Africa’s economy lacks diversity. The continent’s share of global merchandise exports has remained virtually unchanged, it stood at 1.9 per cent in 1998 and 2.5 per cent in 2018. The continent has experienced economic growth in the time, but this has been dependent on a boom in commodity prices and based on the exports of minerals.
The African rising narrative between 2004 and 2014 was largely fuelled by Chinese demand for raw materials. This overdependence on the export of commodities and minerals to countries outside the continent has increased the vulnerability of African economies to external shocks such as Covid-19 or changes in demand in key markets.
The taper these risks, Africa should pursue structural transformation of its economies. This involves diversification away from primary products dominating an economy towards offering more manufacturing, technology, and services. It also means the transition from producing raw materials to creating finished products, as well as from labour-intensive to skill-intensive economic activities.
One of the major factors stifling the structural transformation of Africa is the limited capacity of states to formulate and implement appropriate policies. Despite many previous attempts, African development strategies have been ineffective in allocating resources to more productive sectors such as agribusiness, mineral beneficiation and financial services.
Intra-Africa trade remains marginal at less than 17 per cent of the continent’s total trade. This compares unfavourably with other regions of the world such as the EU at 69 per cent, Asia at 47 per cent, and Latin America at 27 per cent. Small domestic markets and continental fragmentation limit the economies of scale for the production and distribution of goods and services.
Because of a lack of national institutional and administrative capacity the challenges of achieving structural transformation are best addressed at the continental level.