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Mr. Tharman Shanmugaratnam |
Senior Minister and Coordinating Minister for
Social Policies of the Republic of Singapore has shared some four strategies for
Africa’s transformation.
African governments must (i) invest more in
social foundations like health and education (ii) focus on specialization as
continental free trade kicks in; (iii) maximize coherence and effectiveness;
and (iv) think in the long-term to maximize the benefits of the global
financial system.
Mr. Tharman Shanmugaratnam made these remarks
when he addressed diplomats, captains of industry and investors at the
Enterprise Singapore Ghana Singapore Business Forum held at the Marriot Hotel
in Accra on November 7, 2019.
Invest more
in social foundations
Mr. Shanmugaratnam said any country which is
serious about holistic development must invest more in social foundations such
as education, health and housing. According to him, African governments must
make efforts towards raising the quality of education which involves paying
teachers well amongst others. He said it is crucial to invest in teachers
because they are at the heart of quality education. ‘If you don’t succeed in
raising the quality of education, you won’t succeed at anything. Invest in teachers,
pay them well. Good teachers add great value.
Investing in teachers is the foundation of every good education system’.
The Coordinating Minister for Social Policies also noted that investing in
healthcare is crucial to development. He urged African governments to focus on improving
maternal health and child health. Mr. Shanmugaratnam added that the provision
of decent housing cannot be ignored. ‘Deal with housing’, he said. Singapore
focused on housing as part of efforts to invest in its social foundations. ‘Mixing
people socially in neighbourhoods leads to inclusive growth’, the minister
said.
African
Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA)
The African Continental Free Trade Area
(AfCFTA) is to amongst others create a single continental market for goods and
services, with free movement of business persons and investments and expand
intra African trade through better harmonization and coordination of trade
liberalization. The AfCFTA with its headquarters coming to Ghana, is set to
cover a market of 1.2 billion people at an estimated GDP of $3 billion across
the 54-member states of the African Union.
Sharing his thoughts on the AfCFTA, Singapore’s
Senior Minister said ‘there is increasing protectionism across the world but
Africa is singing a different tune. Africa must spread its economic openness by
strongly showcasing specialization along the production value chain.
‘Regionalization gives a special way to specialize. We have to think of free
trade as way of building our capabilities. Countries can feed into each other’s
specialty. Africa has to use the AfCFTA to develop skill. It has to be
fundamentally about regional supply base. It should be a production base not a
consumption base.’
According to UN forecasts, the continent is
expected to double its population by 2050, from 1 billion to nearly 2.5
billion. It is also projected that in the next decade, Africa will have the
largest working age population in the world, larger than China and India with
about 1.1 billion people of working age population of between 15 and 64 years.
Mr. Shanmugaranum argued that in order to
build economic resilience and create job opportunities for their increasing youth
population, there must be stronger connectivity and economic interaction among
developing regions, especially between Africa and Asia which share demographic
similarities.
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Conversation with Senior Minister Tharman |
Singapore’s
interest in Ghana and Africa
The Senior Minister indicated that Singapore
is the eighth largest foreign investor in Africa. In 2018, Singapore invested
about $90 billion in the continent.
He said there is a significant interest by
Singapore businesses in Africa which needs to be scaled up. ‘We need to take
practical steps to spur this collaboration with more bilateral investment
treaties that provide some assurance to investors’. The Minister noted that the
unique capabilities of
Singapore companies would
be a value-add to the region’s developments. He said while Ghana serves as a gateway for
international companies to enter
the West Africa region, West African companies
could look to Singapore as a gateway to growing Asia markets.
The Ghana Singapore Business Forum was
organized by Enterprise Singapore, a statutory board under Singapore’s Ministry
of Trade and Industry championing enterprise development and developing
Singapore as a leading global trading hub.
The event brought together companies from
Ghana and Singapore to network and initiate some business discussions.
There was a short MOU exchange ceremony which
saw some noteworthy agreements between Ghanaian and Singaporean companies
bordering on security, oil and gas being exchanged.
The event was facilitated by Ms Mary Boakye,
Senior Advisor at Dentons and Managing Director of Oriol Associates and Nick
Opoku, a communications consultant.
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Nick Opoku |
Credit: Additional files from afdb.org
Very enlightening... Thanks for the great job done!
ReplyDeleteI'm encouraged. Thank you.
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