From UNCTAD - 26 September 2007 
Reliance on domestic financial
resources will enable Africa to determine its own development priorities, new
UNCTAD report says 
The 
contents of this press release and the related Report must not be quoted or 
summarized in the print, broadcast or electronic media before 26 
September 2007, 17:00 GMT
  
"Developmental states" are the key to boosting domestic 
savings and productive investments in Africa, contends Economic Development in 
Africa 2007
  
  
Making greater use of domestic resources can help African countries achieve 
sustained and higher economic growth and over the long term will reduce 
overdependence on donor funding and on the rules that apply to it, a new UNCTAD 
report says. The report argues that increased use of domestic financial 
resources and more productive investments would provide African leaders the 
"policy space" to define development programmes that reflect their countries´ 
genuine priorities, giving true meaning to the rhetoric of "ownership" of 
economic policies. "Developmental states," in which governments actively manage 
economic policy to encourage greater economic diversification, are in a better 
position to implement this agenda, says Economic Development in Africa 
2007: Reclaiming Policy Space: Domestic Resource Mobilization and Developmental 
States (1). 
The report contends that the "developmental state" has been a crucial element 
in the phenomenal economic growth of several Asian economies. Such economies 
also have focused much greater attention on increasing and retaining domestic 
financial resources and using them to fuel rapid and sustained economic growth 
as well as job creation -- an approach African countries should emulate. The 
strategy is different from the recent African experience, in which the 
philosophy has been to reduce government participation in the economy to conform 
with the prevailing ideology in favour of market opening. The report, however, 
warns that state involvement in development should not be seen as repeating past 
mistakes, such as overprotection and interventionism. It argues that what 
African countries need is better state, and not less state. 
Mobilizing "hidden" African domestic financial resources 
Facts suggest that there are potential sources of domestic finance that 
could, if properly mobilized and efficiently invested, over time reduce 
significantly African aid dependence by providing alternative development 
resources, the report claims.  
Public finance reforms, mainly the introduction of Value Added Taxes (VAT) 
have been successful in raising government revenue only to a limited extent 
without compensating for the revenue losses due from a reduction in trade taxes. 
Nevertheless, there still is great potential for further revenue increases. 
According to African tax experts, improving collection alone could double tax 
revenues in some countries. Large variations in the ratios of tax revenues to 
GDP -- from 38% in Algeria and Angola to less than 10% in Chad, Niger and Sudan 
-- suggest that countries with very low ratios have the potential to increase 
revenues dramatically. 
The informal sector has become an increasingly important segment of economic 
activity in many African countries due to economic liberalization and state 
roll-back, policies pursued over the last 25 years. It accounts for 58% of the 
gross national products (GNP) of Tanzania and Nigeria and for 28% of the GNP of 
South Africa. If appropriate measures could be taken to formalize economic 
activities, a larger tax base would potentially increase the continent´s 
development resource base. This would increase the capacity of the formal sector 
to finance the productive investments needed to sustain higher rates of economic 
growth. 
For a number of African countries, workers´ remittances are an important 
source of development finance. Officially recorded remittances peaked at about 
US$ 16 billion in 2004, with around two-thirds of the amount accruing to North 
Africa. It is widely understood that unrecorded flows are significant. When 
these are added to official amounts, it is largely acknowledged that remittances 
are the main source of foreign currency for several countries. In such 
countries, they provide not only more financial resources than official 
development assistance (ODA) and foreign direct investment (FDI), but are far 
more stable sources of income. Moreover, remittances are non-debt-generating, 
are free of conditionalities, and suffer from fewer "leakages" in the form of 
transfer inefficiencies and corruption. Channelling more remittances through 
African countries´ formal banking systems would increase their developmental 
impact considerably, the report says. Most remittances now spur consumption, but 
governments could encourage their greater use for investment. 
Capital flight continues to deny African economies large amounts of the 
continent´s resources for investment. If these funds were used for productive 
investments at home, they could create jobs and provide or boost the incomes of 
large segments of the population now unemployed or underemployed. It has been 
estimated that the stock of capital flight from Africa is higher than the stock 
of the continent´s debt, prompting some analysts to conclude that Africa is a 
"net creditor" vis-à-vis the rest of the world. Stopping this financial 
haemorrhage while putting in place appropriate measures to repatriate resources 
held abroad would reduce the current shortfall in financial resources needed for 
Africa´s development, the report argues. 
With these possibilities in mind -- and with appropriate reforms, especially 
in the financial and fiscal sectors -- Africa should be able to mobilize 
considerably more domestic resources to finance development programmes, the 
report contends.  
Internal integration is vital for high savings, better investment, 
and sustained growth 
"External integration" into the world economy as opposed to "internal 
integration" has recently been the policy advice of choice to African countries. 
The limits of this approach have become increasingly clear as the relatively 
high rates of growth experienced in Africa in recent years have not resulted in 
significant gains in living standards. This growth has been underpinned by the 
current boom in the commodity sector, particularly minerals, produced in 
"enclave industries" with little or no linkages to the rest of the economy. As a 
result, very few jobs have been created, leading to the phenomenon of jobless 
growth. To benefit a large proportion of a country´s population, economic growth 
must be generated by internally integrated economies, the report says. This 
requires strengthening linkages between rural and urban business activities, and 
between different economic sectors. Sectoral integration, in turn, spurs product 
diversification and economic transformation. That can mean greater output growth 
and more savings, leading to increased investment which sustains the process of 
economic growth. The report says that one step towards internal integration is 
to address some of the market failures plaguing African economies, particularly 
those relating to poor infrastructure. 
The report argues that a strategic allocation of investment to sectors with 
the strongest linkages to the rest of the economy can create more jobs and 
generate growth that benefits larger proportions of African populations. Even if 
it is unlikely that additional domestic savings alone will immediately close the 
resource shortfall -- evaluated at 10% to 20% of GDP -- to allow achievement of 
the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), including halving extreme poverty by 
2015, they will give African countries the policy space to craft the most 
appropriate development strategies. 
Developmental states are best able to carry out Africa´s development 
agenda 
The development challenges facing Africa are such that the private sector is 
unlikely to play the lead role in addressing them, the report contends. 
Consensus is now building around the idea that African countries need better 
rather than less state. The "developmental state" has been instrumental in the 
successful economic transformation of high-growing Asian economies. It also 
underpinned the immediate post-colonial development of several African 
countries. Such developmental states can re-emerge in Africa, the report 
contends, particularly if current improvements in governance are deepened to 
ensure the efficient and strategic allocation of resources to produce the 
maximum impact on development.  
Developmental states would not only enable African governments to mobilize 
domestic resources but allow them to encourage long-term productive investment, 
the report says. Governments could design credit allocation policies, public 
investment and expenditure policies, and incentives for the private sector to 
invest in priority areas. The report says that strategic integration into the 
world economy may require different doses of protectionism and openness, 
depending on timing and circumstance.  
A successful developmental state is one that creates institutions that 
genuinely address development challenges, the report notes. There is, however, 
no magic formula. Building such institutions is a learning-by-doing process, 
adjustable and flexible enough to allow even for the possibility of failure. 
True "ownership" means allowing sufficient policy space to undertake such a 
learning process, leading to the robust institutions required to push 
development forward, the report concludes.  
Endnotes 
1.Economic Development in Africa 
2007: Reclaiming Policy Space: Domestic Resource Mobilization and Developmental 
States (Sales No. E.07.II.D.12, ISBN-13: 978-92-1-112723-2) may be 
obtained from UN sales offices at the addresses below or from UN sales agents in 
many countries. Price US$ 25.00. Please send orders or enquiries for Europe, 
Africa and Western Asia to United Nations Publication/Sales Section, Palais des 
Nations, CH-1211 Geneva 10, Switzerland, fax: +41 22 917 0027, e-mail: unpubli@un.org ; and for the Americas and 
Eastern Asia, to United Nations Publications, Two UN Plaza, DC2-853, New York, 
NY 10017, USA, tel: +1 212 963 8302 or +1 800 253 9646, fax: +1 212 963 3489, 
e-mail: . Internet: http://www.un.org/publications. 
 
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