You Better Believe That Africa MattersBy Charles Ray - February 2022
For
too long in the West, primarily the United States and Western Europe,
the continent of Africa has been viewed as peripheral to world affairs.
It was thought of only in terms of the natural resources that could be
extracted from it or as a place of poverty, violence, and
disasters—natural and man-made. As a diplomat who has served in Africa, a
journalist who has photographed and written about the continent, and
now as a think-tank analyst who studies Africa, this view of Africa is
short-sighted and needs to be revisited.
Although Africa is home
to some of the most strategic minerals on the planet, such as gold,
copper, cobalt, and oil, it does have more than its fair share of
problems—some of them self-inflicted, but others either not of its own
making or exacerbated by the actions of outsiders. Nonetheless, the
continent is far more dynamic and diverse than most Westerners realize
and for a whole host of reasons it does matter.
Resource Rich Yet Still Poor
Africa’s
resources, including people—during the height of the global slave
trade—have always been both a curse and a blessing to the continent.
Because it possesses a significant proportion of global reserves of some
strategic minerals, it has often been, and still is, a pawn in the
struggles between powerful countries to gain access to and control of
minerals that are vital to modern industry. Africa is estimated to
contain 21% of the world’s total gold reserves and 85% of platinum, just
as two examples.
The competition to extract these minerals is
often carried out without regard to the impact it has on the countries
of Africa and on the average African who accrues little of the profit.
While living standards and wages vary among the countries, and even by
region within a single country, the average net salary for the continent
is less than $400 per month. One in three Africans, or more than 400
million people, live on less than $2 per day and represent 70% of the
world’s poorest people.
Persistent Troubles: Natural and Man-made
The
African continent, particularly sub-Saharan Africa, suffers from
serious environmental problems due to the impact of climate change,
overfishing, deforestation, mining, and intense agricultural usage. Lack
of resources, poor governance, corruption, and lack of respect for the
rule of law by the governing elites contribute to the inability to solve
these problems. Overlooked, however, is that the devastating impact of
European colonization, the Atlantic slave trade, and the Cold War
exacerbated a lot of these problems.
Pervasive poverty and
excessive dependence on foreign assistance also contributes to Africa’s
problems, sometimes aggravated by foreign aid, which is often misused,
despite US and European attempts to lay down conditions, and because aid
from countries like China comes without obvious conditions and easily
leads to abuse. Corruption and poor governance is often considered the
leading cause of poverty in Africa, and after decades of foreign
aid—with and without conditions—it often appears that little has
changed.
Africa Is Not a Monolith
Taking the above into
consideration, along with the increasing number of extralegal changes in
government, mainly through military coups, it is understandable, though
regrettable, that many Westerners think these ills are representative
of the entire continent. All too often, Africa in general is both
perceived and presented as a global basket case that we notice only when
the next disaster strikes.
But Africa is not a homogenous place;
it is as diverse as any other continent and actually more diverse than
many. Composed of more than 50 countries, Africa is the second largest
and second most populated continent with 1.3 billion inhabitants. Over
1,500 languages are spoken in Africa, and it is home to every major
religion and hundreds of ethnic groups. By 2050, the African continent
is expected to have a population of 2.4 billion people and will account
for half the world’s population growth. Moreover, Africa is an
overwhelmingly young continent, with approximately 40% of its population
under the age of 15; in some African countries, over 50% of the
population is under 25.
Why Africa’s Demographic Issues Matter
The
aforementioned demographics alone should cause the world to sit up and
take notice of Africa. With such a large, young population that has
grown up in the digital age, it represents an immense potential consumer
market and employee base—or a potential source of recruiting for
extremist movements if the economic needs of this population are not
met.
Africa is also urbanizing at a fast pace. In 1960, 80% of
Africa’s population was rural. Currently only 60% live in the
countryside, and by 2050 that number will have fallen to 40%. This
urbanization has been caused by economic privation, wars, and
climate-fueled disasters. Still, the move to the cities has not solved
the problems, as many of Africa’s large conurbations are not equipped to
deal with the negative effects of climate change, nor does the move
lift the internal migrants out of poverty. Approximately 70% of Africa’s
urban population lives in slum conditions, lacking access to economic
opportunity, education, or health care.
With 17% of the world’s
population, Africa contributes a single-digit percentage of global
greenhouse gasses but suffers more than any other populated continent
from the impact of climate change, with droughts, floods, climate-caused
storms, and heat waves reducing food production and increasing health
problems across the continent. Diminished food production with such a
fast growing population is a recipe for disaster. Currently, heavily
dependent on agriculture, Africa receives only 4% of the world’s
investment in agricultural research, a deficit that must be made up if
Africans are to understand how climate change affects agricultural
production.
Not only is Africa affected by climate change, but it
also has a potentially significant impact on climate change. The Congo
basin rainforest is the second largest carbon sink on the planet after
the Amazon rainforest and is endangered by deforestation, caused mainly
by local agriculture. With the Amazon rainforest now emitting more
carbon dioxide than it absorbs, itself endangered by logging and
agricultural activity, the Congo rainforest becomes even more important.
The
Congo basin, where human populations are increasingly encroaching on
wildlife habitats, could be the source of our next global pandemic. One
shudders to imagine a viral disease that is as infectious and
transmissible as COVID-19 and as deadly as Ebola; in the absence of a
concerted effort to identify and isolate the zoonotic diseases native to
the region, it’s not a matter of if but when we will be faced with this
disaster.
While Africa has not been a significant factor in
global terrorism, most of the major international terrorist
organizations do have a presence there and the continent has a large
number of domestic extremist groups. Extremist activity has
significantly increased in the past decade. Left unchecked, these groups
could become a threat to countries outside Africa.
The New Great Power Competition and its Impact
The
competition of the United States and the Soviet Union in the Cold War
era has been replaced in the last decade with the US–China competition.
Mostly economically oriented, China is now sub-Saharan Africa’s largest
trade partner in mostly import-driven trade. China is also a major
investor in Africa, where it is building a number of infrastructure
projects. However, China has also established a military presence in
Djibouti, where it built a support base (the second Chinese overseas
military base) at a cost of US$590 million. Although China’s largest
import from the continent is oil, it also imports a number of vital
minerals to fuel its rapidly growing economy, including iron ore, and
cobalt from the Democratic Republic of Congo.
While Chinese
investments in Africa are popular with the ruling elites and have
created a degree of economic development, China’s lack of governance
conditions, its support for some of the continent’s most authoritarian
leaders, and the debt burden its loans have imposed on some of the
world’s poorest countries have been controversial both on the continent
and internationally. With Chinese firms—many controlled by the central
government or the Chinese Communist Party—increasingly becoming dominant
in African economies, the US and the West view the situation with an
understandable degree of concern.
Finding the Light Through a Glass Darkly
Looking
to the future, Africa will have a significant impact on the world in a
number of areas. Whether that impact is positive or negative will depend
upon the actions taken primarily by Africans themselves, but also by
the policy choices of the countries of the global north.
As
Africa’s populations increase, if economies are structured to provide
adequate living standards, it will be a potentially lucrative customer
base, investment destination, and source of a young and tech-savvy labor
force. It also could become our worst nightmare: a densely populated
region of disaffected young people who are ripe for recruitment by
violent extremist groups.
If Africa cannot develop methods to
mitigate the negative impacts of climate change, such as developing
climate-friendly agriculture and building more resilient cities, food
production will fail to keep pace with population growth and thus
increase Africa’s dependence on foreign assistance just to feed the
people, hence perpetuating the cycle of poverty.
Population
relocation due to famine, war, or other disasters will exert more
pressure on already overburdened cities, with the population possibly
flowing northward and putting pressure on southern Europe and the
Mediterranean, ultimately affecting the rest of Western Europe and the
US.
Africa and the world also have to implement methods to
protect and preserve the Congo rainforest. If this forest continues to
be degraded, it will lead to less rainfall and will affect agricultural
production in a region dependent upon it. It will most certainly induce a
rise in global temperatures, which will, in turn, lead to more frequent
and violent tropical storms and rising sea levels. The destruction of
wildlife habitats and increased human–animal contact could lead to the
emergence of a virus that could quickly turn into a serious pandemic.
Africa’s
54 countries constitute the largest voting bloc in the United Nations.
Having this many votes ensures a majority in the UN General Assembly.
Should the Africa Union’s initiative to develop an African Continental
Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) become reality, thus creating the world’s
largest free trade area, it would promote significant reforms in
Africa’s political and economic governance, enhance the long-term
development of African economies, and potentially turn Africa into a
global economic kingmaker.
While China and the US, currently the
world’s two largest economies, are often at loggerheads on a number of
issues, taking a pragmatic approach to US–China competition in Africa by
focusing on areas of common interest, such as climate change
mitigation, counterterrorism, anti-piracy, and stability, could benefit
not only the two competitors but also Africa and the rest of the world.
For better or for worse, in the coming decades, Africa will matter, and we had better believe it. Our lives could depend on it.