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Nigeria’s Abuja light Rail and Bole Airport in Ethiopia, things expected in Africa in 2018 says CNN

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History was being made across the continent in 2017. From the end of an era to the realization of grand ambitions, from thrilling discoveries, to tragedies that shocked the world.

Much of what mattered came out of the blue. But other stories, such as Kenya’s troubled election and the decline of iconic wild animals, were easier to anticipate.

The coming year will reveal its own surprises, but some of the potential highlights, lowlights, and events worth keeping an eye on are listed below.

 

Infrastructure projects

Nigeria’s transport network is due for a boost with the launch of the Abuja Light Rail network, which President Muhammadu Buhari has declared “98% complete,” covering 12 stations over a 28-mile route.

The president has also given assurances that the $1.5 billion Lagos to Ibadan segment of the Standard Gauge Railway will be finished in 2018, with a capacity of two million passengers per year.

The first phase of the expansion of Ethiopia’s Ababa Bole International Airport is expected to be complete this year, part of a $350 million development intended to cement the nation’s position as an aviation hub for East Africa.

Uganda will open its largest power plant, one of the continent’s largest hydropower facilities, in Karuma. Tunisia is pursuing what could become the world’s largest solar power plant.

Egypt aims to accelerate work on a new capital city outside of Cairo, although there are doubts over whether the $45 billion megaproject can be delivered as planned.

 

Elections

The long reign of Robert Mugabe is finally over and Zimbabwe is to vote for a new president in 2018. Mugabe’s successor Emmerson Mnangagwa has signaled his intention to usher in a more democratic era, although analysts have questioned whether opposition parties will be allowed to operate freely.

Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi could have a smooth path to reelection as his challengers are mired in difficulties. Former Prime Minister Ahmed Shafiq has suggested he is reconsidering his candidacy, after being deported from the UAE shortly after announcing his intention to run. Human rights lawyer Khaled Ali may be forced to withdraw as he faces a prison sentence over an alleged obscene gesture.

President of Cameroon Paul Biya is now one of Africa’s longest serving leaders after 35 years in power, but the 84-year-old has not revealed whether he intends to stand for another seven-year term. He may face legendary soccer player Samuel Eto’o if he does.

Sierra Leone will certainly have a new president as incumbent Ernest Bai Koroma is no longer eligible after two terms in power. Koroma’s party has chosen current Foreign Minister Dr. Samura Camara as its candidate, who will run against former military leader Julius Maada Bio.

War-torn Mali is also scheduled to go to the polls, although regional elections have been postponed due to security concerns.

 

Business

The battle of the taxi apps will be fiercely contested. Global giant Uber has signalled its intentions with a new $20 million base in Cairo, and it is establishing a strong presence across sub-Saharan African markets including South Africa, Nigeria and Kenya. But local rivals such as Little and Africab are using their superior knowledge of African markets to fight back.

Governments and businesses will seek to take greater advantage of the “Blue Economy.” Thirty eight of 54 African states have a coastline but most are failing to cash in on their marine resources. The African Union (AU) and UN Economic Commission for Africa (UNECA) have outlined plans to turn the tide such as through cultivating fisheries and eco-tourism.

The AU is expected to adopt a draft agreement of flagship initiative the Continental Free Trade Area (CFTA), aimed at boosting passage of goods, people and services between borders, spurring growth and development among member states.

Liberalization of gambling laws has led to strong growth of the industry in recent years in major economies such as Ghana and Kenya. But governments are now seeking control of this trend, such as through a steep tax on gambling revenue in Kenya.

 

War and peace

Somalia remains the African country worst affected by conflict violence, according to the Armed Conflict Location and Event Data Project (ACLED), with more than 3,000 deaths in 2017 including a terror attack in Mogadishu that killed more than 300 people. Somalia has not seen sustained peace for several decades now, but there is sufficient confidence in the government’s security forces that the African Union Mission in Somalia is being scaled down.

The uprising that became a civil war in Libya shows little sign of abating and continues to throw up fresh horrors, such as the slave market revealed by CNN. The UN is pursuing elections to deliver a government with popular legitimacy, while an international conference will be held in March to aid the reconstruction of Benghazi.

The conflict in South Sudan has now claimed over 50,000 lives, despite a heavy UN presence in the young country and previous peace agreements between the government and rebels. A new ceasefire deal was signed in December but violations have already been alleged.

The 2012 jihadist insurgency in Mali has not yet been defeated by the G5 Sahel, a regional army with support from France. Peace initiatives have stalled and elections have been postponed, suggesting another troubled year in store.

 

Elsewhere

Governments and commodity traders will face sustained pressure from anti-corruption campaigners over the revelations in last year’s Paradise Papers, with the likelihood of further leaks to come. The seizure of funds from the Obiang family in Equatorial Guinea and the Abacha family in Nigeria offer a template.

As the US looks to pare down its foreign aid budget, Turkey could become China’s major challenger in Africa. Construction firm Yapi Merkezi has been awarded a $1.9 billion contract to deliver a high-spec railway in Tanzania, the company’s second major contract in the country in 2017, and Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has been working hard to drum up new business on the continent.

Cameroon and the DR Congo are among the African governments to shut down internet access in 2017, a common response to unrest. But this approach will come under growing pressure, as connectivity becomes a public expectation and economies become more reliant on the web. One NGO found that shutdowns have cost African governments $237 million since 2015.

In a World Cup year, Senegal are the highest-ranked African team to qualify but a lot can change between now and July. Much is expected from a resurgent Nigeria, while Egyptian hopes are high for their first World Cup since 1990, driven by Liverpool star Mohamed Salah.

(Source: edition.cnn.com)

Air France to increase frequency to 4x per week

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French carrier, Air France, is to increase its frequency on the Paris-Accra-Lome route from the current 3x weekly flight to 4x weekly starting this summer.

The airline, per its summer schedule, will operate the Paris-Accra-Lome flights on Mondays, Wednesdays, Thursdays, Saturdays.

Country Manager of the Air France-KLM, Dick van Nieuwenhuyzen, that Air France will operate the new schedule on an Airbus A330.

The new schedule will allow the European carrier optimize the use of its fleet while connecting neigbouring cities.

Air France, headquartered in Tremblay-en-France, is a subsidiary of the Air France–KLM Group and a founding member of the SkyTeam global airline alliance.

Air France’s hub at Paris-Charles de Gaulle, in the heart of Europe, is a genuine gateway to the rest of the world from Africa. About 6,500 Air France staff work at the facility, serving about 100,000 passengers every day and 25,000 weekly connecting passengers.

Dubai through the eyes of Emirates’ Captain Julian Quao

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Growing up, my dream was to have an opportunity to soar across the sky flying the aircraft of a well-respected airline company. I took the phrase “working on a dream” so seriously that my entire existence revolved around being able to cruise at 39,000 feet one day, dressed in a starched double-breasted blazer with the accompanying winged badge and my pilot hat. Those were the days when I was growing up in Ghana as the son of an aeronautical engineer.

My dad worked for Ghana Airways. He was in charge of research and development, testing, parts assembly and the maintenance of aircrafts. He also studied the effects of aircraft on the environment, evaluating new aircraft technologies and fuel efficiency of the Ghana Airways planes. I think my dad was my motivation in deciding to become a pilot.

Today, the dream is a reality. Just a couple of weeks ago, I clocked ten years of working with Emirates in Dubai as a pilot and now captain. I’ve lived in Dubai for a decade now.  Dubai has gained worldwide recognition for its pioneering spirit. For some people, it is a place to get away from the hustle and bustle of regular everyday life. To others, it presents the opportunity for career progress. But to me, it is home.

When I first got the offer to work with Emirates as a pilot, I was thrilled to commence a new career journey in a progressive, contemporary and cosmopolitan city like Dubai.

Despite having some logistics concerns and adjustment worries, I sooner realised my fears were unfounded. We had barely relocated into our new home when I realized my family had settled in perfectly. My children have made the best of friends here, they attend a great school, my wife found her dream job. Moving to Dubai has been a blessing not just for me but my entire family. It introduced us to a new level of lifestyle– affordable yet quality healthcare, secure living environment, visionary technological advancements and several others.

To say I love my job will be the understatement of the year. Outside of my family and the few hobbies I have, nothing gives me more joy than flying Emirates aircraft. Each time I sit in the cockpit, I feel like a newbie pilot fresh out of flying school, with all the giddiness to boot. It’s like falling in love or reconnecting with a long lost best friend every single flight for the past decade; nothing comes close to this.

Making the decision to join Emirates was a fairly simple one. Emirates was the best way forward in terms of career progression and opportunities such as upgrading to captain. And one of the best parts about working for Emirates, for me, is the advanced roster system that gives me the flexibility to enjoy equal time flying and pursuing my career as well as spending adequate time with my family.

I love flying with Emirates and cannot imagine myself flying with any other airline. Flying with Emirates offers me more than150 destinations to fly to across the globe. Apart from the destinations, I greatly enjoy flying the well-maintained, large fleet of aircraft and the multicultural workforce I get to work with each day. I’ve made some great connections through working with Emirates and these people have graduated from colleagues and friends to become family.

I especially enjoy flying to Ghana because it allows me the opportunity to catch up with old friends and some extended family members. I always take time out to visit new places springing up across the country. Every time I come back home, I hear about a new place I have to visit. I visited Aqua Safari in Ada on one of these vacations and it has become one of my favourite places in Ghana. The nice and serene environment allows me to relax and unwind from my otherwise busy schedules. I am able to engage in water sports, hike and enjoy delicious foods I have not had in a while.

Having my family with me in Dubai has always allowed me to see Dubai as my second home. It is the place I build my family, create memories, share laughter and celebrate life events. I love travelling the world and I particularly enjoy the fact that as an Emirates captain, I get to travel to over 80 countries. Nevertheless, I always look forward to coming back home to Dubai, because Dubai is home for me and it will always be, just as Ghana is.

‘Ghana’s Great Expectations’: An interview with Dr. Ernest Addison, Governor, Bank of Ghana

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PRH: The Bank of Ghana plays a crucial role in formulating and implementing policy in the banking sector. What are you doing to ensure Ghana’s balanced and sustainable economic growth?

Dr. Addison: The core mandate of the Bank of Ghana as the Central Bank is price stability. In broad terms, you have to look at Ghana as a small open economy which is subject to both internal and external shocks. Therefore, there is need for a policy framework that will deliver stability and as a central bank, our part in that policy framework is to use our monetary policy tools and instruments to deliver on price and exchange rate stability. We argue that macroeconomic stability creates a conducive economic environment that provides certainty to the private sector and allows it to take appropriate decisions to invest and grow the economy – this is the theory underlying the importance of stability. The channels affect both producers in terms of the allocative efficiency associated with a stable environment and for consumers who can receive a stable real wage and therefore afford higher levels of consumption than you otherwise would in an unstable environment. For instance, implementation of policies to ensure stability this year has yielded positive results.   Alongside fiscal consolidation that the government has undertaken, with the monetary policy stance of the Central Bank, we have seen the rates of inflation come down from 15.4% to the latest figure of 11.7%. The exchange rate has also remained relatively stable, and we are seeing a higher build-up in foreign exchange reserves. These are all supporting the higher quarterly growth rates we are witnessing which results are almost to the letter in terms of what the theory says. On the financial markets, Ghana’s sovereign spread started the year at about 600 basis points and at the end of the year we are at 350 basis points, reflecting the progress we are making in terms of macroeconomic stability.

 

PRH: Could you comment on the loosening of monetary policy and what it could eventually impact in terms of lending rates across the banks?

EA: I don’t even see that as a loosening of monetary policy, but rather the dividends that come with the decline in inflation rates because the overall objective of monetary policy is low and stable inflation. As we see the inflation rate going down at least we derive the dividend of a lower policy rate and then we expect this will transmit into lower lending rates which would allow the private sector to grow. The broad assessment is that the macroeconomic risks associated with the Ghanaian economy are being reduced, which supports the sovereign spreads on Ghana’s instruments becoming tighter and tighter because the perceptions about the risks have eased considerably.

 

PRH: What do you expect in terms of the exchange rate fluctuations?

EA: In terms of the currency we have also been, in a sense, fortunate because apart from the impact of the policy framework that has been put into place, we have benefited from a relatively strong export performance this year. This has been underpinned by higher oil output leading to higher oil export revenues; higher gold production also leading to higher receipts from gold and cocoa production has remained relatively robust so the trade balance recorded a surplus this year compared to a deficit of a similar magnitude a year ago. That obviously has helped us build additional reserves which are currently around US$7.4 billion dollars, 4.1 months of import cover. This is reflected in the behaviour of the local currency in terms of the stability. Obviously, in the last quarter of this year, we have seen a little bit more volatility due to some imperfections of the market which does not reflect the fundamentals. Currently, we have a stronger and growing economy; inflation is trending down and we are building up more foreign exchange reserves. All these are supportive of a relatively stable local currency.

 

PRH: What can we expect for next year in terms of GDP growth?

EA: The budget estimated real GDP growth of about 6.8%, which is consistent with what we have in the medium-term macro framework where the objective is to grow at above 6% per year. Obviously, the current growth rates are mainly oil-driven but looking ahead, we expect that improvement in private sector credit extension, together with the implementation of growth-enhancing government initiatives such as “One District One Factory”; “Planting for Food and Jobs”, would provide a stronger impetus for non-oil growth and keep overall GDP growth robust at above 7% over the medium-term.

 

PRH: From my small sample of the market I had the feeling that the economy retracted in the last year as there was little liquidity in the private sector, but there does still seem to be a lot of hope that 2018 will see better times across all sectors of the economy…

EA: This is where I bring in the banking sector. We saw at the beginning of the year that the banking sector took the brunt of the slow growth in 2016 due to high non-performing loans, energy sector problems with credit having to be extended to the sector etc. So, this year, we have had the banks focus on cleaning up their books. We started the year with about nine banks not meeting the capital adequacy ratio of 10%, but at least seven of them were able to improve to meet the minimum capital adequacy requirement over the period while we had to resolve two banks i.e. given them to GCB Bank through the Purchase and Assumption agreement. We also announced the new minimum capital requirement for banks for next year and looking back, I think we have gone through the worst in terms of the numbers in the slowdown in private sector credit. If you look at the recent data, you would see that credit to the private sector is beginning to pick up and we expect that to continue through next year.

 

PRH: You have raised the minimum capital requirement twice in 2017…?

EA: The first one had to do with the minimum capital adequacy ratio and the second one was the minimum capital requirement which was increased from GH₵120 million to GH₵400 million. At the time that the GH₵120 million was announced, I think that the Cedi to US dollar exchange rate was around 2.1, so essentially, we moved backwards from a banking sector that had a US$55million dollar minimum capital requirement to about US$30 million due to exchange rate depreciation. In fact, the new minimum capital is now being moved to around US$90 million.

 

PRH: The local press reported that early last year only three banks fulfilled the minimum capital requirement?

EA: There were about four or five of them that would meet the GH₵400 million already.

 

PRH: So how do you expect the banking sector to look this time next year?

EA: We expect that the banks will consolidate. We are aiming for banks that will be big enough to help finance high-valued projects that would be transformative. This is the idea that the banks will finance transformative projects. You would be surprised at the interest that people have in the banking sector, coupled with the recent development in terms of improved confidence and macro consolidation, we continue to receive a lot of interest in the sector. I don’t think that the problem [with banks] will be meeting the capital requirement. The cultural issues with the domestic capital owners who want to preserve ownership controls and do not want to be diluted may be factor but ultimately, they will have to make the choice at the appropriate time. Banks that are willing to merge with other banks will find willing partners.

 

PRH: The intention being to boost the overall strength of the banking sector….

EA: But not only that, our banking sector is also confronted with the problem of very high cost of doing business and prone to very high interest rates. For instance, lending rates are around 30%. We cannot make a difference with those high interest rates, so we expect that when we have larger banks, they will take advantage of the economies of scale and unit costs associated with banking. This coupled with the on-going macro stabilisation should see lending rates come down significantly.

 

PRH: The cost of financing was a major issue in Ghana seven years ago already. How are we going to change what we weren’t able to under previous governments?

EA: In the past, we had a model where we liberalised entry into the banking system so you had over thirty banks, each one carrying very high overheads costs relating to software, buildings, transport, wages, rents etc. These were very demanding, especially for relatively small banks, and they had to find the revenue through higher interest rates to pay for these high overhead costs. Now we are saying let’s consolidate, let’s have bigger operations – once you have bigger operations, your fixed costs, though relatively high, would be run based on higher operations, so in that sense the unit costs surrounding the provision of banking services should go down. Just by re-examining that model you should be able to see interest rates responding.

 

PRH: When do you think we could expect to see this reflected in the numbers?

EA: First, we need to see the consolidation happening. Once that kicks off, I don’t know how many banks we will end up with, but you will then see more efficient pricing in the market.

 

PRH: How do you think you are improving the operating environment for banks in the country as a whole, for example with the US$7.4 billion dollar foreign reserve you mentioned?

EA: The reserve adequacy ratio keeps an assurance in the foreign exchange market. That assurance helps to maintain the exchange stability that we are seeing. Once you have a stable exchange rate and improved economic environment, doing business should be easier. In seeking to improve the operating environment for banks, we are currently collaborating with banks to draft a new corporate governance framework which is intended to reinforce public trust and enhance credibility in the entire financial system.

 

PRH: And in terms of investor confidence, there seems to still be a sense of renewed confidence in Ghana? Do you feel partly responsible?

EA: I think it is part of the package. The Central Bank is part of that policy package and that renewed confidence, we are seeing it in our bond market where non-resident investors are picking up local currency bonds, if they didn’t have confidence in the Central Bank to maintain a stable economy, no non-resident investor would put money into government bonds. We definitely feel partly responsible for that renewed confidence.

 

PRH: On the subject of bonds could you comment on the importance for the country of raising capital through government bonds?

EA: The first ever bond was successfully issued in 2007 and that demonstrated strong economic management after completion of the HIPC program and significant improvement in the country’s credit worthiness.  This was demonstrated very well when the bond was twice over subscribed. Since then, many other African countries have gone to the capital market. I think Ghana is one of the few African countries that has opened its domestic market to non-resident investors. That for me is also another attestation of the confidence that non-residents have in terms of the economic management because they are sure that after investing in Ghana’s three or five-year bonds, they can repatriate that investment on maturity and not lose value due to large exchange rate depreciation.

 

PRH: What are the next priorities to further strengthen the current economic performance?

EA: You are looking at a three-year macro framework, this is only the first year. Maybe we should stress the importance of consistency of policy, we need to be consistent and deliver this on a longer-term basis. It is not about two or three years it is about five, ten-year periods of stability, which would roll in the real dividends to the Ghanaian economy and we have only seen one year of successful implementation of that policy framework so far. I think the effort must be in sustaining the progress that we have made, staying the course of fiscal consolidation, keeping monetary policy on track to ease inflation towards the low single digits and implementing policies that would help boost export earnings. All those measures would help us in terms of delivering stability on a more sustainable, longer-term basis.

 

PRH: Drawing on your extensive and distinguished academic and professional precedents, what would you say has been your most challenging role to date?

EA: I think that the job of the Governor is very challenging. As you know, I came into the position with nine banks on the line for possible closure. We resolved only two and by way of purchase and assumption model which is the least costly option, which preserved depositors’ funds, saved jobs and safeguarded the stability of the financial sector.

 

 

RH: Thank-you!

Disclaimer: Please be advised that this transcription was done from an audio recording. As such, the quality of the transcript is impacted by the quality of the recording and may not be as accurate as having legal certification that can verify terminology and speaker identifications. Therefore, please note that the certification is to the “best of our skill and ability”. In some instances, words have been modified to avoid repetition but not content. Please revise the transcript and adapt should the content not be relevant or fit for publication. 

Credit

Interview by Eleanor Legge-Bourke

Transcribed by Thomas Robinson

Reaching poor people

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Sobering evidence from Africa illustrates how hard it is to target anti-poverty efforts well

It has often been said that the world’s aggregate poverty gap—the total monetary amount by which all poor people fall below the poverty line—is modest when one uses poverty lines typical of low-income countries.  For example, Annie Lowrey wrote in the New York Times magazine on Feb. 23, 2017, that “one estimate recently calculated that the global poverty gap is roughly what Americans spend on lottery tickets every year, and it is about half of what the world spends on foreign aid”.

The implication is sometimes drawn that only a modest sum of money is needed to eliminate global poverty—to bring all poor people up to the international poverty line that separates the poor from the non-poor.

However, eliminating poverty is a lot harder than the size of the aggregate poverty gap might suggest.  Identifying who is poor and by how much is particularly challenging. The calculation cited in the New York Times could therefore be way off the mark. Some who are truly poor go wanting while funds end up in the hands of others. Because of imperfect information about levels of living, the amount of money needed to eliminate poverty can quickly balloon.

We have tried to assess whether the data typically available and routinely used by policymakers in sub-Saharan Africa—the poorest region of the world by most measures—are adequate to reliably determine who is poor.

Finding poor households

Identifying poor households is often complicated by a lack of reliable data. It is difficult, or even impossible, in many cases to assess the living standards of all individuals in the population. In higher-income countries, income tax records help. But tax records are not a feasible option in many developing economies, given that many households work in the informal sector or traditional agriculture.

Governments are often hindered by constraints on record-keeping for reliably measuring all incomes, and these constraints can be severe in poor countries. In addition, household-level data may not be a good indicator of the living standards of individuals within the household.

To try to overcome this obstacle, governments across the world have increasingly turned to some form of proxy means-test to identify poor households. The idea is simple. A score is given to each household based on a (usually small) set of readily observable household characteristics that are suggestive of whether a household is poor. Such characteristics may include the size of the household; the gender of the head of the household; the demographic composition of the household; the type of dwelling in which the family lives; what the dwelling is made of; and the assets a household has (for example, whether the household owns basic items such as a radio or phone). Each of the characteristics is given a weight based on its observed statistical relationship with household consumption based on nationally representative sample surveys.

Among researchers and practitioners there has been much debate about the efficacy of proxy means-tests (that is, how well the characteristics substitute for direct evidence of income or consumption).  Supporters claim that it is a reliable method; critics say that the approach gives unsatisfactory predictions about who is poor and who is not. Concerns have also been raised about lack of transparency and divisiveness within communities, whereby similar households are treated very differently based on some opaque score on a proxy means test.

We study the performance of this popular method in a number of African countries. Our results point to both the strengths and weaknesses of the method. The good news is that proxy means-tests can substantially reduce the inclusion of non-poor households in an anti-poverty programme; in most cases we studied, the inclusion error rate can be at least halved. The bad news is that this comes at the cost of substantial exclusion of the poor. And when the objective is to reduce poverty, policymakers should be worried about exclusions.

A key reason for the high exclusion error rates is that the standard proxy means-test works less well near the extremes of the distribution of household consumption. The statistical properties of the method often lead it to overestimate living standards for the poorest (and underestimate them for the richest). When we compare actual household consumption to the predicted values from the proxy means-test, it becomes clear just how much this overestimation matters.

For the poorest 20 percent of households, in terms of actual consumption, proxy means-tests yield predicted values that are between 50 percent and 100 percent higher than actual consumption. This means that the test misses many of the poorest households in almost all countries: on average, 80 percent of poor households are counted as non-poor by the test, and 40 percent of non-poor households are counted as poor.

For two of the countries in our study, Ethiopia and Nigeria, the chart shows the relationship between actual consumption and the scores using a standard proxy means-test. In both countries, there is a strong positive relationship between the proxy means-test scores and actual consumption; most of those deemed not to be poor based on the score are correctly classified. But there are substantial exclusion errors, strikingly so for Ethiopia where 95 percent of the poor are identified as non-poor (compared with 55 percent for Nigeria). But for both countries, and indeed for all those in our study, the commonly used proxy variables are clearly not doing a very good job of distinguishing poor households.

For a fixed budget, we find that a common form of the proxy means-test reduces poverty only slightly more on average than a universal basic income, in which everyone gets the same transfer whether they are rich, poor, or middle-income. One can do about as well as the proxy means-test by making a uniform transfer based on just a few household-level characteristics, such as gender of the household head or whether the household has young children. Indeed, once the often-long delays in implementing proxy means-tests and households’ changing circumstances are considered, these simpler targetting methods perform better on average in bringing down the poverty rate. When the costs of constructing and implementing the proxy means-test are considered, these simpler targetting methods may be preferable in terms of poverty reduction for a given budget.

Pinpointing poor individuals

Even if poor households could be correctly targetted, it is still unclear whether that ensures poor individuals will be reached. Poverty is individual deprivation, but is almost invariably measured using household data. Typically, every member of a poor household is assumed to be poor, and every member of a non-poor household is assumed not to be poor.

But the widely used household-based measures may not do a good job of identifying disadvantaged individuals who might share relatively little in the household’s aggregate consumption or face impediments in accessing opportunities outside the household—including health, education, and financial services.                                                                             Missing data on individual-level poverty presents a significant hurdle to examining whether anti-poverty programmes targetyed at poor households reach poor people. Individual-level consumption is not easily collected, and it is difficult to determine how income earned by individuals is shared with other household members.

For example, in a household where only one member works income could be shared equally among all members – or one of them may take a disproportionate share. Specific members, such as the elderly or orphans, may be discriminated against. Thus, we can find non-poor individuals residing in poor households and poor individuals in non-poor households.

One dimension of individual welfare that is suggestive of poverty and can be observed in many surveys is nutritional status. We undertook a comprehensive study of the relationship between household wealth (measured by either an index of assets owned or household per capita consumption) and individual nutritional status for 30 countries in sub-Saharan Africa using the Demographic and Health Surveys.

We find a reasonably robust relationship between household wealth and undernutrition indicators for women and children—that is, the incidence of undernutrition tends to fall as household wealth rises. Nonetheless, about three-quarters of underweight women and undernourished children are not found in the poorest 20 percent of households. And about half are not found in the poorest 40 percent. Moreover, countries with a higher overall incidence of undernutrition tend to be those in which a larger share of the undernourished are found in non-poor families.

There are several potential explanations for these results. The demographic imbalance between poor and non-poor households, such as poor households having more children than non-poor households, does not turn out to be a major factor. While measurement errors are clearly present, our tests do not suggest that this is the main reason for our findings.

Intrahousehold inequality helps explain why such a large proportion of undernourished women and children reside in non-poor households. We find that a sizable proportion of undernourished women and children live in households where a male head of household is not underweight — although sometimes the male head is underweight and other family members are not.

However, intrahousehold inequality is only part of the explanation. This is evident when we redo our calculations assuming that there is no intrahousehold inequality (every household member is assigned the average household nutritional status). Even then, we find that a sizable share of undernourished women and children are not found in poor households as identified in the survey data. This appears to be because both poor and non-poor households living in impoverished areas often share the same health environment and are thus exposed to similar health risks.  We find evidence consistent with this explanation using data on the incidence of illness in children across the household wealth distribution.

No easy solution

Information is not of course the only factor affecting antipoverty policies; government budget constraints (also reflecting the government’s capacity to raise revenue), incentive effects (such as when non-poor people change their behavior to receive benefits intended for the poor), and political economy (when some nonpoor people do not support efforts to help poor people) must also be considered. But information is undeniably an important constraint. Policymakers need to have realistic expectations of what can be accomplished given the reliability of available data.

Our results suggest that the standard data sources on poverty are not very effective in identifying poor households or poor individuals. To reach undernourished women and children, policy interventions will require either much more individualised information or broader coverage than policies finely targetted to poor households. This is especially true in countries with a high incidence of undernutrition.

There is some potential for using better data and better methods. But the idea that we can easily eliminate poverty by finely-targetted transfers is overly optimistic. This is true even before we start to think about the (potentially serious) adverse incentive effects that such a policy could generate.

CAITLIN BROWN is a PhD candidate and MARTIN RAVALLION is an Edmond D. Villani Professor of Economics, both at Georgetown University. DOMINIQUE VAN DE WALLE is a lead economist in the Development Research Group at the World Bank.

This article draws on “A Poor Means-Test? Econometric Targetting in Africa,” a 2016 working paper for the National Bureau of Economic Research, and “Are Poor Individuals Mainly Found in Poor Households? Evidence Using Nutrition Data for Africa,” a 2017 World Bank Policy Research Working Paper, both by the authors

Credit: Finance & Development, December 2017, Vol. 54, No. 4

Gov’t misses 2017 inflation target …as December records 11.8%

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Government missed out on its inflation target for year 2017 by 0.6 percentage points, ending the year with 11.8 percent against a target of 11.2 percent, the Ghana Statistical Service’s (GSS) December release has shown.

The figure also represents a 0.1 percentage point rise over the 11.7 percent recorded in November 2017.

Also compared to the same period last year, inflation ended with 15.4 percent against a target of 10.1 percent.

Commenting on what accounted for the marginal increase in December, the Acting Government Statistician of the GSS, Baah Wadieh, attributed it to a rise in the rate of some non-food items.

“We have items like clothing and footwear, transport, recreation and culture, furnishing and routine maintenance, which all recorded rates above the national average and were the key drivers for the marginal rate rise in December,” he said.

Details of the release indicate that the non-food group recorded a year-on-year inflation rate of 13.6 percent in December. Four subgroups recorded rates higher than the group’s average of 13.6 percent.

These are clothing and footwear, which recorded the highest rate of 18.8 percent, followed by transport with 18.7 percent; recreation and culture with 17.5 percent; and furnishing, household equipment and routine maintenance with 15.2 percent. Health recorded the least with 6.3 percent.

In the food and non-alcoholic beverages group, inflation recorded was 8 percent – a 0.1 percentage point higher than that of November 2017.

Two subgroups recorded rates higher than the group’s average. These are vegetables which recorded 10 percent, and fish and sea food at 8.8 percent.

Inflation for imported items was also 13.6 percent, representing 2.5 percentage points higher than that of locally produced items which recorded 11.1 percent.

In regional terms, four regions – Upper West, Greater Accra, Brong Ahafo, and Ashanti – all recorded rates higher than the national average of 11.8 percent.

The Upper West Region recorded the highest rate with 12.8, followed by Greater Accra Region with 12.7 percent, Brong Ahafo 12.4, and Ashanti with 12.2.

The Upper East Region, however, recorded the least with 10.2 percent.

Meanwhile, government has set an end of year inflation target of 8.9 percent, and a medium-term target of 8±2 percent.

Phoenix Insurance boosts University Endowment Fund with GH¢250,000

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Mr. Adu-Sarkodee (second right) in a handshake with Prof. Ebenezer Oduro Owusu

Phoenix Insurance Company, a leading insurer in Ghana, has responded to calls for industry to team up with academia by boosting the University of Ghana Endowment Fund with a donation of GH¢250,000.00, as part of its corporate social investment towards in improving teaching and learning in institutions of higher learning in the country.

The company presented a cheque for GH¢100,000.00 as the first tranche with an assurance to present the remainder by mid-year 2018.

The Endowment Fund which is to be set up this year, is earmarked for addressing key areas of the university’s development programmes, including accommodation, curriculum development, recruitment, training and activities to enhance the socialisation of staff and students.

At a short ceremony at the University of Ghana on Thursday, January 4, Group CEO of CDH Financial Holdings Limited and board member of Phoenix Insurance Company Limited, Emmanuel Adu-Sarkodee, said that the gesture was worthy of consideration in view of the number of students likely to be absorbed by tertiary institutions across the country following the implementation of government’s free SHS programme which has seen large number of students enter varioussenior high schools.

“If we’re successful at implementing the free SHS programme, it will mean that our universities will require funding to be able to expand their infrastructure as well as support students who might be intelligent but needy. This is why Phoenix Insurance is leading the way as a reputable corporate institution to support the University of Ghana,” he added.

Mr. Adu-Sarkodee therefore called on other corporate organisations to join to plan for the expansion of lecture halls and residential accommodation and also look at how to ensure that the huge numbers do not affect the quality of teaching.

For his part, Managing Director of Phoenix Insurance, Henry Bukari, said that Phoenix Insurance believes that when they invest in students today, they will only be preparing great minds to take over the management of the company when they are gone.

He assured Ghanaians particularly patrons of insurance products of outfit’s commitment to contributing significant portions of the business’ profit into addressing challenges in communities therefore doing business with them only meant that they are helping build Ghana.

Vice Chancellor of the University of Ghana, Prof. Ebenezer Oduro Owusu, expressed gratitude to Phoenix Insurance and the CDH Group for their timely support adding that it is a good start for the endowment fund and hoped that the rest of corporate Ghana will emulate the step to ensure that the bond between industry and academia is further deepened.

The University Don added that the university is focusedon improving on residential and lecture hall facilities as well as getting more lecturers to ensure the teacher-student contact is not short-changed in view of the expected intake due to the free SHS programme.

It will be recalled that the Group CEO of CDH Group announced at the 2017 Congregation of the Colleges of Health Sciences and Basic and Applied Sciences of the University of Ghana, Legon, where he was the special guest of honour, a GH¢250,000.00 donation to support the University’s Endowment Fund

Vodafone grabs 20 awards in 2017

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Vodafone Ghana amassed 20 key awards in 2017 – highlighting a year in which the company consolidated its position as a company of choice in Ghana.

The telecommunications sector underwent key changes last year; notably, increased competition, market consolidation and a heightened demand for choice by customers. Despite all these, Vodafone was unrelenting in its quest to provide unmatched experience for customers whilst stepping up its community investment initiatives.

Among the key awards won included Programme of the Year – Healthline (CIMG), Best Brand of the Year (UKGCC), Best Advert of the Year (CIMG), Industry Personality of the Year – CEO (GITTA), Best in Employee Relations (HR Focus) and Top 50 Corporate Women Leaders in Ghana – CEO, Yolanda Cuba.

Gayheart Mensah, Director for External Affairs at Vodafone Ghana said:”These are testament to the commitment we continue to put in to ensure we constantly reflect what we stand for as a company. A new year has begun and we will not rest on our laurels in delivering on our promise of an exciting future of endless possibilities for our customers.”

Vodafone has begun the new year on a great note by extending the popular “Ekiki Mi” promotion to the end of January 2018. Customers can now share airtime purchased via Vodafone Cash with five other people and experience an empowerment of being part of a caring family.

DATCCU bags over GH¢800,000 net surplus

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Patrick Yeboah, Board Chairman of DATCCU

The Dormaa Area Teachers’ Cooperative Credit Union (DATCCU) in the Brong Ahafo Region has recorded sound growth in the 2016/2017 financial year, posting a net surplus of GH¢808,080.

The 2016/2017 surplus achievement is an improvement over the 2015/2016 figure of GH¢726,821. Members’ deposits also grew significantly, from a little over GH¢16.99million in the previous financial year to approximately GH¢20.97million.

DATCCU currently has a membership of 20,379, representing a 23.59% growth over the 2015/2016 membership total of 16,790. The Board Chairman of DATCCU, Patrick Yeboah, disclosed these at the 17th annual general meeting held at Dormaa-Ahenkro. He said the union’s membership growth is an indication that it is enjoying the general public’s goodwill.

The membership-increase obviously translated into corresponding share capital, pegging at over GH¢2.20million. The minimum shareholding for the union is GH¢200. Loans advanced to members, according to the Board Chairman, during the period under review stood at GH¢13,970,893; the amount represents 51.82% of its total assets, which appreciated from GH¢20.60million to GH¢26.96million.

Mr. Yeboah indicated that the credit union has set a 2018 target of growing the current total assets of GH¢26.96million by 35%, and urged members to save more as well as embrace its ‘Anidaso mutual fund’ and housing policy as products for future hope.

The credit union’s total investment during the year under review was over GH¢9.05million, showing about 40.7% increase over the year gone by. Total income also increased from GH¢3.95million in the 2015/2016 financial to GH¢4.48million in 2016/2017, whereas total operating expenses stood at GH¢3.67million with a marginal increase from GH¢3.22million.

The Board of Directors of DATCCU proposed a dividend of 15% – amounting to GH¢330,932 on shares for members with the minimum share capital of GH¢200.

The Board Chairman announced that DATCCU has been selected by the Credit Unions Association (CUA) to be licenced by the Bank of Ghana due to “our compliance” with the cooperative credit unions regulation (Act. 2225) passed in October 2015. Per the Act, all societies are among others required to have a core capital that is not less than 10% of their total assets and 20% of investments.

Mr. Yeboah enumerated high rate of loan delinquency, frequent withdrawals by members, inability to retain dividends, and failure of some members to meet the minimum share capital as some challenges impeding smooth operations. He, however, assured members of pursuing policies that will put the union on a sound footing and serve the supreme interest of members in the years ahead.

USAID-FinGAP awards deserving agribusiness actors

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The USAID Financing Ghana Agribusiness Project (USAID- FinGAP) has awarded ten (10) various agribusiness actors for their diverse contributions to growth and development of the sector, especially in the three northern regions.

The awardees are players in areas such as financing, farm aggregation, agro-processing, business advisory and farming. They were presented with plaques and citations. The awards ceremony climaxed the 2017 Women in Agribusiness Development Summit held in Accra.

They are Builsa Community Bank, Tumu Cooperative Credit Union (TCCU), Success for People Microfinance Ltd., JCS Investments Ltd., and Shinkaafa Buni Rice Farmers Association. The rest are Agricare Ghana Limited, Vester Oil Mills, Margaret Awenyogu of Adabi Women’s Group, Victoria Norgbey-President of the Ghana Women in Poultry Value Chain, and Mebel-Ann Akoto-Kwudzo of Okata Farms and Food Processing Ltd.

The citation for Builsa Community Bank (Bucobank) for instance read: “The bank has collaborated with USAID FinGAP to disburse over US$2.3million to over 840 agribusinesses in the Upper East Region. Bucobank has developed innovative methods of supporting female-led enterprises, including the reduction of its lending rate and waiver of commitment and processing fee.  The bank has also used social guarantees as a means of overcoming women’s lack of collateral when seeking loans”.

The citation for Success for People Microfinance Ltd. Read: “A female-led microfinance institution disbursed financing to a female-led SMiLE for increased production and processing of rice for both the local and international market. This has helped to substitute imports and impacted the lives of smallholders, including women and the youth, transforming lives in the north of Ghana. The organization, although located in the south, has made great inroads into the north by supporting aggregators and smallholder farmers”.

Madam Mabel-Ann akoto-Kwudzo, CEO of Okata Farms and Processing Ltd.’s citation read: “Okata Farms, a female-led rice production and processing company in the Volta Region, obtained financing from Success for People and the CARI Project through the services of USAID FinGAP BAS providers to support over 850 women and 500 youth in rice production. Her activities have impacted over 3,000 smallholder farmers in the Nkwanta North District of the Volta Region, which falls within USAID FinGAP’s ZOI. Okata Farm’s presence in northern Ghana is helping to make many smallholder farmers food-secure. Okata Farms is the 2017 First Runner-Up – National Best Farmer”.

 

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