
    concentrated in Natural Resource Extractive
    sectors (Energy Metals), with the rest going to
    agricultural commodities including NTEs such as
    horticulture and tourism (UNCTAD others)
    Service sectors especially Telecommunications,
    Finance, Retail
  • Mostly M As, very little is Greenfield
    investment, although that is somewhat evident in
    some more recent Infrastructure investment and
    some manufacturing, most evident in Chinese
    recent Indian investment
  • Increasing flow of portfolio investments hot
    money although trends have changed since 2008
    Financial Crisis withdrawal of SPVs in real
    activity/resurfacing more strongly into sovereign
    debt, carry trade, arbitrage, and latterly asset
    management activity IMF REO 2009 onwards.
  • Private Sector lending grown five-fold, real
    estate consumption now NPLs on the rise
    long-term down turn in lending to real sectors
  • Also Rising Debt, Interest Rates, Reserves Run
    Down, Currency Instability, Capital Flight IFF
  • Current Account remained in deficit (except
    Botswana Nigeria for a while), Structural
    Deficit
  • Yet increasing reliance on Financialised Circuits
    and Activities to maintain diversify growth
    PPPs

4
ISSUES ARISING The Revenge of History?
  • Growth Not Due to Financial Liberalisation
    Neo-liberal Macro policy fundamentals Primary
    Commodity Price Boom, Deepening Commodity
    Dependency increased by 7 since 2009, 94 of SSA
    economies now characterized as severely primary
    commodity dependent (UNCTAD 2010, 2014)
  • Up to a point, Need to differentiate the China
    Factor, As seen in current Commodity Price Down
    Turn Trade Business Cycle reinforce
    morbidities of SSA CDDCs
  • SAPs and De-Industrialisation, Agrarian
    Stagnation amid Growth of Finance Manufacturing
    from 22 to 9, exacerbate excess liquidity,
    speculation, even SWFs (World Bank, 2014) no
    National Champions
  • Jobless Growth, Urbanisation, Informal Sector,
    Artisanal linkages such as ASM acute
    distortions in capacity under-utilization

5
FINANCIALISATION New Unprecedented Threat to
Development in SSA
  • Liberalisation/Financialisation of Commodities
    Volatility, Vulnerability, Regressive
    Distribution, Value Capture
  • TNCs, Financialisation and Fiscal Crisis Lonmin
    Sierra Leone GS Ghana
  • Financial Liberalisation, Intermediation Growth
    (FT 2009 Banking in Africa study) (Highest
    foreign ownership concentration in Developing
    World) NB cross-border intra-African Finance RSA,
    Nigeria. Trade Finance, fees commissions,
    Investment Banking
  • Financial Inclusion/Household Debt/Reproduction
    Crisis
  • Financialisation Land Grabs e.g. West Texas
    Hedge Fund/South Sudan

6
Where Now after the Super Cycle? The Case of
PPPs
  • Issues of the underlying paradigm
  • Fundamental guiding concepts, problematic
    assumptions and values (undefined and left for
    implementation stage)
  • e.g. Viability Gap Scheme Value for Money Risk
    Sharing Value Added
  • Roles of Transaction Adviser
  • Primacy of the Foreign Investor
  • E.g. the Ministry of Trades Role define SME
    involvement in terms of local content

7
Role of External Donors Case of Power Sector
  • Ghanas challenge Severe Electricity Shortfalls
  • Pressures for Fragmentation of Volta River
    Authority, the National Power Generator to Make
    way for Independent Power Producers
  • Emerging Policy to Use Pension Funds to support
    PPPs with the Independent Power Generators
  • Pressures for Privatisation of Ghana Electricity
    Company, the National Power Distributor
  • Role of USA- linked to Obamas Power Africa and
    General Electrics planned Energy investment

8
Privatisation of GEC
  • GEC will hand over its lucrative consumer base to
    Private Participation
  • The Private Participants are assured all
    outstanding debts owed to ECG (40 of which by
    government institutions will be paid) and
    automatic tariff structure adopted to guarantee
    future returns
  • All in return for Aid from the USs Millennium
    Challenge Account over five years
  • 469,300,000.00 of which 133, 891, 250 goes to
    back to American supplier as tax and tariff
    exemptions.
  • Aid is less than debt owed to GEC by Ghana
    Government

9
Drivers of PPPs
  • Concern About Budget-Deficit
  • Excessive, One-sided, and In the Case of Ghana,
    often externally-driven, or imposed
  • Foreign Investment
  • Not simply FDI
  • But importantly foreign participation in finance
    markets (and connected issues of interest rates)
  • External Donors Interest and Ideological
    Preferences of World Bank, IMF and other IFIs
    AfdB Africa Infrastructure Fund, record 700m in
    one month

10
PPPs and Public Finance
  • Recovery of Investment in PPP in Ghana
  • User Charges or Service Tariffs
  • From Government budget, fixed or partially fixed
  • Or Combination
  • As User charges, it comes back in certain
    circumstances to government, in form of
    subsidies due to public interest
  • As government charge its like a loan taken by
    government, but worse
  • Private sector loan higher, which translates into
    higher charge on government.
  • Private sector charges less definitive end-date
  • Also note. In Africa, private sector
    expectation of returns on investment are higher
    due to so-called risks. e.g. World Bank estimates
    for early 2000s. 24-30

11
PPP and Net Resource Outflows
  • Unlike in advanced countries, PPPs in Africa are
    overwhelmingly Foreign Investment
  • A mechanism for net outflows (cf David Woodward
    and Ha-Joon Chang)
  • Profit repatriation, without incentive for
    re-investment, esp. in infrastructure
  • High level of returns, not fixed as loans.
  • Problems of exchange rates, currency reserves,
    etc
  • Especially since not invested in areas with
    capacity with immediate generation of foreign
    earnings
  • Build-up of foreign debt (when linked to
    government payment)
  • Problems for domestic capital formation source
    financial weakness in Africa

12
In sum
  • Regulation
  • Institutional capacity is even more critical than
    regulatory form.
  • Africas experience of institutional collapse
    over past 30 years of World Bank reforms is
    relevant.
  • Transparency.
  • Form and space for participation of citizens and
    civil society formations
  • More important, capacity to engage.
  • But there are prior questions of paradigm and
    development strategy.
  • From FFD3, SDGs- COP 21 Africa Renewable Energy
    Initiative another new frontier? PIDA? China
    Silk Road?

13
Finally..
  • Production Structures Relations fundamental so
    Structural Transformation not dressed up
    Structural Reforms
  • Real Assets Capacity utilization provide an
    objective basis for re-orientation real
    alternatives
  • Inequality must be made radically subversive
  • Engaged Organic Intellectuals working in
    Solidarity
  • All our IDEAs needed now more than ever!
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