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| Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper (l) & Senegal President Macky Sall (r) |
AllAfrica
by Fawza Sheikh -- Toronto — With an initial focus on oil-producing
Nigeria and mineral-rich Ghana, Ottawa is bolstering its trade strategy in
Africa, but some within the international development and economic communities
have expressed concerns about Canada's approach.
The Canadian
government was criticized for cutting foreign aid a few years ago, and in
particular when Africa amassed some of the greatest hits.
The
Canadian International Development Agency ended bilateral programming in
countries where aid efforts are hindered by high operating costs, including
Rwanda, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Malawi and Niger. The agency also decided to reduce
and concentrate its bilateral programming in five states, including Mozambique,
Ethiopia and Tanzania.
Yet
last month, after years of viewing the continent as mainly a foreign aid
recipient, the Conservative government announced a trade mission slated for
next January encompassing the extractive resource industries and the
infrastructure sectors related to energy, power generation and mining.
Between
1995 and 2010, Africa's annual average GDP growth was 4.3 percent a year,
making the continent one of the fastest-growing regions of the world, Rudy
Husny, press secretary to Ed Fast, the Canadian minister of international
trade, wrote in an email to IPS. Solid economic growth is expected to continue
this year and in 2013, he noted.
Roughly
100 Canadian companies operate in Ghana, which offers a politically stable
business climate and respect for the rule of law, according to the trade
ministry. The two countries reported 321 million dollars in bilateral
merchandise trade in 2011, a 61-percent increase over 2010, Husny said.
In
2011, bilateral merchandise trade between Canada and Nigeria, Canada's largest
trading partner in sub-Saharan Africa and the continent's most-populous state,
equaled more than 2.7 billion dollars, a rise of 44 percent since 2010, the
ministry states.
The
fledgling Nigerian Canadian Business Association aims to assist Canadian and
Nigerian companies in doubling trade to six billion dollars by 2015.
Is
trade, not aid, the answer in Africa?
Without
a doubt, there is growing attention on "the very interesting economic
growth rates in Africa and also the wealth of natural resources that is very
attractive for Canadian companies," acknowledged Sylvie Perras, the
Africa-Canada Forum coordinator at the Canadian Council for International
Cooperation in Ottawa.
The
government of Prime Minister Stephen Harper is shifting from aid toward trade, Perras told IPS, conceding that Canadian
private sector development strategies for Africa are important but must be
consistent with poverty reduction and the development goals of African
countries themselves.
On the
whole, she said, a developing country is constrained from enhancing the
potential social, economic and environmental benefits of outside investment and
trade and from minimizing the potential damage that this funding may bring.
This is
why, she said, her organization is pushing for the inclusion of a human rights
impact assessment in all trade and investment agreements Ottawa strikes with
foreign governments.
Last
month, Canada concluded an investment promotion deal with Tanzania, a country
which will see increased Canadian investment in several sectors including
mining, oil and gas and transportation. Ottawa has also forged trade and
investment initiatives with Benin, Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Côte d'Ivoire,
Ghana, Tunisia, Zambia and Senegal.
As the
Canadian trade minister and his delegation head to West Africa early next year
to unearth opportunities in the extractive resource industry and infrastructure
sector, the CCIC, Perras' group, is also continuing to seek the strengthening
of Canadian companies' corporate social responsibility policies, especially in
relation to African mining activities.
"This
has very rarely been beneficial for African countries," Perras argued.
"We say that it creates jobs, or it creates revenue, but when we look at
it more closely, it's not necessarily the case."
Mineral-heavy
countries have not spurred economic development for their local populations,
according to a CCIC backgrounder, as high unemployment rates, debt and poverty
are widespread in mining communities.
According
to a report by the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development
issued earlier this year, the drop in Canada's overseas development assistance
since 2011, as well as a decision to zero in on fewer countries that are
predominantly middle income, "may undermine the support (Canada) has given
in recent years to poor countries with weak capacity, especially in sub-Saharan
Africa."
In
2011, Canada's net overseas development assistance fell to 5.3 billion dollars,
a decrease of 5.3 percent from 2010, states the peer review published by the
OECD's Development Assistance Committee.
In
the report, the OECD advised that Canada and other nations must ensure that
development objectives and partner country ownership are key to the programs it
supports, and that there is "no confusion" between development aims
and the promotion of commercial interests.
Moreover,
Canada's Official Development Assistance Accountability Act, which was enacted
in 2008, directs that aid money should consider the perspective of the poor,
human rights obligations and environmental standards, Perras added.
Although
Canadian foreign aid is still extremely important to Africa's funding of
health, governance, education and NGO development, conceded Lucien Bradet,
president and CEO of the Ottawa-based Canadian Council on Africa, "what we
have neglected in the past is being part of the economic development of Africa
in a sizeable manner".
"We
are not doing a good job," Bradet told IPS.
Canada's
bilateral trade with Africa jumped from an annual two billion dollars at the
beginning of the 21st century to 13 billion dollars, but it would be feasible
to increase these numbers by 15 percent to 20 percent a year, he said.
In
comparison, China, India, Turkey and Brazil are boosting by 25 percent to 40
percent a year their trade and technology relationships with Africa, he noted,
with China's trade growth dramatically leaping from 10 billion dollars a decade
ago to 160 billion dollars.
Economic
development offers an improved standard of living to developing-country
populations through investment and trade, and allows locals to manufacture,
export and establish their own enterprises, Bradet said.
The
more Canada facilitates these activities, the more it will be perceived as a
"significant partner in Africa, not only in aid but in economic
development", he added.

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