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View Full Version : Africa: The world changed again, while you weren't looking



RandomGuy
12-05-2011, 02:52 PM
To those of you who bothered with Hans Rosling's excellent lectures on TED.com about Africa, this won't come as a surprise. It is simply the inertia of growth and change that was taking place under the dramatic headlines, and easy stereotyping that dominated a lot of the news.

( http://www.ted.com/speakers/hans_rosling.html )

Now that growth is becoming a bit more obvious.

http://www.economist.com/node/21541008

Africa rising
After decades of slow growth, Africa has a real chance to follow in the footsteps of Asia

HER $3 billion fortune makes Oprah Winfrey the wealthiest black person in America, a position she has held for years. But she is no longer the richest black person in the world. That honour now goes to Aliko Dangote, the Nigerian cement king. Critics grumble that he is too close to the country’s soiled political class. Nonetheless his $10 billion fortune is money earned, not expropriated. The Dangote Group started as a small trading outfit in 1977. It has become a pan-African conglomerate with interests in sugar and logistics, as well as construction, and it is a real business, not a kleptocratic sham.

Legitimately self-made African billionaires are harbingers of hope. Though few in number, they are growing more common. They exemplify how far Africa has come and give reason to believe that its recent high growth rates may continue. The politics of the continent’s Mediterranean shore may have dominated headlines this year, but the new boom south of the Sahara will affect more lives.

Africa’s hopeful economies
The sun shines bright
The continent’s impressive growth looks likely to continue
Dec 3rd 2011 | LAGOS | from the print edition

..

HER $3 billion fortune makes Oprah Winfrey the wealthiest black person in America, a position she has held for years. But she is no longer the richest black person in the world. That honour now goes to Aliko Dangote, the Nigerian cement king. Critics grumble that he is too close to the country’s soiled political class. Nonetheless his $10 billion fortune is money earned, not expropriated. The Dangote Group started as a small trading outfit in 1977. It has become a pan-African conglomerate with interests in sugar and logistics, as well as construction, and it is a real business, not a kleptocratic sham.

Legitimately self-made African billionaires are harbingers of hope. Though few in number, they are growing more common. They exemplify how far Africa has come and give reason to believe that its recent high growth rates may continue. The politics of the continent’s Mediterranean shore may have dominated headlines this year, but the new boom south of the Sahara will affect more lives.

From Ghana in the west to Mozambique in the south, Africa’s economies are consistently growing faster than those of almost any other region of the world. At least a dozen have expanded by more than 6% a year for six or more years. Ethiopia will grow by 7.5% this year, without a drop of oil to export. Once a byword for famine, it is now the world’s tenth-largest producer of livestock. Nor is its wealth monopolised by a well-connected clique. Embezzlement is still common but income distribution has improved in the past decade.

Severe income disparities persist through much of the continent; but a genuine middle class is emerging. According to Standard Bank, which operates throughout Africa, 60m African households have annual incomes greater than $3,000 at market exchange rates. By 2015, that number is expected to reach 100m—almost the same as in India now. These households belong to what might be called the consumer class. In total, 300m Africans earn more than $700 a year. That’s not much, and many of those people could be pushed back into penury by a small change in circumstance. But it can cover a phone and even some school fees. “They are not all middle class by Western standards, but nonetheless represent a vast market,” says Edward George, an economist at Ecobank, another African banking group.

As for Africans below the poverty line—the majority of the continent’s billion people—disease and hunger are still a big problem. Out of 1,000 children 118 will die before their fifth birthday. Two decades ago the figure was 165. Such progress towards the Millennium Development Goals, a series of poverty-reduction milestones set by the UN, is slow and uneven. But it is not negligible. And the mood among have-nots is better than at any time since the independence era two generations ago. True, Africans have a remarkable capacity for being upbeat. But it is seems that this time they really do have something to smile about.

...

(end of excerpt, read the full article at the link)


My retirement money will go into U.S. firms with exposure to Africa and India, not China.

Drachen
12-05-2011, 02:59 PM
My retirement money will go into U.S. firms with exposure to Africa and India, not China.

Probably a good idea. However it is more and more clear that you exposure to Africa will give you major exposure to China.

Good for Africa, though.

RandomGuy
12-06-2011, 08:13 AM
Probably a good idea. However it is more and more clear that you exposure to Africa will give you major exposure to China.

Good for Africa, though.

They actually address that in the article.

Historically capitalism and entrepreneurialism have run VERY deep in the Chinese cultural DNA, and with the fading of old school communism, Chinese are leaving the homeland to make their fortunes.

Chinese FDI (foreign direct investment) is driving some, but not all of the growth.

Africa is on a trajectory to grow, no matter what happens in China.