Led by Kenya, East Africa emerges as a trade hub
East Africa is emerging as a trade hub
to rival sub-Saharan Africa’s
two heavyweight states of South Africa and Nigeria, according to analysis by
Barclays published on Thursday.
However the UK bank identifies five
sleeping giants that present significant new opportunities for foreign companies;
Ethiopia, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Mozambique, Tanzania and Ghana.
This quintet which are playing catch-up
after significant political and economic upheaval are
increasingly attractive to foreign firms and international investors with an eye
on long-term returns from fast-growing markets, Barclays said in its inaugural
Africa Trade Index.
Matt Tuck, head of global corporate
banking at Barclays, said the five were open to international trade and had
rapidly growing populations that are likely to reach 325m in total by 2020,
comparable to that of the US.
Moreover, any repeat of the 7.3 per cent
compound annual economic growth they have experienced over the past five years
would lead to a significant rise in household spending. Most are relatively
unreliant on commodity exports by African standards, shielding them from some
of the storms currently battering emerging markets.
The core underlying fundamentals are
getting better and with more stable government it does represent an opportunity
for growth, said Mr Tuck. It’s a much more encouraging outlook than
in the past.
Overall, Barclays found South Africa and
Nigeria offered the best opportunities for foreign companies, in terms of unmet
demand, the absence of major barriers to cross-border trade and their
connectivity with other African countries (see the first table).
|
Barclays Africa Trade Index 2015
|
|
|
Top 10
|
Score / 100
|
|
South
Africa
|
73.3
|
|
Nigeria
|
62.6
|
|
Kenya
|
56.2
|
|
Ghana
|
53.4
|
|
Tanzania
|
52.4
|
|
Ethiopia
|
49.2
|
|
Angola
|
48.7
|
|
Cte d’Ivoire
|
48.5
|
|
Sudan
|
48.4
|
|
Senegal
|
48.3
|
|
Source: Barclays
|
|
While South Africa is the standout
performer, Barclays said Nigeria arguably represented the most exciting
long-term opportunity.
However it added that the country
suffered from logistical difficulties posed by inadequate infrastructure, which
meant many companies had to provide their own power and water supplies.
The bank, which has operated in Africa
for more than 150 years and has 1,500 branches across the continent, said
Nigeria needed to reduce non-tariff barriers to trade, as well as invest
heavily in transport networks and power provision.
Barclays said that east Africa was
emerging as a trade hub, with improved border administration helping create a
fast-growing regional market.
|
Barclays
Africa Trade Index 2015
|
|
|
Bottom
10
|
Score
/ 100
|
|
Malawi
|
38.8
|
|
Madagascar
|
38.8
|
|
Rwanda
|
38.5
|
|
Congo
|
36.5
|
|
Gabon
|
35.2
|
|
Lesotho
|
33.2
|
|
Guinea
|
30.3
|
|
Chad
|
29.9
|
|
Burundi
|
28.2
|
|
Gambia
|
23.4
|
|
Source: Barclays
|
|
The east African Community introduced a
single customs territory last year, earning praise from Erich Kieck, director
for capacity building at the World Customs Organisation, for remarkable work
simplifying the control of goods moving across the customs union.
Kenya is ranked third in Barclays’ index, with Tanzania and Ethiopia also
in the top six. Mr Tuck said Kenya had taken on the role of regional leader,
pushing for regional policy in terms of infrastructure and administration and
developing strong regional and global air connectivity.
Many countries, particularly in east
Africa, have invested in major developments in both infrastructure and soft’ infrastructure such as tariffs and
border policies, said Mr Tuck.
He welcomed the development of one-stop
border posts, where a single customs check is run jointly by neighbouring countries,
rather than each country operating their own station.
East Africa is leading the way in this
regard, with seven OSBPs operational or in development in Tanzania and six in
Uganda and Kenya, although they are spreading further afield with even Zimbabwe
implementing such a system at its Chirundi border post with Zambia.
Developments such as these have helped
the dollar value of intra-regional exports expand at a compound annual growth
rate of 16 per cent between 2004 and 2013, Barclays said, double the 7.6 per
cent CAGR for sub-Saharan exports in total, which hit $460bn in 2014.
Mr Tuck said intra-regional trade still
only represented 17 per cent of total trade flows in sub-Saharan Africa, below
the levels in regions such as Latin America (20 per cent), North America (32
per cent), Asia (48 per cent) and Europe (66 per cent).
Having said that, bodies such as the
African Development Bank have estimated that the true figure is nearer to 40
per cent when informal and unofficial cross-border trade is taken into account.
The report, which was compiled as an aid
for UK exporters but has wider ramifications, also pointed to the degree to
which Europe has been usurped by the rise of Asia, which accounted for 19 per
cent of sub-Saharan Africa’s goods imports in 2004 but 32 per cent
by 2013.
Barclays saw some of the best
opportunities in the retail sector, with the development of more formal shops,
malls and supermarkets allowing customers to trade up, and expanding mobile and
internet services creating new avenues for online retailers.
Opportunities abound elsewhere though,
with Diageo, the UK drinks group, currently generating 13 per cent of its sales
in sub-Saharan Africa, a figure it hopes to raise to 20 per cent.
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