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ISSER, University of Ghana, Legon
THE NEW GLOBAL DEMAND FOR NATURAL RESOURCES: OPPORTUNITIES FOR
STRUCTURAL TRANSFORMATION IN AFRICA
ERNEST ARYEETEY
ISSER
University of Ghana
ISSER, University of Ghana, Legon
Outline• Overview of Chinese and Indian transformation:
Any Lessons for Africa?
• The Size and Composition of Trade between Africa and China & India
• Assessment of the Impact of Trade, FDI and Aid from China and India
• Africa Strategizing for a more equal relationship
ISSER, University of Ghana, Legon
1. OVERVIEW OF CHINESE & INDIAN TRANSFORMATION
Economic reforms in China began a decade earlier than in India – Late 1970s
Generally, Economists attribute China’s rapid growth to:- large-scale capital investment (largely financed by domestic savings and foreign investment)- rapid productivity growth
For India, better institutional infrastructure, corporate governance standards and more commercially-driven companies are well-noted edge
ISSER, University of Ghana, Legon
Some reform initiatives in China
1. Establishment of the special economic zones to attract FDI, boost exports and engender import of high technology products
2. Decentralization of economic policymaking, especially in trade and control of enterprises, from central to provincial and local authorities
3. Declaration of open cities and development zones as test grounds for free-market policies
4. Gradual elimination of price controls and general market reforms, among others
ISSER, University of Ghana, Legon
Emerging Results in China
World’s fastest growing economy (2005):
• GDP 4th largest in the world• 9.6% average RGDP growth (1979 - 2005 )• Rapidly rising per capita GDP ≈ $1,709• Exports - $762 billion; Imports - $660 billion• Trade surplus estimated at $102 billion• FDI $61 billion (2004), $58 billion (2005)• Third largest trading economy in the world• Projected to be 50% larger than US in 2025
and 100% by 2035(Morrison, 2006)
ISSER, University of Ghana, Legon
Some reform initiatives in India
• Deepening of private sector participation in economic growth process
• Government-led modernisation of agriculture through infusion of modern technology
• Sustained transformation of agriculture, forestry and fisheries, textiles and manufacturing to heavy industry, transportation and telecommunication
ISSER, University of Ghana, Legon
Emerging Results in India
• Since 1979 - average GDP growth rate 5.7% & 6.8% since 1994
• 4th largest economy by PPP• Relative to most East Asian economies:
- much higher rate of return on assets
- Lower non-performing loans in banking sector
- Much better stock market performance
• Share of world GDP projected to rise to 11% (2025)
• Size to reach 60% of US economy (2025)• Any lessons for Africa? Yes
ISSER, University of Ghana, Legon
2. TRADE BETWEEN AFRICA AND CHINA & INDIA
Trade flows between Africa and Asia have increased steadily since 1991
• Bilateral trade between India and Africa rose from $967 million (1990/1) to $9.14 billion (2004-2005).
• Trade between China and Africa has quadrupled in the last 5 years to reach $40 billion (2005)
• Since 2003, annual growth rate of Africa’s exports to China reached 30%, the highest.
ISSER, University of Ghana, Legon
Obvious complementarities exist between the economies of Africa and China/India:
• Africa imports manufactures - e.g. machinery, transport equipment, textiles, apparel, footwear and manufactured materials
Africa’s Imports from Asia: China 36%; India 13%
• China and India import mainly raw materials – e.g. oil, non-oil minerals, metals and agricultural raw materials
Africa’s exports to Asia: China 40; India 9%
• Trend largely driven by increasing demand from growing industrial sectors and purchasing power in China/India
ISSER, University of Ghana, Legon
Current Trade & Investment
Relations • Nevertheless structure of exports and imports of
Africa to Asia not different from structure of overall African exports to and imports from the rest of the world
• African imports from China/India are more diversified than the exports;
• For both geographic and product concentration, trade with China is more concentrated than trade with India
– possibly influenced by India’s ethnic networks in Africa
ISSER, University of Ghana, Legon
Table 1: Geographic & Sectoral Concentration of Africa’s Trade with China/India:
Herfindahl-Hirschman Index (HHI)
Indicator
Exports to
China
Imports from China
Exports to India
Imports from India
Geographic Concentration of African Exporters/ Importers
0.17
(+0.09)
0.09
(+0.05)
0.05
(-0.03)
0.01
(-0.03)
Product Concentration of African Exports/ Imports
0.04 (+0.25)
0.02 (+0.01)
0.30 (+0.15)
0.02 (0.02)
Source: Broadman (2006) based on UN COMTRADE Data
ISSER, University of Ghana, Legon
Table 2: Composition of African Exports to China
1996 2004
SITC Product Name US $ ‘000 % US $ ‘000 %
0 Food & Live animals 30,510 2.7 71,908 0.5
1 Beverages and tobacco 55,244 4.9 117,676 0.8
2 Crude materials, except food/fuel
563,237 50.3 2,648,121 18.8
3 Mineral fuel/lubricants 278,530 24.9 9,492,959 67.3
4 Animal/vegetable oil fat/wax 94 00 2,363 0.0
5 Chemicals/products n.e.s 31,115 2.8 170,302 1.2
6 Manufactured goods 145,007 13.0 1,505,543 10.7
7 Machinery/transport equipment 6,948 0.6 90,343 0.6
8 Miscellaneous manufactured articles
8,544 0.8 12,505 0.1
Total 1,119,229 100 14,111,720 100
ISSER, University of Ghana, Legon
• Comparative advantage suggests that Africa will export natural resources and import processed/manufactured products;
• But there are signs of a few countries exporting processed/manufactured products to China and India (SA and Nigeria mainly);
• And there appears to be growing prospects for more processed exports from Africa
ISSER, University of Ghana, Legon
Foreign Direct Investment (FDI)
• FDI per GDP declining in China while increasing in Africa
- for China, FDI more into manufacturing
- For Africa, FDI focused on extractive sectors
• FDI from Africa to China steadily growing
- $565 million (2002) to $776 million (2004)
• FDI from India to Africa focused on services, manufacturing & extractive sectors
- Indian FDI flowing into Africa mainly through informal trade links.
ISSER, University of Ghana, Legon
Tariff Structures
• Relative to India, China more liberalized
- About 45% imports zero rated
• Generally, tariffs apply only to few products but end up driving up average tariff rates for African exports
• Tariff escalation on African exports to China/India
• Lack of capacity limits benefits from relatively low tariffs on the few intermediate & final African exports
• African tariffs on Asian exports still relatively high - Average 30% on Agric. products in East Africa
ISSER, University of Ghana, Legon
3. ASSESSING IMPACT OF NEW RELATIONSHIP
• 3 primary channels of Impact transmission:
1. Trade (direction and volume)2. FDI & Production3. Aid
• In all cases, takes direct and indirect forms:
1. Direct - Usually obvious and clear2. Indirect - Less obvious, result from China/
India trade relations with other economies, then working out to impact on SSA economies.
ISSER, University of Ghana, Legon
Trade Channel
-- China and India are now major outlets for African commodities –creating more diversified export destinations
-- Higher global demand for African exports pushing up prices, thus improved terms of trade
-- Factor endowments, other economic resources yielding strong country-level complementarities (also suggesting sustainability of observed trade boom)
-- significant opportunities for greater African participation in network trade in Tourism and services exports (outsourcing – Ghana, Senegal & TZ)
ISSER, University of Ghana, Legon
• Lower priced manufactured imports from China and India are pushing African manufacturers out of business;
e.g. - job losses and collapse of manufacturing industries in Nigeria, Zambia and Ethiopia;
•Growing calls for protection in African countries with governments torn between producers and consumers.
ISSER, University of Ghana, Legon
FDI /Production Channel
• Relative to trade, FDI more modest
• Contrary to traditional FDI flows, Chinese FDI involves long term extensive state investments
• Investments propelling African trade into cutting-edge multinational corporate networks plus spill-over effects from technology & skills transfer
• Aid/concessional loans rather than direct investment in major projects - stadiums, dams, etc. Ultimately aimed at specific economic and political interests
ISSER, University of Ghana, Legon
Aid flows
• Different patterns of Chinese assistance to SSA:
- FDI/Aid partially or wholly flow from state-owned companies
- Investments usually linked to pursuing strategic long term objectives like long-term access to raw materials & energy resources
- FDI/Aid indistinct and limited data
Examples of China Aid flows: 1. Official Economic Support -$1.2 billion (2002)2. Ex-Im Bank loan for Infrastructure -$12.5 billion
(2004)3. Debt relief facilities and concessional loans, etc4.Technical cooperation & HR development, etc
ISSER, University of Ghana, Legon
4. AFRICA STRATEGIZING FOR THE FUTURE• Emergence of China/ India – an opportunity requiring
effective management for sustained growth
• Particularly, a whole new, well thought-out “game-plan” to ensure stable structural transformation of the economies based on rent income & capital accumulation from continued trade with China/India
Short-Term:
SE & NE Asian NICs experience suggests Africa must engage actively in global trade/investment, accumulating foreign exchange and rent income
ISSER, University of Ghana, Legon
Medium to Long-Term:Form capital and support rapid industrial growth/ development for:
- technological upgrade of industries;- nurture infant industries;- build export competitiveness;- improve sector productivity and efficient
application of rent income, among others
Pragmatic functional and selective policy interventions focused on structural transformation of economic system for more diversified, competitive industrial base
ISSER, University of Ghana, Legon
Complementing Requirements
• ‘Capacity is not destiny’, thus African governments must strengthen capacity of both national and regional institutions for effective management and negotiations
• deploy more potent economic diplomacy in engaging the support of international FIs, trade blocs and global governing bodies such as the WTO, UNCTAD
• Re-examine own trade policies, eliminate disharmonies and accelerate economic integration processes alongside other political arrangements
• APRM, a strategic tool to entrench political stability & good governance, for strong states & democratic regimes