The Perception Gap About Africa

All Africa: Africa: Continent – the Next Frontier for Investors

Washington — Economists say Africa will grow by 5.5 percent in 2012, with seven African countries expected to rank among the 10 fastest-growing economies in the world during the next five years, projections that are making the continent an increasingly popular destination for foreign investors. …

… Foreign direct investment projects across the continent grew 27 percent in 2011 from 2010, a "stellar performance" that continued a longer-term trend of FDI growth by 153 percent in absolute terms since 2003.

But despite this growth, the survey of more than 500 investors and business leaders highlights a so-called perception gap of Africa's attractiveness.

"Those already doing business on the continent were overwhelmingly positive, ranking Africa's relative attractiveness above every other region except Asia, and even then, only marginally so," the report said.

"In stark contrast," it said, "respondents with no business presence in Africa were overwhelmingly negative." It said these respondents view Africa as "by far the least attractive investment destination in the world," citing risk factors such as political instability, corruption and security as major obstacles.

"This represents not so much a gap as a chasm between perception and reality," the report said, adding that "the facts tell a different story — one of reform, progress and growth."

In addition to more than tripling its economic output during the past decade, Africa is rapidly democratizing, combating corruption and working to improve the climate and ease of doing business for foreign investors, the report states. …


Comments

2 responses to “The Perception Gap About Africa”

  1. Dana Ames Avatar
    Dana Ames

    The Chinese are not deterred. A good friend who has been a missionary in Uganda and RSA told me that Africa is crawling with Chinese workers, investors and others who are interested in getting the most resources for lowest price, usually to the detriment of Africans.
    Dana

  2. I sometimes wonder if being rich in natural resources isn’t a curse. Paul Collier has some good thoughts on how to address some of these challenges in “Plundered Planet.” Mostly dealing with transparency, particularly the use of a transparent auction process to for who gets the rights to mine which resources on what terms.
    Still, even in the midst of all this, the good news is that the lives of hundreds of millions are changing for the better. But Africa is a big place. And I have the sense that there is a wide variance from nation to nation. I don’t know much about Uganda but do know others who work with RSA and I think they would confirm your worries about that nation.

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