ECOWAS ECONOMIC OUTLOOK - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 34
About This Presentation
Title:

ECOWAS ECONOMIC OUTLOOK

Description:

EU-Africa Business Forum (Co-Chair, Trade), Africa Business Round Table/ NEPAD ... Sesamum seeds (4.3%) Guavas, mangoes and mangosteens (2.6%) 2. Cape Verde ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:225
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 35
Provided by: Ken115
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: ECOWAS ECONOMIC OUTLOOK


1
ECOWAS ECONOMIC OUTLOOK OPPORTUNITIES
  • Dr Ken Ife
  • (B.Sc PhDMBALLMC.EngFNSM) kenife_at_aol.com
  • EU-Africa Business Forum (Co-Chair, Trade),
    Africa Business Round Table/ NEPAD Business
    Group.
  • ECOWAS Trade Investment Conference, Brussels,
    4th -5th June 2009

2
OPPORTUNITY ECOWAS THE TIME TO INVEST IS NOW
  • HIGHLIGHTS The fundamentals of emerging ECOWAS
    economy are strong
  • PEACE DIVIDEND Peace, stability and sustained
    effort at conflict resolution. Steadily
    improving investment climate. Social, economic
    political opportunities for ECOWAS economic
    integration are now positive and convergent.
  • DEMOCRACY DIVIDEND Smooth political transition
    Rising macro-economic stability regulatory
    convergence improved economic, political and
    corporate governance. Landmark achievements
    towards regional integration (passport, currency,
    customs union, CET, Common Investment Policy,
    Trade facilitation, stronger engagement with
    private sector etc
  • Rapid economic growth - about 5.7(2008) but
    slowing temporarily
  • DIASPORA DIVIDEND Rising levels of FDI/ODA-Aid
    flows, Diaspora remittances strong and improved
    performance of the financial sectors
  • Rising prices and demand of minerals, raw and
    agricultural materials
  • INFRASTRUCTURE challenge - huge investment in
    power, gas pipelines, road rail
  • ICT - the fastest growing subscriber base and
    call volume
  • Agriculture A case of unfulfilled potential,
    Cote dIvoire is still largest exporter of cocao,
    Ghana exporting 70 of Yam consumption in Europe
  • Export Priority- Non Oil export/diversification
  • Education largely untapped market
  • China is the largest growing economy and Africa
    is its engine of growth

3
(No Transcript)
4
(No Transcript)
5
(No Transcript)
6
AFRICA ECONOMIC OUTLOOK ( Africa Development Bank
, May 2009)
7
Nigerias prediction, as is West Africa, doesnt
stack up. As an Agrarian economy with Agriculture
contributing over 40 of GDP, you cant ignore
over US3b direct investment in all aspect of
Commercial Agriculture(CBN agric bond N200b,
FMAWR N104b grant, World Bank Commercial Agric
US150m , Budgetary resources of Fed and States
etc), the output of which will felt later this
year. Secondly none of the 25 Nigerian Banks has
succumbed to the financial crisis, instead their
fundamentals are strong and they are positing
huge profits despite the shake-up in share
valuation. Thirdly, domestic capital
mobilisation of our under-banked communities is
continuing unabated and Nigeria currently has 5
of Africa 10 biggest banks with strong capital
base and expanding into the regions and taking on
development finance on competitive rates.
Forthly, Diaspora remittance is consistently at
US10b a year (CBN-2008), and there is a surge of
Diaspora homecoming. Fiftly, the massive
investment in power, which runs into billions of
dollars would raise the contribution of
industrialisation to GDP from the current 3.7
to Indonesias level of 40. Overall, Nigerias
prudent macro-economic reforms, strengthened
fiscal balances and reduced inflation aiming at
single digit by 2010 means that our economy is
more resilient.
8
Trade, Investment and Regional integration of
ECOWAS
  • Tony Blair Africa should trade itself out of
    poverty....and the only people that will
    develop Africa are Africans.
  • Africas share of World trade declined from 10
    (early 60s) to about 2 (2007). ECOWAS share
    less than 1. 1 in trade brings in about US75b.
    But World trade is shrinking by 13.1, the first
    in 60yrs .
  • World Bank (2007) suggested that investment of
    US20b in regional infrastructure could bring
    extra US250b in Regional Trade in 10yrs.
  • Intra-African trade is 9.5 and about 12 for
    ECOWAS of which manufactured products account for
    42.5, Fuel Mining(35.4) and agric (17.1)
  • EU ACP EPA Agreement and EBA protocol duty
    free access and asymmetric trade liberalisation
    allowing 15 yrs policy space
  • US AGOA to 2015. Duty free access to US
    13trillion import market
  • Transit Corridors Integrated Infrastructure
    paving the way for regional markets
  • PPPs in key infrastructure (Rail, Road, ICT
    backbone, Power pool, Water, Gas pipeline)

9
(No Transcript)
10
(No Transcript)
11
(No Transcript)
12
INFRASTRUCUTRE - EQUATORIAL SUPER TRANSIT
CORRIDOR- SIZE OF THE ECONOMY
13
Trade, Investment and Regional integration
  • TRADE- key areas of action is to build
    sustainable Export Trade capacity through
    strengthening institutional, technical and
    organisational capacities)
  • Trade Policy
  • Trade Agreements
  • Infrastructure
  • Export Development Strategies
  • Standards and Conformity Assessment
  • Trade Barriers(NTBs TBTs SPS Tariff barriers
    Subsidies Trade Disputes etc)

14
Investment
  • Diaspora Dividend. Inflexion (1995 Vs 2005). The
    Nigerian Diaspora remitted US6b (2004)
    US8b(2005) and US4b(2006) but CBN says it is
    10b per year. In 2007, we remitted US3.3b of
    the US11b to Sub-saharan Africa. Remittances
    come to 50 from US/Canada (25) from UK and
    (14) from EU
  • Nigerian Banking Sector Emerges as Sub-Saharan
    Leader
  • From 89 banks with a total capital base of N293
    million at 2004YE, which was just the size of the
    No. 4 bank in South Africa to now over 7 banks
    with Tier I capital in excess of 1 Billion by
    2008 YE 11 banks now have market capitalization
    ranging between 1 Billion and 5.3 Billion 16
    banks now in the top 1000 in the world 5
    Nigerian banks now rank among the top 10 African
    banks. Not one of these 24 banks have succumbed
    to the financial crisis. The fundamentals are
    strong and they are posting huge profits.

15
Remittances The Great Inflexion
16
(No Transcript)
17
(No Transcript)
18
Nigerian Banking Sector Emerges as Sub-Saharan
Leader
  • 8 Nigerian banks in top 20 by capital

19
Nigerian Banking Sector Leading the way in
Sub-Sahara
  • 8 Nigerian banks in top 20 by assets

20
Nigerian Banking Show exceptional performance on
ROA
  • 9 Nigerian banks in top 20 by ROA

21
Nigerian Banking Sector showing strong asset
performance
  • The Nigerian banking sector has emerged as
    sub-Sahara African (SSA) leader

Regulatory capital is among top 3 in SSA
Improved asset quality
2008 figures
22
Scale and Scope of Nigerian Banks African
Operations
  • Geographical Coverage of Nigerian Banks in 2004
  • Nigerian Banks were in 3 countries (South Africa,
    Ghana and Cameroon) with only 5 subsidiaries
    shown as pink ( ) colour on the map

23
Scale and Scope of Nigerian Banks African
Operations
  • Geographical Coverage of Nigerian Banks in 2009
  • Nigerian Banks are now in 18 countries with 44
    subsidiaries shown as red ( ) colour on the
    map
  • This implies that in 5 years, Nigerian Banks
    spread to 15 other African countries and
    established 39 more subsidiaries

Nigerian Banks in sub-Saharan market
23
24
Regional Integration Infrastructure
  • RECs are changing the game(ECOWAS, EAC,SADC,
    COMESA, CEDAC)
  • Free movement of people, goods and services
  • Common Currency and macro-economic convergence
    criteria are being met
  • Common Passport (ECOWAS)
  • Customs Union Common External Tariff (EAC
    Close)
  • Competition Policy and Common Investment Policy
    and One Stop Shop
  • Common Business Law (OHADA)
  • Alternative Trade Dispute Resolution(ECO-SOLVIT)
  • Transit corridors in top gear with Joint border
    posts
  • Trade and Transport facilitation in top gear
  • Single Window/Hubs implemented in Dakar, Mombasa
    and Lagos targeted

25
(No Transcript)
26
ICT Africa has the fastest growth
  • Africa Development bank has Infrastructure
    Project Preparation facility which is open to
    private sector
  • Average growth rate of mobile phone in Africa is
    58
  • NIGERIA Mobile phones grown from 1m lines in
    2000 to 60m lines (2008) and about US20b call
    volume.

27
Energy
  • Oil, Gas Renewable Energy.
  • Regional Power Pool. Huge investment in Power
    generation (Nigeria US6b plus)
  • Ghana Nigeria gas pipeline Nigeria Algeria
    gas pipeline and Kenya Uganda pipeline are
    among the regional distribution infrastructure
  • Many parts of Africa have substantial oil and gas
    deposits and exploration activities
  • Ghana is setting up large Jatropha plantations
    for bio-diesel production and paving the way to
    carbon- free energy future. At least 20 states in
    Nigeria are investing in Jatropha plantation
    with Enugu leading the way with 35,OOO hectares
    and Bio-Diesel Refinery

28
Agriculture Increased Private investment in the
agri-food sector needed
  • Implications for agri-food chains
  • Would be a boost to food security
  • Increased concentration in agri-food supply
    chains-integration
  • Rapid change in technologies
  • Increased importance of food standards for
    national, regional and export markets
  • Increased access to international markets
  • Increased supply capacity for high-value and
    high-standards food production
  • Changes in the governance system of agri-food
    supply chains increased vertical coordination

29
WHY ? Because of Nigerias unfulfiled potential
  • The share of global trade has declined to the
    point where little of its Agricultural produce is
    seen in the Worlds markets. But the potential
    is enormous and Nigeria is the sleeping giant of
    Africa in Agriculture. It produced 140m Metric
    Tonnes of the first 20 listed food items (approx
    1 Tonne per person FAO 2005) but some 30 to
    35 of food produced do not enter the food
    chain because of post harvest losses. Nigerias
    position is quite strong on a number of crops
  •  
  • Crop(FAO 2005) Volume (M Tons)
    Position(World Market) Position(Africa)
  • Yams 26.5m
    1
    1
  • Sweet Potatoes 2.5m
    3
    2
  • Pineapples 889,000
    6
    1
  • Mangoes 730,000
    9
    1
  • Vegetables 4.285m
    3
    1
  • Okro 730,000
    2
    1
  • Peppers / Chillies 720,000
    7
    1
  • FAO 2005

30
Private Sector Development
  • Promoting good political, economic and corporate
    governance
  • Policy Reform to Improve investment Climate
  • Promoting Entrepreneurship
  • Linking wealth creation to poverty reduction and
    the MDGs
  • Meeting the challenges of Globalisation and
    competitiveness
  • Encouraging innovation and technology transfer
  • Promoting Public-Private Sector Partnership and
    De-regulation
  • Promoting Corporate Social Responsibility
    alongside Social, Economic and Environmental
    Sustainabilty

31
Education
  • NIGERIA has 97 Universities (more than those of
    sub-saharan Africa put together) but a far cry to
    US 2,600 Universities for a population of 280m
    compared to Nigerian population of 148m
  • Currently less than 200,000 undergraduates are
    admitted each year and 1m are dissappointed
  • Great opportunity for Private sector led
    On-line/Distance learning collaborative open
    Universities

32
(No Transcript)
33
Tourism
  • Eastern and Southern Africa very strong in Eco
    Tourism
  • North Africa coastal Tourism
  • West Africa developing cultural heritage(Ghana)
    and coastal Tourism(Gambia.
  • At least 2 states of Nigeria, Enugu and Plateau
    State are planning to build Game Park and
    integrated Leisure complex, the one of Enugu to
    include Nollywood Film villages

34
Mining Extractive Metallurgy
  • Wide range of minerals exploited from virtually
    all countries in Africa but face severe
    transport, rail and road challenges
  • Africa now the engine for the largest world
    growing economy - China.
  • In Zambia, china had to climb down to extend the
    copper value-chain into manufacturing.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com