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Press Release No. 17/2003CAPITAL
MARKETS WORKSHOP ADOPTS ROBUST ACTION PLAN
Addis
Ababa, 30 October 2003 (ECA) -- The African Capital Markets Development Workshop,
organized by the Economic Commission for Africa, in partnership with the Rand Merchant
Bank, closed yesterday in Johannesburg, South Africa, after three days of intensive
discussions.
The workshop underlined
the importance of capital markets for Africa's development, and, in order to build
capacity for African capital markets, identified the following priorities:
1. Establish a stable
political environment; appropriate and effective legal and regulatory frameworks; sound
macro-economic environment; a sound tax policy; a smooth and secure settlement system and
an active money market.
2. Encourage the
regional integration of African capital markets to overcome most of the current
constraints of African capital markets.
3. Educate the general
public, as well as stakeholders and policy-makers on the development of capital markets.
4. Encourage Governments
to play a role in the development of the markets through protection of investors,
enhancing transparency in the budget and borrowing process and ensuring fair, efficient
and transparent markets.
Speaking at the
workshop, Mr. Patrick Asea, Director of the Economic and Social Policy, ECA, said:
"We need to be ambitious. We must pursue capital market development that creates in
each country a diverse and competitive financial services industry that fosters innovation
and growth of national economics as they become increasingly integrated in the global
economy. This integration itself offers substantial opportunities for expanding the range
of financial products and services available in African countries." He added that the
focus must be on building capital markets, which provide new means for companies to
strengthen and diversify their financing structure, reduce financing costs and better
manage financial and other risks.
Also speaking on the
occasion, Mr. Paul Harris, Chairman of Rand Merchant Bank, said the African renaissance
being promoted by President Thabo Mbeki and other African leaders will not happen unless
the continent develops its soft infrastructure - i.e., sound, well-regulated financial
markets. " Hard infrastructure such as roads, buildings and telecommunications are
the easy part," said Harris. "Soft infrastructure is much harder to put in
place. It involves the creation of a sound legal and regulatory framework free from
political interference - one in which investors can have confidence and contracts can be
enforced."
This was the first in a
series of regional workshops being organized by ECA on capital markets development and was
targeted at southern and eastern African countries.
In attendance were over
60 participants and resource persons, from Africa and Europe, including policymakers,
renowned academics, senior government officials, security market regulators, CEOs of stock
exchanges and other top private sector executives from Eastern and Southern Africa.
(END)
For more information on the workshop, please
contact:
Nii Wallace Bruce, Coordinator, Tel: 251-1 44 57 89, e-mail: wallace-bruce@un.org The documents of the workshop are available on: http://www.uneca.org/acmdp/ Issued by the ECA Communication Team |