
Making
globalization more inclusive will require policies that help African economies
to converge with high-income countries. African policymakers should focus on
accelerating regional integration, bridging gaps in labor skills and digital
infrastructure, and creating a mechanism to own and regulate Africa’s digital
data.
The current
backlash against globalization, most notably from working-class citizens in
advanced economies who are worried about stagnant wages and insecure jobs,
highlights how the benefits of global economic integration were oversold, and
its costs undercounted. But the effects of globalization on Africa and its
citizens have received far less attention, even though the continent is projectedto
account for over 40% of the world’s population by the end of this century.
Making
globalization more inclusive will require policies that tackle inequality
within advanced economies and boost convergence in living standards between
Africa and high-income countries. African policymakers, with support from
external partners, can play their part by accelerating regional integration,
bridging gaps in labor skills and digital infrastructure, and creating a
mechanism to own and regulate Africa’s digital data.
Ever since
the first industrial revolution led to a surge in international trade, Africa
has remained largely on the sidelines of the global economy. The main
beneficiaries of early globalization were today’s advanced economies, where
industrial technologies emerged. This, in turn, led to the “great divergence”
in income levels between the Global North and South.
More
recently, the advent of new information and communications technology in the
1990s dramatically lowered the costs of distance and ushered in another wave of
globalization, characterized by the emergence of complex global value chains
(GVCs). These GVCs contributed to the “great convergence” of recent decades by
boosting industrial output in countries such as China, India, Indonesia, Poland,
South Korea, Taiwan, and Singapore, enabling them to narrow the gap with
advanced economies.
Yet African
countries have remained excluded from this process. The continent’s share of
global merchandise trade has stagnated at around 3%, similar to its share of
world manufacturing output.
To be sure,
globalization has brought benefits to Africa. Rising incomes elsewhere in the
world have increased demand for African commodities and natural resources,
boosting national economies. Globalization has also supported knowledge
transfer, enabling African countries to improve living standards by
“leapfrogging” to new technologies.
But myriad
challenges have far outweighed such benefits. For one thing, globalization has
contributed to premature deindustrialization. Because advanced economies can
now produce goods more cheaply, African countries have found it difficult to
develop local industries that create jobs. Moreover, some multinational
corporations operating in the region are dodging taxes through sophisticated –
and legal – accounting mechanisms such as profit shifting, depriving
governments of much-needed resources for economic development.
Globalization
is also contributing to climate change, which has a disproportionate effect on
Africa despite the continent’s limited contribution to the problem. Cyclones
Idai and Kenneth, which recently devastated Malawi, Mozambique, and Zimbabwe,
are a tragic example of what is to come.
Unsurprisingly,
therefore, the economic disparity between Africa and richer countries has
widened in recent decades, with the ratio of African incomes to those in
advanced economies falling from 12% in the early 1980s to 8% today. In order to
reverse this trend and enable Africa to benefit more from globalization, the
region’s policymakers should accelerate their efforts in three areas.
First,
governments should promote further regional integration to make Africa
economically stronger and more effective at advancing its agenda
internationally. Progress so far is very encouraging. The African Continental
Free Trade Agreement recently obtained the minimum 22 ratification needed to
enter into force, thus creating a single African market for goods and services.
The AfCFTA, along with the Single African Air Transport Market and the Protocol
on Free Movement of Persons, will help to unlock the region’s tremendous
economic potential.
Second,
Africa must improve its digital infrastructure and technology-related skills to
avoid being further marginalized. At present, the cost of Internet access in
Africa is the highest in the world, and Internet penetration is only 37%,
significantly below the world average of 57%.
Moreover,
the low-cost, low-skill labor on which Africa has traditionally relied is
becoming less of a competitive advantage, given the advent of the Fourth
Industrial Revolution and the higher production standards and infrastructure
requirements of GVCs. Education and training programs should therefore focus
more on developing digital know how, as well as on soft skills such as critical
thinking and cognitive and socio-behavioral capabilities.
Third,
Africa must create a system for owning and regulating its digital data. In the
modern era, capital has displaced land as the most important asset and
determinant of wealth. But in the digital economy, data will be key – as
demonstrated by the scramble among global technology firms such as Facebook,
Google, and Ten cent to control it. And, as Kai-Fu Lee argues in his book AI
Superpowers, the abundance of data generated by China’s large population is
giving the country an advantage over the United States in the field of
artificial intelligence.
Africa’s
population boom means the continent will also generate large amounts of data,
particularly as digitization makes inroads, e-commerce platforms spread, the
middle class expands, and consumer spending increases. This new data-driven
wealth will accrue to those who actively harvest, own, and regulate such
information, leaving latecomers to play catch up.
Africa’s
potential may be huge, but it faces formidable challenges. By 2030, the continent
will be home to almost 90% of the world’s poorest people. Unless globalization
works better for Africa than it has in the past, its promise of shared
prosperity will remain unfulfilled.
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