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African Union working aggressively to attract investors at the NYSE with business opportunities in Africa

Monday, September 30, 2013



Traders on the floor of the Nigerian Stock exchange. PHOTO/File

Global investors are being enticed by bountiful opportunities to do business in Africa, as the continent continues to experience economic growth.

The Chairperson of African Union Commission, Nkosazana Dlamini Zuma, joined Uganda’s President, Yoweri Museveni, South Sudan’s Vice President James Wani Igga and Maged Abdelfatah Abdelaziz, the Under-Secretary-General and Special Adviser on Africa, to woo delegates at the “2013 CEO Institutional Investment Summit,” held at the New York Stock Exchange, New York, to promote investing in Africa.

“Available data positions Africa as a new growth pole where returns on investments in virtually every sector – from infrastructure to ICT/technology, and from retail, health to manufacturing – are higher than any other part of the world,” Dlamini Zuma told the investors. She projected that, “Africa’s population is set to double in the next few decades, its middle class is growing exponentially, it is rapidly urbanizing and it has a young population.”

Dlamini Zuma pointed to the revolutionary growth of ICT/technology on the continent having a tremendous impact in numerous other areas. Africa is the second largest consumer of mobile telephones after Asia.

The ICT/tech revolution demonstrated that other areas such as agriculture, infrastructure and energy have the potentials of experiencing exponential growth on the continent. Investment in these areas is of critical importance. It will spur intra-African trade and consequently advance the African Union’s integration and prosperity agenda.

In his opening remarks, Hubert Danso, Chief Executive Officer and Vice President of Africainvestor (Ai), the host institution, pushed for, “An investment Pact and a Call to Action, with the African Union, to prioritize and pursue a 10-year intra-African investment growth target.” He noted the abysmally low intra-African trade which currently stands between 12-15 percent, compared to intra-European investment sitting around 82 percent.

Dlamini Zuma outlined a number of key factors that make business sense to invest in Africa. The African Union’s commitment to accelerate continental integration will create one huge market. This will result to increased trade, strong regional value chain and boost economies of scale. An eventual increase in the middle class will also equally mean increased purchasing power.

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