Briefing
to the African Diplomatic Corps on the May 1996 Conference of Ministers
K. Y. Amoako,
Executive Secretary, ECA
23 April 1995
Excellencies,
Distinguished Guests,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
I. Welcome to the first meeting in
this new conference centre, an initiative of the African delegates to the General Assembly
over a decade ago. It is fitting that you have the first use. We will have an official
dedication soon, but we hope that in this trial run, we can start sharing the pride
together of meeting in this magnificent place.
II. Today there are three
purposes for my remarks
A. To Brief you on the up-coming
Conference of Ministers
B. To particularly Brief you on the
Process of Renewal at ECA, which will be the heart of the agenda of this meeting of the
Conference.
C. And to Ask your help to make the
Conference a major Success.
III. The Conference of Ministers
A. Part I of the agenda for the
Conference and the Conference
Theme is: Meeting the Challenges of
Africa's development in the 21st Century: The Role of ECA. Within this Theme we present
our proposed Renewal and our proposed medium term plan.
The Renewal is enormously important
for the success of your Commission. Permit me to explain.
(((lights down))))
B. Our Perspective is not different
from Yours
1. We are Committed to Renew ECA to SERVE
AFRICA BETTER
In so doing we, like you, have a Vision
of Africa for the 21st Century. It is a progressive vision.
We see a Renewed Africa:
--with Rising GDP, taking
advantage of solid global growth, projected at 5.2% over the next decade and slightly
less, but still solid for Africa, a growth level which will help reduce poverty.
-- We see Continuing Reforms,
carried out with more experience and prudence than the past, and incorporating balanced
safety nets for the poor.
These reforms will transit into more
normal patterns of good governance.
-- We see Improved Terms of Trade
as Africa learns to live in the post Uruguay Round World and where the pace of decline in
terms of trade slows down;
-- We see Africa Connected
within itself so that while proud cultural and linguistic traditions continue, the old
divides of trade along artificial lines are replaced by new solidarities; and that Africa
is profitably connected with the global economy.
C. Renewed ECA
1. To make this vision happen will
require work from all of us including a Renewed ECA:
-- ECA needs a renewal because, your
Governments, the General Assembly and a number of global and regional fora have given us
specific Responsibilities;
-- Because there are excellent new opportunities;
as Africa is at a turning point;
-- Because you and I are part of a new
generation of workers and leaders, aware of the wretched colonial past, but not
immobilized by it;
-- Because marginalization must be
arrested by a United Africa;
-- Because we have new UN
Responsibilities, including co-managing the UN System-wide Special Initiative for
Africa,
-- Because there is need for us to
be a positive force, to emphasize what works and to bolster faith in itself;
-- And because We can Do Better.
2. In our renewal our Guiding
Principles are:
-- Excellence;
-- Cost Effectiveness; and
-- Partnership.
3. We aim to have:
-- sharper programme focus
-- far more use of new
technologies in our operations;
-- we will further foster Africa's
growing pluralistic forces, particularly the private sector and civil society;
-- we will strive for consensus;
-- we will have much greater outreach;
and
-- we will increase our accountability
to Member States, the UN and Africans at large.
4. The Process of Renewal has
involved:
-- Expert Diagnosis by a
number of world class centres of expertise;
-- Major Reviews in which
there has been more in-house participation than in any time in memory;
-- A major Consultation two
months ago on our improved programmes with an impressive group of leading ministers,
academics and NGO and private sector leaders. As well, I have visited a number of African
capitals, most recently in North Africa, meeting with ministers and heads of state.
5. From all this we are underway to
carry out:
-- a major reorganization
-- a redeployment of staff
based on careful skills assessments and strict adherence to UN personnel rules;
-- a series of management reforms;
-- systems to better assure full accountability;
-- a much improved personnel
system where fairness, transparency and high professionalism will be the rule;
-- and a series of Institution
Strengthening Steps
-- Training of staff;
-- Skills upgrading;
-- Fellowships to allow
outstanding younger Africans to work with us; and
-- Sabbaticals to allow
leading academics to spend time with us.
6. The background document presents
to you and the Ministers an important proposal for Reforming ECA's Programmes.
Our consultations, all my meetings with your governments, and a recent consultative
meeting with 20 donors all urged us to Focus carefully.
a. From 21 programme areas in 9
themes, we will have five themes and two cross-cutting issues.
b. The themes are spelled out in the
documentation. I will just mention them:
-- Facilitating economic and
social policy analysis, where we will sharpen our focus to give added emphasis to
remedies to poverty and to highlighting best practices in Africa's economic and social
policies;
-- Ensuring food security and
sustainable development where the foundations of so much development: food security,
population and environment, will be the focus.
-- Strengthening development
management to continue key work on fostering effective public sectors, the private
sector and civil society;
-- Harnessing information for
development, an expansion of exiting work which could help Africa leapfrog years of
effort; and
-- Promoting regional cooperation
and integration to work on the Abuja Treaty in carrying out shared responsibilities
with OAU and ADB, to help sub-regional organizations, and to carry out responsibilities in
transport and energy.
7. Our Two Cross-Cutting Themes
are:
Gender where we will engender
all our programmes and upgrade our African Centre for Women. I believe the gender issue is
one of the keys to progress in Africa and elsewhere;
and
Capacity building, which also
will cross-cut ECA's programmes.
We look forward to the discussion on
these programme emphases in the Conference of Ministers. Our consultations within Africa
and with the donors have been very constructive and have yielded consistently constructive
views on these recommended programme frameworks. The advice and guidance from the
Conference of Ministers will be the capstone of these discussions.
8. ECA's Operations will strive to
position ECA to become a much improved:
* -- Think tank for Africa;
-- a Clearing House for best
practices in Africa;
-- a policy integrator being
not the sole-source producer of thinking, but the integrator of the best minds we can find
in Africa;
-- and a Catalyst for people
with good Ideas
9. We will also reform ECA's Modalities
of implementation creating New Ways to Operate commensurate with an organization
aiming to be of service in the 21st century.
-- We will use more electronic
means of communication.
-- We are improving Dissemination
of our products;
-- We will improve country
targeting to be of better service;
-- We will produce fewer, but more policy
relevant reports;
-- We will hold fewer but
more goal-oriented Meetings; and
-- We will work with Member States
to rationalize sponsored institutions which are either duplicative or unviable.
D. We are Part of the United
Nations
1. That brings us strengths
by association with a number of essential institutions, and we will work closer within the
UN family.
* 2. We have new responsibilities
from the UN in that I co-chair the UN System-wide Special Initiative on Africa,
which so many of you
* helped to launch one month ago.
* and we are likely to receive new
responsibilities to help harmonize the UN's work in Africa.
3. Even if the UN did not have a Budget
Squeeze we would undertake these reforms because we must Serve Africa Better.
* E. In all our work we will be Seeking
Partnerships
Even the largest organizations in
the world do this. A collection of 200 professionals can hardly do less.
1. Within Africa we will be Networking
significantly with policy networks and centres.
We will be helping to create firmer
links within and across sub-regional and linguistic networks.
2. We will foster South-South
cooperation with the help of regional UN commissions in Asia and Latin America.
This last week senior delegations
from China, India and Indonesia came to discuss several concert linkages. There is great
promise in working with these countries, as many of you know firsthand.
3. And we will partner With
Donors, seeking help in capacity building tasks for the institution and for strengthened
programmes. In our meeting last week with 20 donors, including the G-7 countries,
the Scandinavians, Austria, Belgium, The Netherlands, the Bretton Woods
institutions, the Carnegie Corporation, and, as I said, China, India and
Indonesia.
There was firm support for
the renewal process; consistent advice to focus ECA's programmes sharply
within the proposed programme framework and the promise that if the reforms are
implemented, important support will be likely.
F. The spirit of all this, was
caught by a leading South African academic who attended our January consultation when he
said that the renewed ECA we proposed would allow Africa to say:
"This is our institution,
carrying out our agenda on our continent."
IV. Next Steps
* Now let's talk about Next Steps
* At the Conference of Ministers
ECA's whole renewal and proposed focused programmes will be presented for approval and, I
hope, for counsel by the Ministers on choosing priorities within the programme framework.
We are ambitious but we are not large enough to do everything. I will pose trade-offs to
the Ministers in the hope that they will help ECA determine where the demand for our
national and regional services is greatest on given themes. To the extent we can focus
sharply our effectiveness will rise. This also has implications on mandates. Too many
mandates in the past has spread us too thin. We must work together to focus on the essential,
because the desireable is just too much.
Immediately after the Conference of
Ministers we will proceed with the Restructuring of the programme side of the House
(the Administrative side having already been restructured).
We will then move to programme
selection for the Medium-Term Plan on a careful basis, within the framework approved
by the Conference of Ministers, and we will also rationalize current programmes within the
approved framework, as possible and feasible.
* The Medium-Term Plan to be
presented, is congruent with the consolidated Programme framework I have presented to you.
With these important steps in place
the Future of ECA will be much brighter.
((lights up)))
I invite the support of your
Governments to the renewal and the related Medium Term Plan.
V. OTHER AGENDA ITEMS
There are other agenda items also of
importance
A. Part II of the agenda has three
items:
#1. A review of Africa's
socio-economic development situation and our projections for 1996.
#2. The UN System-wide Special
Initiative on Africa. Here I would hope the spotlight will be on the great potentialities
to Africa of this Special Initiative and, as well, the need for serious national planning
if your countries wish to take advantage of the major components in the Special
Initiative... basic education, health and household water supplies. The full report on the
Special initiative has been circulated to you as a Conference document.
#3. Exploiting Information
Technology. This is an Action Plan and it is close to my heart. A growing number of us
recognize the enormous potentials for Africa from the information revolution. Africa could
leapfrog years of development if it joins the information age. We have a chance at this
Conference of Ministers to agree on a responsible, African-defined framework for growing
the information revolution on this continent. ECA is an active player now and hopes to be
a very active partner with your countries in harnessing information for development.
Part III of the agenda has two very
useful items:
First, is on follow-up to
international and regional conferences. On this item you will find the U.N. far more
organized than in the past. All UN agency heads now see the follow-ups in a far more
integrated way, avoiding duplicative follow-up assignments when a similar conference
action has been repeated conference after conference.
The Second item under Part III is a
Joint OAU/ECA Progress Report on implementation of the Abuja Treaty. I want to stress this
item given the importance of the Treaty and a of a new era of collaboration which OAU
Secretary-General Salim Salim and I are leading for our two institutions. This report is
important. We hope to have a lot more to report to you in coming sessions.
Part IV are Statutory Issues,
including a progress report on our important On-Going Programmes. We do have on-going
responsibilities and we are working hard not to neglect them despite the difficult budget
situation of the UN and our necessary renewal.
The Conference will also consider a
number of resolutions from subsidiary bodies and in doing so I again urge us to focus on
the essential.
We also include a progress report on
evaluation at ECA. I merely wish to comment that we are re-engineering our systems to be
far more transparent and accountable. Programmes will be designed not to produce paper or
meetings, but to produce results of value to Africa. I hasten to say that I do not
minimize the numerous past accomplishments of ECA, but our management changes signal a
significantly different way of doing business, one that should make for better use of
resources and for far more accountability to the Conference of Ministers.
Special Events:
You will find in the agenda a number
of special events. As a special events. I have been inspired by the President of ECOSOC,
Ambassador Khan of Pakistan, who has been working hard to better tap the intellectual
talents present at ECOSOC meetings. For example he organized very useful high level panel
discussions as part of ECOSOC's meetings in Geneva last July. I, too, want to see if
together the Ministers and I can make the best possible use of our time together.
We are arranging an opening address
by an outstanding international figure.
There will be a panel discussion in
TEPCOW by leading experts on the topic: Framework Agenda for Building and Utilizing
Critical Capacities in Africa. This is a very important topic and we will cover it in an
innovative way.
There will be a panel at the
Conference on Poverty and Public Expenditures by leading international figures.
I also wish to explore in an orderly
way during the coming year other ways the utility and impact of the Minister's time and
the Conference process can be maximized.
In all this, ECA hopes that solid
substance and innovative features will add to the value of Conference meetings for your
delegation.
VI. ASKING YOUR HELP
Because the Renewal of ECA is
important to Africa, Because the Medium Term Programme will entail new services to Member
States and a new way of doing business, Because discussion of the UN System-wide Special
Initiative on Africa could provide sizeable potential resources for your countries, and
Because of special efforts to add significant substance and results from this Conference
of Ministers meeting... I have a request for you.
In case your Ministerial member of
the Conference is not yet planning to attend, I would ask you to draw upon my remarks to
make a case to the Minister to attend. We have already taken a number of steps to enhance
the level of participation and that may have helped a number of ministers to decide to
attend. But more Ministers could and, permit me to say, should attend, if at all possible.
This is a new era at ECA and having a true Ministerial Conference will expedite the
renewal of ECA and its improved service to the Member States.
Thank you so very much for attending
this briefing. Your personal interest in the Commission and its key meetings is of the
greatest importance to us.
If you have questions on the
up-coming Conference, I will try my best to answer them.
Again, Thank you, Excellencies,
Colleagues.
Note to KY:
1. We could also mention other
conference documents, e.g.
-- the JIU Evaluation of NADAF;
-- the Report on Subsidiary Bodies;
-- Evaluation of ECA natural
resource and energy programs.
2. Be very careful about
"Country Targeting". I would not talk at all about country representatives as
they may well fear we are going around them.
3. Be prepared to be asked why this
renewal is different from the one Yaker brought to them a few years ago. |