Essential The Africa the Media Doesn't Tell You About

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A decade after write-offs, Africa sliding back into debt trap
Wed Sep 16, 2015 4:08pm GMT

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By Ed Cropley

JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) - With their economies floundering and currencies sinking, African states that have borrowed heavily in dollars may be slipping back into the debt trap - and ultimately default - only a decade after a far-reaching round of debt forgiveness.

Some are looking to issue more Eurobonds to refinance existing foreign currency loans, but with U.S. interest rates set to rise soon, the inevitably higher borrowing costs will do little to alleviate pressure on creaking state budgets.

Top of the list of 'at risk' countries, according to experts, is Ghana, the first African sovereign after South Africa to go to the international markets when it launched a debut $750 million Eurobond in 2007.

Since then, Accra has issued two more bonds of $1 billion each, helping pushing total public debt to 71 percent of gross domestic product (GDP), according to data published this week.

This compares to 50 percent in 2005, the year anti-poverty campaigners Bono and Bob Geldof persuaded rich countries to write off billions of dollars owed by Ghana and other African nations.

Ghana's central bank governor Henry Kofi Wampah dismissed the levels of debt - half of it in dollars - as "not very dangerous" but most analysts disagree, mainly due to the decline in the West African nation's currency.

When it launched its debut bond in 2007 with an 8.5 percent interest rate, the cedi was virtually at parity with the dollar. It is now around 4, meaning the government is in effect servicing a loan equivalent to $3 billion.

Accra agreed a $918 million, 3-year rescue package with the International Monetary Fund in April, but even if the programme works the Fund admits the government's interest payments are likely to stabilise at an eye-watering 40 percent of revenues.

And in reality the IMF package - essentially a dollar loan with slightly more favourable interest rates - is merely papering over the cracks.

"It's a case of using one credit card to pay off another credit card," said Carmen Altenkirch, an African sovereign debt analyst at Fitch. "Ultimately, the only ways to get your debt levels down are to raise your income or cut your expenditure."

With growth slowing and a depressed outlook for commodity prices, balancing the books looks unlikely.

"The longer the commodity slump continues, the more countries will enter into crisis - and then you just can't get out," said Tim Jones, an economist for the London-based Jubilee Debt Campaign, an anti-poverty group.



MORAL HAZARD

Overall, Fitch says African sovereign debt levels have risen to 44 percent of GDP from 34 percent five years ago, with Zambia and Kenya - which are running budget deficits approaching 10 percent of output - looking particularly vulnerable.

Zambian finance minister Alexander Chikwanda told Reuters this week he would prefer not to have to go to the IMF for help - like Ghana, the southern African copper producer faces an election next year - but his options are narrowing.

As with Ghana, domestic yields are as high as 24 percent and since Chinese growth has cooled, leaders from Zimbabwe's Robert Mugabe to Angola's Jose Eduardo dos Santos have found Beijing to be an increasingly reluctant lender.

The cost of refinancing through more global bond issuance is also rising, as shown by the hefty 9.375 percent interest rate Zambia had to pay when it sold a $1.25 billion bond in July.

There is also the issue of moral hazard for the IMF, which, in positioning itself as a backstop, can be accused of encouraging reckless behaviour - both by rich-country lenders who know they will be bailed out, and by governments who fail to live within their means or wean their economies off commodities.

Oil producer Angola has told Reuters it plans to borrow $10 billion this year. The IMF expects Angolan public borrowing to hit 57 percent of GDP by end-2015.

"For all the talk of reform, Africa is still a commodity exporter," said Ravia Bhatia, an Africa credit analyst at Standard and Poor's. "'Africa Rising' masked the story that the fiscal deficits had been rising. Now it's come home to roost."



IT'S COMPLICATED

Assessments by credit agencies do not suggest defaults are imminent, but the ratings trend is downwards and negative outlooks prevail.

If it comes down to it, default and restructuring is likely to be messier than 2005 due to the presence of so many commercial investors in Africa's debt mix, as opposed to the bilateral lending that prevailed before then.

"As sub-Saharan African sovereigns are moving away from bilateral and concessional lending and more towards market lending, debt forgiveness is less likely," said Matt Robinson, an African sovereign ratings analyst at Moody's.

"It makes it much more complicated."
 

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PRESIDENT BUHARI CONDEMNS COUP D'ETAT IN BURKINA FASO, CALLS FOR IMMEDIATE RESTORATION OF CIVIL TRANSITIONAL AUTHORITY

President Muhammadu Buhari and the Federal Government of Nigeria unreservedly condemn Wednesday's detention of the Interim President, the Prime Minister and other ministers of the transitional government of Burkina Faso in an apparent coup d'etat.

President Buhari and Nigeria align with ECOWAS, the African Union and the United Nations in rejecting the brazen contravention of the constitution and transitional charter of Burkina Faso by elements of the Presidential Guard under the leadership of General Gilbert Diendere.

President Buhari and Nigeria urge the Defense and Security Forces of Burkina Faso to keep faith with the agreed transitional programme for the return of the country to full democratic rule after elections, which were due to be held in the country on October 11, in support of which Nigeria has donated 20 pick-up vans to the National Electoral Commission of Burkina Faso.

While welcoming the news that the Interim President, Mr. Michel Kafando has now been freed, President Buhari and Nigeria also demand the immediate release of Prime Minister Isaac Zida and other detained ministers.

Nigeria will give the fullest possible support to ongoing efforts by the ECOWAS mediatory team of President Macky Sall of Senegal and President Boni Yayi of Benin Republic to quickly restore Burkina Faso to the path of order, democracy and constitutionalism.

The President urges the people of Burkina Faso to remain calm and steadfast in support of the transitional order, elections and democratic governance with the full assurance that Nigeria, ECOWAS and the international community will uphold their right to peace, freedom, democracy and good governance.



Femi Adesina
Special Adviser to the President
(Media & Publicity)
September 18, 2015

 

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Burkina Faso: Senegal's Macky Sall, Benin's Yayi resume diplomatic offensive to break coup's back

19 SEP 2015 18:30AFP

Tensions remained high in Ouagadougou, where most shops remained shuttered after a confrontation on Friday between elite troops and protestors.

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A man wears a shirt depicting former Burkinabe president Thomas Sankara in Bobo Dioulasso on September 18, 2015 during a protest against the military coup.

TWO African leaders resumed mediation talks in the capital of Burkina Faso on Saturday, three days after a coup that reignited violence in the troubled Sahel state.

Tensions remained high in Ouagadougou, where most shops remained shuttered after a confrontation on Friday between elite troops and protestors.

Senegalese President Macky Sall, chairman of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), and Benin President Thomas Boni Yayi met in a hotel with opposition leaders and members of civil society groups.

They were also to meet with the country’s interim president, Michel Kafando, who was released on Thursday after being detained by the coup leaders.

Sall, speaking after meeting with coup leader General Gilbert Diendere, Compaore’s former chief of staff, called on Friday for unity.

“We must create a dynamic of national reconciliation… to allow the country to reposition itself on its path and on its march to democracy,” Sall said.

Burkina Faso has had a long history of instability since it gained independence in 1960.

It had been preparing to hold presidential and legislative elections on October 11 before Wednesday’s coup took place.

The vote is supposed to mark the end of the transitional government installed after Compaore—in power since 1987—was toppled by a popular uprising in October 2014.

The latest coup was orchestrated by an elite army unit loyal to Compaore, who claim Kafando was excluding Compaore’s supporters from taking part in the ballot.

Overnight Friday, Diendere reiterated he had been acting in the country’s interests.

“We simply want to have proposals for elections that take place serenely and peacefully, and for results that are uncontested and uncontestable,” he told the French television channel TV5 Monde.

The 54-member African Union has suspended Burkina Faso and imposed a travel ban and asset freeze on the junta.

“All measures taken by those who took power by force in Burkina Faso are null and void,” Uganda’s AU ambassador Mull Katende said Friday.

Coup leaders released Kafando and two ministers Friday, describing the move as “a sign of easing tensions”, but prime minister Isaac Zida remained under house arrest.

The military also lifted a curfew and reopened land and air borders that they had closed after seizing power.

Protestors killed
Six people have been killed and at least 13 wounded in clashes, a doctor at Ougadougou’s main hospital told news agency AFP on Friday.

As the two African mediators arrived on Friday, members of the elite Presidential Security Regiment (RSP) which spearheaded the coup fired in the air to disperse protestors trying to march on Revolution Square, the epicentre of last year’s revolt against Compaore.

The homes of two former Compaore allies—former Ouagadougou mayor Simon Compaore, and Salif Diallo, who had joined opposition ranks in 2014—were ransacked overnight Friday, an AFP reporter saw.

Other protests have taken place in several other cities and towns, including Bobo-Dioulasso, the country’s economic capital and a hotspot for the Compaore uprising.

Burkina Faso: Senegal's Macky Sall, Benin's Yayi resume diplomatic offensive to break coup's back
 

ZoeGod

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Man when i look at countries like Angola, Nigeria, Ghana they have the potential to real regional superpowers like Israel, Russia or Brazil. It is so disheartening to me that the strongest militaries in Africa is Egypt, Algeria and South Africa. When you look at Nigerias population is almost as big as Russia and yet it depnds on old white afrikaner mercs to defeat Boko Haram. As I said before if Africa has 2 or three black African superpowers it would be hard for outsiders to intervene easily into those nations. In the middle east they got Iran, Israel and Turkey. Asia got China,India, South Korea, Japan and South Korea. Europe got Russia, France, England, Germany etc. South America its Brazil, Argentina, Venezuela.

Africa is growing but it needs a strong regional defense force like a NATO or CSTO cuz the AU is highly influenced by the west. Just my 2cents.
 

BigMan

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Man when i look at countries like Angola, Nigeria, Ghana they have the potential to real regional superpowers like Israel, Russia or Brazil. It is so disheartening to me that the strongest militaries in Africa is Egypt, Algeria and South Africa. When you look at Nigerias population is almost as big as Russia and yet it depnds on old white afrikaner mercs to defeat Boko Haram. As I said before if Africa has 2 or three black African superpowers it would be hard for outsiders to intervene easily into those nations. In the middle east they got Iran, Israel and Turkey. Asia got China,India, South Korea, Japan and South Korea. Europe got Russia, France, England, Germany etc. South America its Brazil, Argentina, Venezuela.

Africa is growing but it needs a strong regional defense force like a NATO or CSTO cuz the AU is highly influenced by the west. Just my 2cents.
angola looks like its developing but there's crazy inequality the vast majority of people outside the capital aren't living like that. and now you got Portuguese and Brazilians moving in to take advantage
 

The Odum of Ala Igbo

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What crisis? 16 of China's biggest projects in Africa — it's all billion dollar territory in here
What crisis? 16 of China's biggest projects in Africa — it's all billion dollar territory in here

19 Sep 2015 20:35M&G Africa Reporter

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US researchers claim that there are currently 3,030 active development projects in Africa, but will Asian country announce more in December?

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Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta and Chinese President Xi Jinping stand during a signing ceremony for a visa exemption agreement. (Photo/How Hwee Young-Pool/Getty Images)

EARLIER this year, Chinese state news agency Xinhua published that the country has so far in Africa completed some 1,046 projects, built railways to a total of 2,233 kilometres, and laid 3,350 km of highways.

According to the largest public database of Chinese development finance in Africa, researchers claim that there are currently 3,030 active projects in Africa. China is clearly racing to deliver on commitments made in 2012, when then-president Hu Jintao offered $20 billion in loans to African countries, doubling its previous pledge.

But with the country fighting to stay on its high-growth lane, this year’s Forum on China–Africa Cooperation that takes place in December in South Africa will be closely watched for how bad the malaise is.

READ: China’s investment in Africa isn’t what you think, and it’s not mostly with ‘rogue’ states

Ahead of that, using information from the database and other research, M&G Africa sought the biggest active development projects and deals between Africa and China, and which cost a minimum of $1 billion:

Coastal Railway, Nigeria

Amount: $12 billion

In 2014 China Railway Construction Corp signed a deal worth nearly $12 billion with Nigeria to build a railway along the West African nation’s coast—China’s largest single contract overseas. The coastal railway will stretch for 1,402km, linking Nigeria’s economic capital Lagos in the west with Calabar in the east.

READ: China firm inks $12bn Nigerian railway deal-its largest single overseas contract yet

Lagos-Kano railway project, Nigeria

Amount: $8.3 billion

In 2006, the China Civil and Engineering Construction Company (CCECC) won the contract for the 1,124-km Lagos-Kano standard gauge modernisation project. Due to funding issues it was recast for completion in segments. Contracts for it are now awarded in tranches. In December 2014 the first, the 186-km Abuja-Kaduna section was completed, done over three years and an estimated cost of $850 million.

Infrastructure for mines barter deal (Sicomines), DR Congo

Amount: $7.16 billion

On September 17, 2007 China and the DRC signed an agreement for a $9 billion loan deal from the Exim Bank of China. However, the loan was reduced to $6 billion in October 2009 because the IMF expressed concerns over the DRC’s national debt. The money was meant to improve Congolese infrastructure and to develop mines in the Mashamba basin, the Dima basin, the Dik Colline D syncline, and Kolwezi. In return, the Congolese state copper company Gécamines would concede a number of deposits containing up to 10.6 million tonnes of copper, of which approximately 6.8 million tonnes were confirmed. Gécamines also promised between 425,000 tonnes and 625,000 tonnes of cobalt and access to all other potential mineral substances.

Mini-City, South Africa

Amount: $7 billion

Chinese property group Shanghai Zendai is building a $7 billion mini city on the outskirts of Johannesburg in one of the largest real estate deals made by a Chinese company in South Africa. Chinese investor Shanghai Zendai heads the 1,600-hectare development called the Modderfontein New City project.

READ: China’s planned new economic ‘assault base’ into Africa seen as extremely ambitious

When completed it is expected to become a mini city with more than 100,000 residents. According to the developer’s founder, the aim is to turn the mini metropolis into the “New York of Africa”.

Joint Venture between China International Fund and Guinea, Guinea

Amount: $7 billion

On October 12, 2009, the China International Fund (CIF) signed an agreement with Guinea to create a holding company for investments in development projects. The project is worth $7 billion. The deal granted Guinea a 25% stake in the newly created Guinea Development Corporation (GDC). CIF and Sonangol (a parastatal that oversees petroleum and natural gas production in Angola) would split the remaining stakes. CIF was given the rights to explore any unexploited Guinean mineral and energy resources. In return, CIF would use some of its revenue to fund infrastructural projects proposed by the Guinean government. All iron ore and associated minerals zones that cover 7,000 square km would now fall under Chinese control. In bauxite and alumina, over 10,000 square km have been attributed to GDC Mining, Oil & Gas in the Gaoual, Lélouma, Télimélé, Koundara and Labé regions. It was also reported the partnership would fund hydro power projects.

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Construction of oil refinery, Angola

Amount: $5.8 billion

On January 16, 2001, China announced that it would take part in the construction of a new oil refinery, Sonaref, in Lobito. The $3.5 billion project was planned to have the capacity to process 200,000 bbl/day. Sinopec, the sole funder of the project, expected the refinery to start operations in 2010. In May 2012, the refinery was still incomplete. An updated projection estimated production to start at 120,000 bbl/day in the refinery’s first stages and to eventually increase to 200,000 bbl/day.

Chad-Sudan Railway, Regional

Amount: $5.6 billion

In 2014, a $5.6 billion agreement was signed between China Civil Engineering Construction Corporation and Chad’s Transport Minister for the construction of a 1,344-km railway network. The first phase will link Abéché to André on the border with Sudan, and Moundou to Ngaounderé on the border with Cameroon. The second phase will connect Moundou with N’Djamena and connected Chad’s capital with border regions. The third phase will link Chad’s capital with Abéché and the fourth phase will link Abéché with Nyala, Sudan.

Cement plants, Regional

Amount: $4.34 billion

In 2015, Dangote Cement signed contracts worth $4.34 billion with China’s Sinoma International Engineering Co. to build cement plants across Africa, as Nigeria’s largest listed firm expands. The plants to be built in Cameroon, Ethiopia, Kenya, Mali, Niger, Nigeria, Senegal and Zambia, with another in Nepal, would add around 25 million tonnes to the company’s existing capacity of around 45 million tonnes.

Kenya standard-gauge railway

Amount: $3.4 billion

In February, work on the Kenya’s biggest investment in railway infrastructure since it gained independence from Britain in 1963 begun. The Export-Import Bank of China is funding 90% of the $3.8 billion railroad, which will connect Nairobi to Mombasa, East Africa’s biggest port. It’s scheduled to be completed by 2017.

Mepanda Nkua dam and hydroelectric station, Mozambique

Amount: $3.1 billion

On April 21, 2006, the Mozambican government signed a memorandum of understanding with the Export-Import Bank of China to finance the Mepanda Nkua dam and hydroelectric station on the Zambezi River in the province of Tete. The MOU also provided for funding for the construction of the Moamba-Major dam in Maputo province that will supply Maputo with drinking water.

Construction of railway from Khartoum to Port Sudan, Sudan

Amount: $1.38 billion

On February 28, 2007, after two years of negotiations, China Railway Engineering Group Co. Ltd. and China Railway Erju Co. Ltd. unit Transtech Engineering Corp signed a $1.154 billion contract with Sudan to construct a 762-km railway line to link Khartoum with Port Sudan. The Chinese government financed the project via export credits.

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African textiles also attract Chinese money.

Capital rebuilding deal, Republic of Congo

Amount: $1.23 billion

China has signed accords with Congo-Brazzaville to present them with $1.225 billion to rebuild parts of Brazzaville that were destroyed by a deadly blast at a munitions depot in March 2012. The loan has a five year grace period, twenty year maturity, and 0.25% interest rate. Most of the funding will be used to rebuild areas flattened by the March 4 explosions in Mpila in the east of the city, $68 million will go towards developing Congo’s telecommunications network and another $75 million has been earmarked for building a road in the north of the country.

Mtwara-Dar Es Salaam Gas Pipeline, Tanzania

Amount: $1.03 billion

In 2012, Tanzanian Finance Minister, Dr. William Mgimwa, and the Deputy President of ExIm Bank, Mr. Li Jun, signed a loan agreement for $1.2 billion with a 33-year maturity and 2% interest rate. The loan finances the natural gas pipeline linking Mtwara gas field to Dar es Salaam. Before accessing the finances, Tanzania signed a contract with three Chinese companies for construction in July of 2012. The lines are over 500km in length and will help boost power supply to the capital city.

Thermal power deal, Zimbabwe

Amount: $1.1 billion

In July 2015, Zimbabwean company, PER Lusulu Power, signed a $1.1 billion agreement with the China State Construction Engineering Corporation (CSCEC) to build a 600-megawatt thermal power plant, a move expected to ease power cuts in the country.

Textile Complex, Egypt

Amount: $1.01 billion

In 2008, the National Bank of Egypt and China Africa Development Fund agreed on plans for the construction of a $1 billion textile complex in the southern province of Suhaj in Upper Egypt. The complex covers an area of 3 km square and consists of at least 100 textile mills, creating 90,000 new jobs.

Deep sea port, Cameroon

Amount: $1 billion

Cameroon signed a deal with the China Harbor Engineering Company Ltd for the country’s only deep-sea port, which can accommodate the larger inter-continental trading ships. The contract value for the first phase was set at $568 million, of which 85% was provided as a preferential loan from China’s Export-Import Bank and 15% was paid by the Cameroonian government. Final construction costs were estimated to be $1 billion.

*All amounts are USD 2009
 

Red Shield

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angola looks like its developing but there's crazy inequality the vast majority of people outside the capital aren't living like that. and now you got Portuguese and Brazilians moving in to take advantage

which is just going to lead to the type of problems blacks have in brazil :snoop:
 

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Man when i look at countries like Angola, Nigeria, Ghana they have the potential to real regional superpowers like Israel, Russia or Brazil. It is so disheartening to me that the strongest militaries in Africa is Egypt, Algeria and South Africa. When you look at Nigerias population is almost as big as Russia and yet it depnds on old white afrikaner mercs to defeat Boko Haram. As I said before if Africa has 2 or three black African superpowers it would be hard for outsiders to intervene easily into those nations. In the middle east they got Iran, Israel and Turkey. Asia got China,India, South Korea, Japan and South Korea. Europe got Russia, France, England, Germany etc. South America its Brazil, Argentina, Venezuela.

Africa is growing but it needs a strong regional defense force like a NATO or CSTO cuz the AU is highly influenced by the west. Just my 2cents.

Africa has been 'growing' forever it seems, it's the inattentive, greedy and cowardly leadership that's affecting africa more than anything. If a fourteen year old boy surving day to day inside a shack can engineer generators then surely these much more foreign 'educated' ministers and officials can come up with greater ideas to alleviate conditions the people face. Herein lies the problem, too many corrupt individuals indoctrinated with foreign ideology, tribalistic mindsets and no introspection or vision beyond what their overlords have laid out for them. Poor and smaller undeveloped nations simply can't afford to have their leaders engaging in corruption at the same rate of much more resilient and developed nations but sadly this concept hasn't seemed to gain any real ground with the elite there. It doesn't take a genius to know 'hey we don't have as much money as those people over there, let's not bullshyt around here as much' the crab mentality is way too prevalent. It's this kind of rationality that has aided in such contempt and mistrust amongst the leadership across africa, and it's affecting the progression of everything from agriculture to defense innovation in a major way.

Until the younger continental africans kick off the renaissance black folk in both hemispheres will continually be marginalized and castigated.
 
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