With both domestic and external financing expected to dry up in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, this book argues that there is a need for fresh ideas and new strategies for achieving sustainable development in Africa.
In addition to triggering the most severe recession in nearly a century, the COVID-19 pandemic has disrupted global value chains, causing unprecedented damage to healthcare systems, economies, and well-being, hitting the world’s most vulnerable people the hardest. Even before the pandemic, Africa was suffering from the effects of low commodity prices, sluggish GDP growth, high debt levels, low levels of domestic savings, and weak private capital inflows. This book argues that now, as the continent emerges from the current crisis, it will be important to reconfigure current financing sources under a forward-looking framework that incorporates other non-traditional financing tools and mechanisms such as public-private partnerships, sovereign wealth funds, gender lens investing, new growth drivers, and emerging and disruptive technologies. Finally, the book concludes by adopting a sectoral approach and examining the real economy impacts of new growth drivers such as agriculture value chains, industrialization, tourism, and the blue economy.
Drawing on a range of original research as well as insights from practice, this book will be a useful guide for Global Development and African Studies researchers, as well as for policy makers, investors, finance specialists, and global business practitioners and entrepreneurs.
Author(s): Fred Olayele, Yiagadeesen Samy
Series: Routledge Studies in African Development
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2022
Language: English
Pages: 268
City: London
Cover
Half Title
Series Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Table of Contents
List of figures
List of tables
List of contributors
Foreword
1 Introduction
2 Time for a Reset: Leveraging the Green Transition to Harness Minerals for an African Battery Value Chain
3 Nigeria’s and Ghana’s SWFs: It is Raining, But Where Are the Funds?
4 Enhancing Gender-Responsive Financing in Africa: A Sustainable Development Perspective
5 Redesigning Africa’s TVET to Achieve the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals
6 Correcting the Myths
7 Repurposing FDI Inflows for Development Finance in Africa
8 Rethinking Fiscal Space and Debt Sustainability
9 Implementing the African Continental Free Trade Area: A Simple, Scalable, and Fast Computational Approach for Algorithmic Governance
10 Revisiting Africa’s Deindustrialization Debate
11 Charting the Uncertain Voyage Ahead: The Sustainability and Resiliency Challenges Confronting Africa’s Tourism Industry
12 Africa’s Blue Economy as a Development Finance Opportunity: Lessons for Policy Innovation
13 Harnessing the Agriculture Value Chain for Development
14 Conclusion
Index