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Victoria Makalima, assistant Director for the Johnson and Johnson Burn Treatment Centre (left) and Roger Crawford, Executive Director, Worldwide Government Affairs and Policy for Johnson & Johnson (back right) happily assisted Nurse Ester Manson and clinical officer William Kalua from Kamuzu Central Hospital in Lilongwe, Malawi throughout their two-week specialised training session at the Burn Treatment Centre at Chris Hani Baragwanath Hospital. The training took place as a result of a public private partnership between the Chris Hani Baragwanath Hospital, Johnson & Johnson, and the University of North Carolina in USA. The hospital in Malawi recently opened a burn unit and the hands-on training Ester and William received at the leading burn treatment centre in Africa, will no doubt make a huge difference in the lives of those in need.


A major breakthrough for Africa, yet more issues for the poor

Posted by Administrator (admin) on Nov 09 2011
Clients In The News >>

Released: 9 November 2011
    

Africa is on the brink of a major development breakthrough; a momentum that is well-merited and anchored in solid foundations sufficient enough to carry the continent forward at a necessary pace, according to Africa Monitor’s latest Development Support Monitor study. 

Speaking at the launch of the Development Support Monitor (DSM) study in Sandton today, Archbishop Njongonkulu Ndungane, President of African Monitor, said that such optimism could be described as a new dawn or as Africa’s moment. 

However, the Archbishop acknowledged a reason for real concern about whether the opportunities that Africa has at its disposal will lead to significant development and progress in African nations and real changes in the lives of the poor.

Quoting from the study, he said: “There is strong evidence suggesting that Africa is at risk of missing the current opportunity because of factors such as continued lack of participation of the poor in decisions affecting them, increasing inequality between the rich and the poor and the exclusion of grassroots communities from economic participation.”

DSM examines and keeps track of commitments made by African governments and their development partners. Its main purpose is to promote greater accountability by making the commitments more widely known through assessing the extent to which these commitments are being met in real terms as well as the impact on the relevant communities.

According to the study, there are indications that the growth recorded in the past decade could be another economic blip generated by exogenous factors such as the commodity boom and international trade.

“The sustainability of the economic performance will largely depend on the extent to which it is broad-based and inclusive. A number of structural failures characterise Africa’s economies,” says the study.

By structural failures, the study means the struggle to convert Africa’s demographic advantage into a dynamic economic force, and programmes that generate growth in agriculture and the informal sectors, which together support more than 80% of the continent’s population. 

Nonetheless, the African Monitor study predicts that over the next five years Africa is likely to take the lead and outpace Asia following an unweighted average of countries’ growth rates that was virtually identical in Africa and Asia in the last decade.

“Leading African development institutions such as the African Union and the African Development Bank have argued that the African moment is imminent and that this is not going to be yet another false dawn, as was the case in the 1970s,” the study says.

It maintains that there is enough evidence to suggest that this optimism is merited and that in the last decade, Africa has made encouraging progress in economic and social development, peace and security, as well as democratisation and governance.

“The Sub-Saharan African economy has been growing by an average of 5.4% per annum between 2001 and 2008. “During the height of the financial crisis, the region was able to record a 2.8% growth rate in 2009, whereas in 2010 it picked up momentum and recorded growth of 4.9%.”

The study projects that the Sub-Saharan African economy will increase by 5.5% in 2011, while the trend is expected to continue to 2015. 

“The sustained growth rate recorded for the period 2001 to 2008 indicates an end of two decades of stagnation,” it says. “African growth rates, since the 1960s show a growth pattern, starting with a good performance in the 1960s and falling steadily throughout the 1990’s and rebounding strongly in 1994.” 

Africa's promising growth outlook is based on a number of growth drivers, ranging from the continent's enormous natural resources, the fastest-growing mobile telecom market, significant agricultural potential, large banking potential, a rising middle class and increasing investment in infrastructure. 

Says Archbishop Ndungane: “The progress is not limited to economic growth only, but also to trade and investments which have doubled. School enrolments are rising and health indicators are improving. The share of people living in poverty has declined from 59% to 48%. 

He also said that there has been apparent progress in ensuring peace and security in Africa, as the number of civil and armed conflicts has declined. 

The study highlights that the validity of the recent optimism about Africa’s sustained growth path needs to be critically evaluated, because growth patterns in the continent might at best be seen as a recurring pattern where intensive growth or increase in per capita income has occurred several times without significant gains in development. 

African Monitor has identified economic services, human development and grassroots participation as critical levers which, if unlocked, will increase the opportunity for grassroots communities to actively participate in their own development.   

ENDS. 

African Monitor was established in 2006 as an independent continental body to monitor development funding commitments, funding delivery as well as the impact on grassroots communities. It also works towards bringing strong additional African voices to the development agenda.

The Development Support Monitor 2011 is a first in a series of publications that will look at various questions to promote an inclusive agenda to achieve the African Moment for grassroots communities.  Over a period of time, the DSM will seek to answer the following questions:

·    What are the structural economic, social and political fundamentals that will facilitate the inclusion of grassroots communities in Africa’s development path?

·         What policies, approaches and practice changes need to be made for sustainable development?

·     How should development resources be generated and allocated to meet the imperatives for an inclusive development agenda for grassroots communities?

 

Last changed: Nov 09 2011 at 2:03 PM

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