Afreximbank
President Prof. Benedict Oramah (right) poses with other speakers,
(L-R) Li Yong, Director-General, United Nations Industrial
Organisation; President Apha Conde of Guinea; President Edgar Lungu
of Zambia; vice President Daniel Kablan Duncan of Cote d’Ivoire and
Albert Muchanga, African Union Commissioner for Trade and Industry,
following the high-level event at the United Nations Headquarters.
The
President of the African Export-Import Bank (Afreximbank), Prof.
Benedict Oramah, yesterday in New York, urged African countries to
create vehicles that would make it possible for manufacturers to
trade across the continent.
Speaking
during a high-level event on the Third Industrial Development Decade
for Africa 2016-2019, organised at the United Nations Headquarters,
Prof. Oramah argued that manufacturers needed somebody else to handle
the export and trading of their products as they were not equipped
for those roles.
Export
trading companies had been one of the approaches used to tackle that
challenge, he said, adding that the creation of the African
Continental Free Trade Area also attempted to address the issue.
Prof.
Oramah said that previous efforts by African countries to use
manufacturing and industrialisation as engines for development and
growth had failed largely as a result of issues such as lack of
access to market, lack of capital and skills and inadequate
infrastructure.
He
stated that many large-scale investors had little interest in
investing in Africa in a massive way because of the fragmented nature
of the African market.
The
President suggested that Africa should focus more on labour-intensive
manufacturing which had more net effect on the population than on
capital intensive industries.
He
also stressed the need for Africa to focus on skills development, in
particular, by going back to building technical schools and
supporting universities of technology in order to equip people with
the right skills for the kind of jobs that were beginning to emerge.
Prof.
Oramah announced that Afreximbank had launched an equity investment
fund, the Fund for Export Development in Africa, which would help
attract foreign direct investment to support industrialisation and
manufacturing in Africa.
Also
participating in the session were Li Yong, Director-General, United
Nations Industrial Organisation; Albert Muchanga, African Union
Commissioner for Trade and Industry; Dr. Adewunmi Adesina, President,
African Development Bank; Dr. Vera Songwe, Executive Secretary,
United nations Economic Commission for Africa; and Ali Mufuruki, Vice
Chairman, AfroChampions Club.
A
second session featured President Apha Conde of Guinea; President
Edgar Lungu of Zambia and Vice President Daniel Kablan Duncan of Cote
d’Ivoire.
The
high-level event, held on the sidelines of the United Nations General
Assembly, had the theme “Promoting innovation and infrastructure
development: A pathway for boosting manufacturing in the Fourth
Industrial Revolution”.
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