Former
Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo and Prof. Jeffrey Sachs (seated)
delivered the Second Babacar Ndiaye Lecture in Bali, Indonesia,
today.
Former
Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo and development economist
Jeffrey Sacks today in Bali, Indonesia, called for the establishment
of an African fund for education as they delivered the second Babacar
Ndiaye Lecture in Bali, Indonesia.
The
two personalities, who were the guest speakers at the international
lecture series introduced by the African Export-Import Bank
(Afreximbank) in 2017 to honour the late Dr. Babacar Ndiaye, said
that such a fund will ensure that every child in Africa got a full
high-quality education in this generation.
They
called on African leaders to support the fund and to make a
commitment that every African child should be empowered and financed
to stay in school until completing his or her secondary education.
“Africa
needs to support every child to stay in school through age 18 and to
achieve 100 per cent secondary school completion,” said Prof.
Sachs, who is Director of the Center for Sustainable Development at
Columbia University, New York. He noted that three quarters of
African children were currently not completing secondary education
and said that with an African fund for education and commitment by
African leaders, the continent will be transformed into a middle
income to high income economy.
Prof.
Sachs argued that the current global disequilibrium was working to
Africa’s benefit as it presented the African Union (AU) with the
opportunity to fully realize its potential as a great unifier, saying
that Africa should be a politically and economically unified region.
“The
AU is the right vision and the right instrument for Africa’s
unity,” he said. A unified Africa would be largest region in the
world and could become a global leader by taking advantage of the
most recent technological advances and with the introduction of open
boarders of trade.
Prof.
Sachs said that the current disruption of technology had brought
about dramatic technological revolution in a way that worked to
Africa’s advantage as the continent could leapfrog development
through the adoption of digital technologies.
With
digital technology and e-commerce, Africa could make revolutionary
advances in health care, education, the functioning of the private
sector economy and other areas, he added. To achieve that, Africa
needed develop infrastructure and train people in the new
technologies.
President
Obasanjo, laying out his support for the Africa fund for education,
argued that there was no shortage of money for good causes in Africa.
According to him, people only wanted to know that their money would
go where it was supposed to go and that such money would be properly
accounted for.
He
added that it was up to Africans to develop their continent, saying,
“Africa is the architect of its own future”.
In
his address, Prof. Benedict Oramah, President of Afreximbank, said
that the greatest problem of Africa was the neglect of Africa by
Africans.
Prof.
Oramah said that the call to establish an African fund for education
should be seen as a call to action by everyone and pledged that, even
though education was not a mandate of Afreximbank, the Bank would
support the effort to make sure that it emerged.
The
lecture series recognises and immortalises Dr. Ndiaye, who was
President of the African Development Bank (AfDB) from 1985 to 1995,
for his many important contributions to Africa’s economic
development, in particular, his critical role in the creation of
Afreximbank.
In
addition to helping the AfDB to earn triple ‘A’ status,
Dr. Ndiaye, who died in July 2017, was also behind the creation of
several other continental institutions, including Shelter Afrique and
the African Business Roundtable. He is credited with fostering the
emergence of many young entrepreneurs who are helping to build Africa
today.
The
event attracted leaders of African and global banks, development
finance institutions, the business community and political leaders
attending the 2018 IMF and World Bank Group Annual Meetings, members
of the diplomatic community, policy makers, academicians, African and
non-African ministers of finance, economy and development, central
bank governors, and CEOs of global and African corporates.
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