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Africa's
spectacular growth jeopardised by rising inequality, new report
warns
Larry Elliot,
The Guardian (UK)
May 11, 2012
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/may/11/africe-economic-growth-jeopardised-rising-inequality
Africa's impressive
growth during the financial and economic crisis of the last five
years will be put at risk unless action is taken to combat rising
inequality, according to the annual health check on the continent
from a panel led by the former UN secretary general Kofi Annan.
The report from
the Africa Progress Panel found that African countries were growing
consistently faster than almost any other region, with booming exports
and more foreign investment.
But it warned
that there was a contrast between a growing yet still relatively
small middle class and the Africans left behind.
Although seven
out of 10 people in the region live in countries that have averaged
growth of more than 4% a year for the past decade, Annan's study
found that almost half of Africans were still living on incomes
below the internationally accepted poverty benchmark of $1.25 a
day.
Ghana was the
fastest growing economy in the world in 2011 and Ethiopia expanded
more quickly than China in the five years to 2009, according to
the report, but it added that the current trickle-down pattern of
economic growth was leaving too many people in destitution.
"The deep,
persistent and enduring inequalities in evidence across Africa have
consequences," the report said. "They weaken the bonds
of trust and solidarity that hold societies together. Over the long
run, they will undermine economic growth, productivity and the development
of markets."
Other members of the
panel include Olusegun Obasanjo, the former president of Nigeria;
Graça Machel, the women's and children's rights advocate;
the former managing director of the International Monetary Fund,
Michel Camdessus; and Tidjane Thiam, the Ivorian-born chief executive
of Prudential.
In his foreword to the
report, Annan said Africa had "stood tall" through the
global crisis and progress had been made towards hitting the UN
millennium development goals, which include halving global poverty,
universal primary education and a two-thirds reduction in infant
mortality.
Annan added:
"It cannot be said often enough, that overall progress remains
too slow and too uneven; that too many Africans remain caught in
downward spirals of poverty, insecurity and marginalisation; that
too few people benefit from the continent's growth trend and rising
geo-strategic importance; that too much of Africa's enormous resource
wealth remains in the hands of narrow elites and, increasingly,
foreign investors without being turned into tangible benefits for
its people."
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