Leapfrogging : The Key to Africa's Development?

Despite sustained economic growth over the past two decades, Sub-Saharan Africa faces massive challenges and significant gaps in many development outcomes. Although poverty has been declining, a recent report estimates that over two-fifths of the A...

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Main Authors: World Bank Group, China Development Bank
Format: Working Paper
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/121581505973379739/Leapfrogging-the-key-to-Africas-development-from-constraints-to-investment-opportunities
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/28440
id okr-10986-28440
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-284402021-05-25T09:04:18Z Leapfrogging : The Key to Africa's Development? World Bank Group China Development Bank DEVELOPMENT INNOVATION TECHNOLOGY AGRICULTURE EDUCATION ENERGY FINANCE GOVERNANCE ICT INFORMATION AND COMMUNICATION TECHNOLGIES Despite sustained economic growth over the past two decades, Sub-Saharan Africa faces massive challenges and significant gaps in many development outcomes. Although poverty has been declining, a recent report estimates that over two-fifths of the African population was poor in 2012. Nearly two-thirds of Africans do not have electricity. Less than one quarter of African enterprises have loans or lines of credit; the corresponding share among firms in non-African developing countries is almost half. The use of formal financial services is concentrated among the richest 20 percent of the population. Most African countries have made significant gains in access to education, but learning remains weak. The agriculture sector, which employs a large share of the labor force, exhibits low productivity. Technological change and levels, which are the drivers of productivity, are much lower compared to other parts of the world. Even simple productivity-enhancing factors like the use of fertilizers has remained flat for decades. Africa’s large infrastructure, technology, and policy gaps require disruptive solutions and thinking outside of the box. Yet, development policies have often been primarily programmatic and mostly incremental. This book argues that it is time to go back to basics of development, think big, and foster the environment for more innovation and technology adoption, to provide the chance for Africa to experience major positive transformations. This is not a new idea; to the contrary, it is what economic theory and history teach. While it has become customary in the development practice to highlight and quantify constraints to investing in Africa, this book argues that those constraints must be and transformed into investment opportunities. Several factors, such as skills, service delivery, access to finance, energy, to name the few, are often pointed out as constraints to investment. Treating those constraints as investment opportunities, attracting the private sector, both domestic and foreign, and creating a conducive environment for technological diffusion is precisely how Africa will harness innovation toward its prosperity. 2017-10-03T20:16:46Z 2017-10-03T20:16:46Z 2017-09-20 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/121581505973379739/Leapfrogging-the-key-to-Africas-development-from-constraints-to-investment-opportunities http://hdl.handle.net/10986/28440 English en_US CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research Publications & Research :: Working Paper Africa Africa Sub-Saharan Africa
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
en_US
topic DEVELOPMENT
INNOVATION
TECHNOLOGY
AGRICULTURE
EDUCATION
ENERGY
FINANCE
GOVERNANCE
ICT
INFORMATION AND COMMUNICATION TECHNOLGIES
spellingShingle DEVELOPMENT
INNOVATION
TECHNOLOGY
AGRICULTURE
EDUCATION
ENERGY
FINANCE
GOVERNANCE
ICT
INFORMATION AND COMMUNICATION TECHNOLGIES
World Bank Group
China Development Bank
Leapfrogging : The Key to Africa's Development?
geographic_facet Africa
Africa
Sub-Saharan Africa
description Despite sustained economic growth over the past two decades, Sub-Saharan Africa faces massive challenges and significant gaps in many development outcomes. Although poverty has been declining, a recent report estimates that over two-fifths of the African population was poor in 2012. Nearly two-thirds of Africans do not have electricity. Less than one quarter of African enterprises have loans or lines of credit; the corresponding share among firms in non-African developing countries is almost half. The use of formal financial services is concentrated among the richest 20 percent of the population. Most African countries have made significant gains in access to education, but learning remains weak. The agriculture sector, which employs a large share of the labor force, exhibits low productivity. Technological change and levels, which are the drivers of productivity, are much lower compared to other parts of the world. Even simple productivity-enhancing factors like the use of fertilizers has remained flat for decades. Africa’s large infrastructure, technology, and policy gaps require disruptive solutions and thinking outside of the box. Yet, development policies have often been primarily programmatic and mostly incremental. This book argues that it is time to go back to basics of development, think big, and foster the environment for more innovation and technology adoption, to provide the chance for Africa to experience major positive transformations. This is not a new idea; to the contrary, it is what economic theory and history teach. While it has become customary in the development practice to highlight and quantify constraints to investing in Africa, this book argues that those constraints must be and transformed into investment opportunities. Several factors, such as skills, service delivery, access to finance, energy, to name the few, are often pointed out as constraints to investment. Treating those constraints as investment opportunities, attracting the private sector, both domestic and foreign, and creating a conducive environment for technological diffusion is precisely how Africa will harness innovation toward its prosperity.
format Working Paper
author World Bank Group
China Development Bank
author_facet World Bank Group
China Development Bank
author_sort World Bank Group
title Leapfrogging : The Key to Africa's Development?
title_short Leapfrogging : The Key to Africa's Development?
title_full Leapfrogging : The Key to Africa's Development?
title_fullStr Leapfrogging : The Key to Africa's Development?
title_full_unstemmed Leapfrogging : The Key to Africa's Development?
title_sort leapfrogging : the key to africa's development?
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2017
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/121581505973379739/Leapfrogging-the-key-to-Africas-development-from-constraints-to-investment-opportunities
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/28440
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