Thursday, November 13, 2008

World Bank Report Suggests Strategy For African Growth Based On Mapping Of Economic Geography



History shows that severe crises can cause nations to become inward-looking, sometimes with negative consequences. The World Development Report 2009: Reshaping Economic Geography, released last week, argues that policies that facilitate geographic concentration and economic integration, both within and across countries as well as within the global economy, will promote long-term growth. This is key in Africa, where accelerated growth is critical for poverty reduction in the years ahead.

“Growth does not come to every place at once, with markets favoring some places over others,” said Indermit S. Gill, Director of the report. “To encourage prosperity, governments should facilitate the geographic concentration of production, rather than fight it. But they must also institute policies that make the provision of basic needs—schools, security, streets, and sanitation—more universal.”

The report notes that Sub-Saharan Africa today faces the triple challenges of low density or scarce and scattered populations; long distances between remote areas and centers of economic activity; and deep divisions in national, religious, and ethnic terms. These dimensions of economic geography reduce connectedness between economic agents within the region, as well as with the rest of the world.

“In Sub-Saharan Africa, we can reduce the disadvantages of our poor economic geography through better urbanization, more domestic specialization, and more regional integration,” said Shanta Devarajan, Chief economist of the World Bank’s Africa Region. “Regional cooperation, labor mobility, investments in trade, communication and transport infrastructure, and peace and stability need to remain high on our agenda, even as countries work to contain the spillover effects of the global financial crisis.”

It is commonly assumed that economic activities, within a country or region, must be spread geographically to benefit the poorest and most vulnerable. However, the WDR emphasizes that trying to spread out economic activity can hinder growth and is not effective in fighting poverty. For rapid, shared growth, governments must promote economic integration which, at its core, is about the mobility of people, products, and ideas.

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