Ministerial Statement
Abuja,
Nigeria, 15 May 2005
1. We,
the African Ministers of Finance, Planning and Economic Development,
gathered in Abuja, 14-15 May 2005, under the auspices of the United
Nations Economic Commission for Africa (ECA), recognise that strong
political will, as well as bold and decisive action, is needed to
establish the conditions for achieving sustained economic growth
and eradicating poverty, as well as promoting sustainable development
in Africa. This is especially urgent, considering that five years
have passed since the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) were launched
and the target date is only ten years away.
2. After
discussion of the theme of our Conference, "Achieving the
Millennium Development Goals in Africa", we reaffirm the
vital importance of these goals as a framework for reducing poverty
and advancing development in Africa.
3. The
global consensus in support of meeting the MDGs is highly valuable
and opens new opportunities for broad collaboration to reducing
poverty. We are convinced that achieving the MDGs will be a critical
step on the road towards the far-reaching and sustainable development
to which we aspire.
4. We are
encouraged by progress in some parts of our continent, and in several
of our countries on individual MDGs, including progress by countries
with severe resource constraints. Yet the broad picture is not satisfactory.
Much faster and broader progress is needed. It is now critically
important that we review both the progress we have made and the
obstacles we have encountered in order to learn the lessons and
become more operational. In this respect, we support the preparation
of an African Common Position in the review of the MDGs.
5. Considering
a number of forthcoming high-level discussions, notably the African
Union Summit in July, the UN High-Level Dialogue on Financing for
Development in June, the G8 Summit in Gleneagles, Scotland, in July,
as well as the General Assembly MDG review summit in September,
we wish to set out some key actions we as policy makers must take
to achieve the MDGs in Africa, as well as highlight critical actions
that international community must take to enable us to meet our
objectives.
The
fruits of growth must be increased and shared
6. It is
clear that progress towards significantly reducing poverty and achieving
the MDGs has been hampered by insufficient economic growth, and
because the benefits of the growth achieved have not, for the most
part, been shared broadly across society. Going forward, it will
be important to expand growth in sectors that can generate greater
employment, and to invest more intensively in sectors such as health
and education that build human capacity to engage in productive
economic activity.
7. Other
factors limiting growth and the spread of its fruits include weak
governance, the impact of HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, malaria and other
diseases, gender inequality, violent conflicts and inadequate capacity,
as well as insufficient public investment and internal and external
resource mobilization. We must therefore develop holistic and comprehensive
strategies to address many challenges simultaneously.
8.
It is our firm belief that the way forward lies in accelerating
broadly-shared and sustained employment-generating economic growth
in the context of improved governance, including increased transparency
and reduced corruption, as well as strong investment in people,
particularly Africa's women who have long been excluded from full
economic participation in our societies. High levels of sustained
growth will provide the resources and capacity for the social spending
required to attack poverty directly while generating jobs required
to help people improve their own situation.
9. Consistent
with the 2004 AU Summit Declaration on Employment and Poverty Alleviation
in Burkina Faso, we commit to developing strategies for generating
decent and productive work for men and women as well as youth in
Africa, and to explicitly address employment generation issues in
national poverty reduction strategies.
Towards
local ownership and more effective national poverty reduction and
growth strategies
10. While
significant progress has been registered in the past five years
in the Poverty Reduction Strategy (PRS) process - notably higher
investment in education and health, as well as better public financial
and expenditure management - more work is needed to deepen national
ownership and leadership. African governments must frame and operationalize
poverty reduction and growth policies that integrate the MDGs as
key objectives. In this context, they must mainstream growth and
employment. as well as strengthen capacity at all levels concerned
with implementing those policies.
11. Poverty
reduction strategies must have broader and longer-term perspectives
and a deepening of ownership through meaningful stakeholder consultation,
addressing gender equality, population growth, capacity and regional
issues, including migration and other regional public goods policies.
Furthermore, there is need to address country-specific realities,
with particular attention to the special needs of Least Developed
Countries, and post-conflict and other fragile economies. Much has
been learned through the African Learning Group on PRSs organised
by ECA. From those consultations, it is now clear that we need to
move from preoccupation with the formal PRS towards a focus on the
content of growth and development strategies.
Greater
focus needed on trade, infrastructure and agriculture
12. Poverty
reduction requires growth and growth requires expanded markets and
much better access to the international as well as continental markets.
Trade is a vital engine of growth. We wish therefore to underscore
the importance for the continent, of a fair, non-discriminatory,
predictable, multilateral rules-based trading system. There is also
a need for significant improvement in market access, particularly
in agriculture and in other export areas of interest to African
countries. Within Africa, we must use the regional initiatives to
open up and encourage trade in goods and services amongst member
states. We call for the elimination of trade distorting domestic
support and export subsidies that have harmful implications for
African commodity exports. It is, therefore, necessary for all WTO
Members to work to ensure a successful 6th WTO Ministerial
Conference in Hong Kong in December, which will set the stage for
the early conclusion of the Doha Trade Round in 2006.
13. On
our side, and to ensure the expanded market size to make the required
dent on poverty, we need to think and act collectively. Whether
in sectors such as transportation, or in relation to general regional
public goods such as research and extension for agriculture or addressing
maternal and child health, HIV/AIDS tuberculosis, malaria, and other
diseases, we need regional approaches. The regional economic communities
are critical to collective action. As such, rationalizing them,
harmonizing their work and enabling them to better implement programmes
at sub-regional will greatly enhance efforts towards meeting the
MDGs.
14. Given
the critical importance of agriculture to development, poverty reduction,
and food security in Africa, the sector deserves special attention.
Some 60% of the total labour force in Africa works in agriculture,
providing livelihoods for 90% of people in rural areas, yet challenges
such as fragmented and underdeveloped markets, lack of access to
information, finance and land, poor infrastructure, and vulnerability
to external shocks and market barriers undermine the sector. Investment
in integrated water and agriculture development must urgently be
scaled up and the NEPAD Comprehensive African Agricultural Development
Programme (CAADP) supported and applied. We urge measures to promote
public-private partnerships to bring resources and infrastructural
development to the sector.
15. In
this regard, and in recognition that the private sector is the primary
engine of growth, we resolve to work harder to create the necessary
enabling environment, including the provision of peace and security,
quality public institutions that promote efficiency, improvements
in physical infrastructure, protection of the environment and natural
resources, consistent with NEPAD objectives, as well as other support
in terms of facilitating the use of quality human capital and technology.
16. Cutting
across all sectors of the economy and governance, inadequate capacity
has been a major constraint on progress. In this context we acknowledge
the need for intensive and extensive capacity development and retention
to strengthen governance and other development efforts. Efforts
to draw on and benefit from the expertise of Africans in the Diaspora
must be stepped up alongside work to improve skills, knowledge and
experience at home. In that context, we commend the work being accomplished
by the Collaborative African Budget Reform Initiative (CABRI) to
build capacity in public financial management. Recognizing the crucial
importance of reliable statistics for gauging and monitoring progress
toward the MDGs, we will give greater attention to the development
of strong statistical capacity at both the national and regional
levels and urge donors to do likewise.
Financing
a "big push" for Africa
17. Africa's
economic development is in the hands of Africans and we are committed
to achieving the MDGs by 2015. We therefore endorse the call made
by the United Nations Secretary General's report "In Larger
Freedom" that developing countries must draw up, by 2006,
practical national strategies to meet the MDGs, assess the financial
requirements and commit themselves to making the necessary public
investments. Above all, we in Africa must work harder to mobilize
our domestic resources to meet the Goals.
18. We
recognize, however, that in the immediate term our progress towards
the MDGs must be accelerated through a significant increase in resources
from outside. Our capacity to absorb aid has increased, making it
possible for us to make good use of additional resources. We therefore
acknowledge the call from the Commission for Africa's report for
"a big push" in financial support for Africa from the
international community in line with the global commitment to meeting
the MDGs, and in particular, the Commission's proposal for a major
fund to develop African infrastructure.
19. The
Commission has called for the doubling of Official Development Assistance
(ODA) to Africa and also proposes the creation of an International
Financing Facility to provide front-loading of aid flows for enhancing
predictability and planning. The United Nations Secretary General's
report also proposes a substantial upscaling of aid towards the
Monterrey target of 0.7 percent of developed countries' gross national
income. In warmly welcoming these proposals, we call on G8 leaders
to commit during the Gleneagles summit in July, to meeting their
existing ODA promises, as well as to helping to accelerate progress
by concretely contributing to Africa's MDG financing needs in line
with these reports' recommendations. We believe that the funds should
be used to fund a holistic package of support for Africa because
it is clear that without simultaneous and effective action on several
priority fronts, success is unlikely to be achieved.
20. We
recall our repeated emphasis in previous meetings for international
action to ensure a sustainable exit from Africa's onerous debt burden.
Most recently at a Conference of African Ministers of Economy and
Finance organised by the African Union Commission in collaboration
with the Government of Senegalin Dakar, we called for the debt impasse
to be broken within the coming year, and agreed on the need for
more radical action from the international community in this regard.
Such action should be in line with the Commission for Africa's recommendation
that debt relief should cover multilateral and bilateral debt, as
well as cover non-HIPC low-income countries and reduce debt stock
and debt service by up to 100 per cent. In this context we urge
African countries to act in solidarity. Above all, the key criteria
for debt relief should be the financing needs of the MDGs and overall
goal of poverty reduction. We cannot over-emphasise the critical
importance of such a measure to Africa's ability to be able to meet
the MDGs.
Improving
aid management and mutual accountability
21. Two
years ago in Addis Ababa we looked forward to discussing at this
meeting the findings of a NEPAD-commissioned report, prepared by
ECA together with the OECD-DAC, on how to practically apply and
monitor mutual accountability in Africa's relations with its international
partners. We have reviewed the report-the Mutual Review of Development
Effectiveness in the Context of NEPAD- tabled here in Abuja and
believe that it provides a valuable blueprint for action that we
can adopt at national level. We reaffirm our previous view that
future editions of the report should appear every two years but
note that there may be need for more frequent updates on progress
or reviews on specific issues in response to specific requirements.
We propose that, in future, the findings of APRM country studies
should provide a foundation for the monitoring of performance on
the African side. We call upon the OECD/DAC to collect information
on future aid commitments from budgetary and other information to
help enhance the predictability of aid flows to our countries.
22. There
is also a need for closer attention on the African side about ways
to improve aid management. While specific conditions and challenges
vary from country to country, our countries share many of the problems
that arise from unpredictable and short-term ODA flows, changeable
partner policies and practices, and lack of flexibility in the types
of aid instruments in use. With the possibility of increased flows
in prospect, there is a pressing need for an African architecture
or framework for aid management through which we may track, at regional
level, the flow, quality and effectiveness of aid.
23. Both
Africa and her partners must meet their obligations to make mutual
accountability an effective tool. Under NEPAD, African leaders have
committed to implementing sound economic policies, putting in place
measures of good political and economic governance, and investing
in people to achieve the MDGs. We acknowledge the progress made
by many African countries on accountability, adherence to constitutionalism,
multi-party political systems, public financial management, and
macroeconomic stability. We note particularly the strong interest
as evidenced by African governments in acceding to the African Peer
Review Mechanism (APRM). On the partner side, through the Monterrey
Consensus, the Paris Declaration on Aid Effectiveness and other
initiatives, development partners have committed to intensifying
efforts for enhanced ODA in terms of quality and quantity, harmonization
with national development strategies, composition, allocation and
predictability. We urge them to meet those commitments.
Fostering
greater institutional coherence and effectiveness
24. We
recognize that ECA continues to play a key role in promoting the
economic and social development of the continent. Now that the AU
has clearly articulated a strategic programme and given its pivotal
role in providing political leadership at the regional level, we
look forward to enhanced collaboration between ECA and the AU.
25. We
also note that the Commission is constrained by resources given
the tremendous rise in the demand for policy and economic analysis
driven by the development agenda in Africa. We therefore urge member
states to support ECA's efforts by generously contributing to the
United Nations Trust Fund for Africa in order to help ECA to continue
acting as a leading voice on Africa's development.
26. We
are grateful to the ECA for successfully convening this 38th
Conference of African Ministers of Finance, Planning, and Economic
Development. We also thank the Honourable Minister of Finance of
the Republic of Nigeria, Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, for her excellent
leadership during our deliberations. Finally, we wish to express
our sincere gratitude to His Excellency, President Olusegun Obasanjo,
and the Nigerian people for the warm hospitality accorded to us
during our stay in Abuja.
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