fuelling africa fuelling the economic development of mozambique and southern africa – empowering...

43
Fuelling Africa Fuelling the economic development of Mozambique and Southern Africa – Empowering its people 2 – 5 December 2013 Maputo Mozambique eaker: Victor Viseu y 2: 10H30 to 11H00 l &Gas – Mozambique 2013 Conference Roadmap for Mozambique How to create a sustainable blue print For Mozambique’s future

Upload: octavia-gregory

Post on 28-Dec-2015

216 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Fuelling Africa Fuelling the economic development of Mozambique and Southern Africa – Empowering its people 2 – 5 December 2013 Maputo Mozambique Speaker:

Fuelling AfricaFuelling the economic development of Mozambique

and Southern Africa – Empowering its people

2 – 5 December 2013MaputoMozambique

Speaker: Victor ViseuDay 2: 10H30 to 11H00Oil &Gas – Mozambique 2013 Conference

Roadmap for MozambiqueHow to create a sustainable blue print

For Mozambique’s future

Page 2: Fuelling Africa Fuelling the economic development of Mozambique and Southern Africa – Empowering its people 2 – 5 December 2013 Maputo Mozambique Speaker:

Area: 801,590 square kilometers

Population: (2011 est.) 23,929,708

Average Life Expectancy (2011 est.) : 50 years

Currency : Metical (MZM) US$ 1 = MZM 29,19

Natural Resources : coal, titanium, natural gas, hydropower, graphite

GDP (2012 estimate) : US$ 14,64 billionReal GDP growth (2012 estimate) : 7,5%

GDP per capita (PPP 2012 estimate) : US$ 1,200GDP per capita (2012 estimate) : US$ 612

Budget deficit (2012 estimate) : - 6,5% of GDP

Public debt (2012 estimate) : 39,9% of GDP

Inflation Rate (2012 estimate) : 3,5%

Page 3: Fuelling Africa Fuelling the economic development of Mozambique and Southern Africa – Empowering its people 2 – 5 December 2013 Maputo Mozambique Speaker:

Roadmap for Mozambique

• Economic Performance indicators• Major drivers promoting development• Impact of Africa’s Economic Performance • Economic transformation of Mozambique• Attracting finance to the region

Page 4: Fuelling Africa Fuelling the economic development of Mozambique and Southern Africa – Empowering its people 2 – 5 December 2013 Maputo Mozambique Speaker:

Economic Performance indicators

• Economic growth – GDP and GDP per capita• Inflation• Foreign Direct Investment• Current Account• External debt

Total Consumption at the SADC Region: 882.000 BPD

Page 5: Fuelling Africa Fuelling the economic development of Mozambique and Southern Africa – Empowering its people 2 – 5 December 2013 Maputo Mozambique Speaker:

Economic growth – GDP and GDP per capita

Source: African Development Report 2012 team based on data sourced from the AfDB database.

Africa’s Economic Growth (2000-2014)

Page 6: Fuelling Africa Fuelling the economic development of Mozambique and Southern Africa – Empowering its people 2 – 5 December 2013 Maputo Mozambique Speaker:

Economic growth – GDP and GDP per capita

Source: African Development Report 2012 team based on data sourced from the AfDB database.

GDP Per Capita by Region (Constant 2000 US Dollars)

Page 7: Fuelling Africa Fuelling the economic development of Mozambique and Southern Africa – Empowering its people 2 – 5 December 2013 Maputo Mozambique Speaker:

Economic growth – GDP and GDP per capitaMozambique

• GDP of 8,4% for 2013 (IMF) was worlds’ top five economic growth– This value might be lower due to instability during the last

quarter of 2013 restricting flow of goods between south and north of the country

• GDP averaged 7,7% for the last 15 years • GDP projected to grow more than 8% to 2018• GDP per capita for 2012 was US$ 612, and expected to

reach US$ 963 by 2017 (IMF)• GDP (PPP) per capita was US$ 1,200

Page 8: Fuelling Africa Fuelling the economic development of Mozambique and Southern Africa – Empowering its people 2 – 5 December 2013 Maputo Mozambique Speaker:

Economic growth – GDP and GDP per capita

Sub-Saharan Africa’s Sectorial contribution to GDP (Percent, 2012)

Source: African Development Report 2012 team based on data sourced from the AfDB database

Page 9: Fuelling Africa Fuelling the economic development of Mozambique and Southern Africa – Empowering its people 2 – 5 December 2013 Maputo Mozambique Speaker:

Economic growth – GDP and GDP per capita

Mozambique’s Sectorial contribution to GDP (Percent, 2012)

Source: Institute Nacional de Estatistica - Moçambique

Page 10: Fuelling Africa Fuelling the economic development of Mozambique and Southern Africa – Empowering its people 2 – 5 December 2013 Maputo Mozambique Speaker:

Economic Performance Indicators

Credit Extended by the Mozambican banking sector in 2011 and 2012

Page 11: Fuelling Africa Fuelling the economic development of Mozambique and Southern Africa – Empowering its people 2 – 5 December 2013 Maputo Mozambique Speaker:

Economic Performance Indicators

• Inflation– In 2012 was 3,5% and in 2013 projected 4,52%. Strong MZM helped.

• Investment– Interest rates in 2013: Lending 21,19%; Deposit 11,41% – Domestic Credit to the economy in 2012 totaled US$ 3,3 Billion– Own funds of all Domestic banks limits lending per client to US$ 200 million– Foreign direct investment (FDI)

• African FDI has grown 32,5% since 2007, double the growth rate in non-african developing markets and four times the growth in FDI for developed markets

• Africa’s FDI has grown 87% during the last ten years, and will peak at US$ 159 billion by 2015

• SSA received most of FDI due to political unrest in North Africa.• FDI projects between 2002 and 2012 created in Morocco 116,157 jobs, in RSA 78,926 jobs

and in Egypt 77,883 jobs. Mozambique FDI generated less than 20,000 jobs • In Mozambique in 2008 50% of FDI was for mineral resources; in 2012 of US$ 3 billion of

FDI only 30% was for mineral resources• Between 2013 and 2016 there will be US$ 10 billion in FDI

Page 12: Fuelling Africa Fuelling the economic development of Mozambique and Southern Africa – Empowering its people 2 – 5 December 2013 Maputo Mozambique Speaker:

Foreign Direct investments and Job creation

2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012

Jobs Created

27450

35674

36540

60100

66270

61120

58940

46650

49470

46809

FDI Projects

244 307 247 322 375 373 574 506 516 408

5 000

15 000

25 000

35 000

45 000

55 000

65 000

50

150

250

350

450

550

244307

247322

375 373

574506 516

408

Trend in FDI projects and associated job creation in Africa

Jobs CreatedFDI Projects

Page 13: Fuelling Africa Fuelling the economic development of Mozambique and Southern Africa – Empowering its people 2 – 5 December 2013 Maputo Mozambique Speaker:

Foreign Direct investments and Job creation Examples of largest investments projects approved in Africa

Company Origin Investment Location

Jobs Created Description Year

Lopesan-Satocan Spain Morocco 7 500 New mega project for Hotel group 2006

Nissan Japan Morocco 6 000 New location for car manufacturer 2007

renault France Morocco 6 000 New location for car manufacturer 2009

CCI International Germany South africa 4 500 Call center business servicing off-shore clients 2012

Shaanxi automobile Group China Algeria 4 000 New vehicle assembly unit for chineses automobile group 2008

Samsung Electronics South Korea Algeria 3 500 New production plant 2004

Volkswagen Germany South africa 3 500 Expansion of existing production operations and new workshop facility 2010

tele Tech United States South africa 2 500 New call center 2007

coroplast fritz Muller Germany Tunisia 2 500 Greenfileld wiring systems manufacture 2008

Portucel Portugal Mozambique 2 500 Paper manufacturing plant 2010

Source: AI Africa investor

Page 14: Fuelling Africa Fuelling the economic development of Mozambique and Southern Africa – Empowering its people 2 – 5 December 2013 Maputo Mozambique Speaker:

Foreign Direct investments and Job creationAfrica

Page 15: Fuelling Africa Fuelling the economic development of Mozambique and Southern Africa – Empowering its people 2 – 5 December 2013 Maputo Mozambique Speaker:

Economic Performance Indicators

• Current Account– Deficit in 2013 projected to US$ -4 billion or 25,39%

of GDP– Deficit in 2018 projected to US$ -8,21 billion or

30,84% of GDP– Reflects high dependency on mega projects – In 2012 Exports US$ 3,516 billion, Imports US$ 5,373

billion – in 2011 Exports US$ 2,776 billion. Imports US$

4,187 billion

Page 16: Fuelling Africa Fuelling the economic development of Mozambique and Southern Africa – Empowering its people 2 – 5 December 2013 Maputo Mozambique Speaker:

Current Account

Page 17: Fuelling Africa Fuelling the economic development of Mozambique and Southern Africa – Empowering its people 2 – 5 December 2013 Maputo Mozambique Speaker:

Economic Performance Indicators

• External debt– External debt reduced from a high of 138% in 2001

to a lowest of 33,2% in 2011 – In 2013 will reach 42,1% – Fitch Rating of Mozambican treasury bonds

improved from B to B+, the same rating as Zambia, Ghana, Kenya and Cape Verde

– The low score on the Human Development Index (HDI) limited further improvement on the rating.

Page 18: Fuelling Africa Fuelling the economic development of Mozambique and Southern Africa – Empowering its people 2 – 5 December 2013 Maputo Mozambique Speaker:

Economic Performance Indicators

Page 19: Fuelling Africa Fuelling the economic development of Mozambique and Southern Africa – Empowering its people 2 – 5 December 2013 Maputo Mozambique Speaker:

• High commodity prices• Diversification of economies into agriculture, manufacturing and

services• Trade reorientation to South –South and fast growing emerging

markets - BRICS• Lower external debt• Increase FDI, and productivity improvements • Sustained remittances from African Diaspora• Improvements in the level of democracy and accountability• Strong economic and fiscal management• Decline on prevalence of armed and social conflicts• Rise in domestic consumption

Major drivers that promoted African development

Page 20: Fuelling Africa Fuelling the economic development of Mozambique and Southern Africa – Empowering its people 2 – 5 December 2013 Maputo Mozambique Speaker:

• Slow pace of poverty reduction. In 2012, 54% of population lived in poverty

• Non-monetary measures of poverty– Considerable decline in Infant mortality rates from 199 deaths per 1000 live

births in 2003 to 76 in 2012 – Increase in life expectancy from 37 years in 2000 to 52 years in 2012– Net primary schools enrollment rate improved from 42 in 1999 to 90,7 in

2009– UNDP’s HDI (0.327) ranks Mozambique on bottom of list of 178 countries

ahead of two countries.– HDI – Human development index – dimensions such as Life Expectancy,

educational attainment, decent std living• Income inequality. Population earning <US$1 per day (PPP) was 81%

in 1997 down to 60% in 2003 (PARP reduce poverty to 42% by 2014)

Impact of Africa’s Economic Performance

Page 21: Fuelling Africa Fuelling the economic development of Mozambique and Southern Africa – Empowering its people 2 – 5 December 2013 Maputo Mozambique Speaker:

GINI Index for selected African Countries

Overall, the evidence suggests that the impressive growth in Africa since 2001 has not substantially led to a lowering of income inequality.

African Development Report 2012

45,7%

Page 22: Fuelling Africa Fuelling the economic development of Mozambique and Southern Africa – Empowering its people 2 – 5 December 2013 Maputo Mozambique Speaker:
Page 23: Fuelling Africa Fuelling the economic development of Mozambique and Southern Africa – Empowering its people 2 – 5 December 2013 Maputo Mozambique Speaker:

• Environmental damage – Land degradation - soil erosion, nutrient loss and changes in crops

• 4 to 12% of Africa’s GDP is lost to environmental degradation • 85% of this loss is due to land degradation• land degradation in Africa affects 65% of agricultural areas• Globally land degradation could reduce food production by 12% in the next 25 years• Residuals from pesticides in food and drinking water is a major health concern

– Loss of forest cover• Net forest loss in Africa amounted to 3,4 million ha per year during period 2000 – 2010

(FAO, 2011) due to economic activity and demand for affordable fuels• The large-scale forest loss aggravates climate change by contributing to GHG (green house

gas) emissions• In central Mozambique degradation is estimated to contribute to 2/3 of net bio-mass loss

– Depletion of fish stocks– Green house gas emissions.

• CO2 emissions in Africa have increase by 35% in the last 10 years to 930 million tons in 2010

• From 1971 to 2009 South Africa, Algeria and Nigeria contribute about 76% of total CO2 annual emissions in Africa

Impact of Africa’s Economic Performance

Page 24: Fuelling Africa Fuelling the economic development of Mozambique and Southern Africa – Empowering its people 2 – 5 December 2013 Maputo Mozambique Speaker:

The 2012 African Development Report warns:

Impact of Africa’s Economic Performance

African economic growth is currently consuming natural assets on a scale which threatens growth prospects and overshadows the progress achieved in social indicators.

Page 25: Fuelling Africa Fuelling the economic development of Mozambique and Southern Africa – Empowering its people 2 – 5 December 2013 Maputo Mozambique Speaker:

The 2012 African Development Report warns:

Furthermore, African growth is slowly contributing to climate change. Loss of forest cover and GHG emissions from the fossil fuel based energy sector are the main drivers for this trend.

Impact of Africa’s Economic Performance

Page 26: Fuelling Africa Fuelling the economic development of Mozambique and Southern Africa – Empowering its people 2 – 5 December 2013 Maputo Mozambique Speaker:

– Research funded by FAO and UNDP warns:

The persistence of environmental degradation and continued inequality in African countries necessitates a shift towards more inclusive and sustainable growth. Thus, African countries should pursue green growth pathways. The necessity for green growth becomes even more apparent considering the development challenges in the 21st century.

Impact of Africa’s Economic Performance

Page 27: Fuelling Africa Fuelling the economic development of Mozambique and Southern Africa – Empowering its people 2 – 5 December 2013 Maputo Mozambique Speaker:

• The vision of an independent economy (1975)– “national economic project” following socialist development

ideology • Increase in productivity and food production, industrial processing of raw

materials(cotton, cashew, tinned veg, meat, cooking oil)• Organizing agricultural sector by building state farms• Privately owned industries were allowed as long they served national

interest

• The war time economy (1977 – 1992)– Economic growth reduced by 2,3% per annum (collier 2007)– Government opted for liberal market economy by joining IMF and WB in 1984– Aid from western and eastern Europe kept economy alive, led to massive

dependence of aid.– Aid dependence reached US$ 1 billion equivalent to 75% of GDP (Hanlon 2007)

Economic transformation of MozambiqueTHE ROAD MAP

Page 28: Fuelling Africa Fuelling the economic development of Mozambique and Southern Africa – Empowering its people 2 – 5 December 2013 Maputo Mozambique Speaker:

• Aid based economy (1992 to date)– SAF in 1986 to 1987, was followed by enhanced SAF in 1990– Level of aid reduced from above 50% in the 80’s to an

estimated 35% of government budget or US$ 580 million– Perceived lack of progress in good governance led to “donor

strike” in 2010– Civil society pressurizes for more transparency in public

sector and promotion of inclusive growth of the economy

• From aid to business based economy– Natural resources and growing investment– Advantage of having non-resource based economy at

present

Economic transformation of MozambiqueTHE ROAD MAP

SAF – Structural Adjustment Fund

Page 29: Fuelling Africa Fuelling the economic development of Mozambique and Southern Africa – Empowering its people 2 – 5 December 2013 Maputo Mozambique Speaker:

• Risks on the new economy – Societal, institutional and rapid economic changes are

not synchronized, therefore risking conflict– Expectations are higher than social and political

capacities to absorb the economic transformation• Illegal economy brings serious security issues– Long coast line attracts illicit traffic through its borders – Reinforce police training and structures– Harmonize criminal law in the region

Economic transformation of MozambiqueTHE ROAD MAP

Page 30: Fuelling Africa Fuelling the economic development of Mozambique and Southern Africa – Empowering its people 2 – 5 December 2013 Maputo Mozambique Speaker:

• Risks mitigation on the new economy– Involvement of civil society will:

• Provide on the ground evaluation on economic growth impact on income inequalities and HDI of the poor and human security;

• Fight for environmental protection • Promote transparency on resources exploration contracts

– Code of Ethics (2013) brings transparency to the government actions and reduces conflict of interest in governance

– Resource curse to be avoided :• Create jobs connected to extractive industries – Linkage programs• Promote diversification into agriculture and tourism (value add and African

branding. Eg Kenya tea vs Sri Lanka)• Promote Agripreneurs amongst youth – agribusiness is cool

– Amiran Farmer’s kit promoting green house farming in 1,000 high schools in Kenya– 60% of population is under 35 years, and 64% of unemployed are youth– Government / CSI to minimize risk for loans

Economic transformation of MozambiqueTHE ROAD MAP

Page 31: Fuelling Africa Fuelling the economic development of Mozambique and Southern Africa – Empowering its people 2 – 5 December 2013 Maputo Mozambique Speaker:

• Conditions for success for the new economy – Access to global markets– Resource management and environmental protection to be

approached at regional level and continental level– Massive investment in human resources training

• Resources related technologies, general management• strengthen state administration and institutional capacity• CSR programmes should focus human capital development • CSR will have a government POLICY for the extractive sector

– Have supportive regulation in areas such as development of PPP framework, and extractive resources concessions

– Government capacity to regulate income distribution to enhance the human security of its citizens

Economic transformation of MozambiqueTHE ROAD MAP

Page 32: Fuelling Africa Fuelling the economic development of Mozambique and Southern Africa – Empowering its people 2 – 5 December 2013 Maputo Mozambique Speaker:

Katharina hoffmann in her August 2013 research on economic transformation of Mozambique - implications for human securityconcluded:

“Only if the government and its democratic structures make it possible for citizens to participate and create some regulating competence vis-à-vis national and international business, will Mozambique be able to act as a sovereign nation that is actively shaping the well-being of its people instead of exchanging one form of dependency for another”

Economic transformation of MozambiqueTHE ROAD MAP

Page 33: Fuelling Africa Fuelling the economic development of Mozambique and Southern Africa – Empowering its people 2 – 5 December 2013 Maputo Mozambique Speaker:

• Infrastructure requirements in Mozambique– CFM need together with its private partners US$ 20 to 25

billion to implement all the coal and natural gas rail and ports infrastructure construction projects.

– Infrastructure to bring to market the 23 billion tons of coal from Tete province and the 150 TCF of natural gas from the Rovuma basin

– Anadarko is due to make final investment decision on its 2 or 5 train LNG plant in Palma in Cabo Delgado valued up to US$ 20 billion

• SADC’s Regional Infrastructure Development Master Plan (RIDMP)

Attracting finance to the region

Page 34: Fuelling Africa Fuelling the economic development of Mozambique and Southern Africa – Empowering its people 2 – 5 December 2013 Maputo Mozambique Speaker:

• Infrastructure Master plan adopted at 2012 summit in Maputo

• IDMP Strategy – foundation for Africa economic community• It consolidates the SADC’s Free Trade Area, the

COMESA-EAC-SADC Tripartite Grand Free Trade Area towards total integration of Africa

• Need US$ 64 billion urgently to implement the first phase and could cost a total of US$ 500 billion in the next fifteen years

• The SADC infrastructure vision 2027 is anchored in six pillars

Attracting finance to the region

Page 35: Fuelling Africa Fuelling the economic development of Mozambique and Southern Africa – Empowering its people 2 – 5 December 2013 Maputo Mozambique Speaker:

Attracting finance to the region

Page 36: Fuelling Africa Fuelling the economic development of Mozambique and Southern Africa – Empowering its people 2 – 5 December 2013 Maputo Mozambique Speaker:

Attracting finance to the region

Page 37: Fuelling Africa Fuelling the economic development of Mozambique and Southern Africa – Empowering its people 2 – 5 December 2013 Maputo Mozambique Speaker:

• Funding Options for Infrastructure projects– Locally currency Bonds

• Treasury bonds • Commercial bonds

– Foreign currency bonds (sovereign bonds)• All supported by QE programme of US$ 85 billion per month

– Zambia, Rwanda, Nigeria, Mozambique, Ghana raising a total of US$2,750 million with interest rates varying from 5,375% (Nigeria)n to 8,5% (Mozambique) and terms from 5 years to 10 years. Most oversubscribed.

• These bonds open the way for municipalities and parastatals to also be funded by bonds

Attracting finance to the region

Page 38: Fuelling Africa Fuelling the economic development of Mozambique and Southern Africa – Empowering its people 2 – 5 December 2013 Maputo Mozambique Speaker:

• African Diaspora remittances – WB estimates Diaspora annual savings to reach US$ 53 billion– IFC set up in 2007 Diaspora Investment fund for infrastructure, bank

capitalization, and debt management• Investment funds targetting institutional investors

– BCG estimates Investment funds raised a record US$ 62,4 trillion in 2012 worldwide

– less than 1% of these funds is allocated to portfolio investments in Africa– Manufacturing Industry for import substitution is on the rise, and also

industries downstream oil and gas. – The market cap for the whole of Africa, excluding RSA, is US$ 460 billion,

just over that of apple Inc with US$ 442 billion– Riscura consulting found that 20 top institutional investors from RSA with

US$ 150 billion of AUM had average allocation to Africa out side RSA of 5,1% in 2013.

Attracting finance to the region

Page 39: Fuelling Africa Fuelling the economic development of Mozambique and Southern Africa – Empowering its people 2 – 5 December 2013 Maputo Mozambique Speaker:

• Sovereign wealth funds – Most of resource rich countries have SWF to manage

effectively revenues from its extractive industries– Counter ill-effects of Dutch disease and revenue

volatility– Botswana Pula Fund based in diamonds worth US$ 6,9

billion – Angolan sovereign Fund with US$ 5 billion

Attracting finance to the region

Page 40: Fuelling Africa Fuelling the economic development of Mozambique and Southern Africa – Empowering its people 2 – 5 December 2013 Maputo Mozambique Speaker:

• Sovereign wealth funds – Stabilization fund – short term oriented and risk tolerant

• Has deposit and withdrawal framework• Buffers economy from economic shocks and prices volatility• Invest in Liquid assets

– Development fund – long term foreign financial assets • Acts as a holding fund until good return projects are identified• Invest in wider socio-economic projects and industrial

development projects to diversify economy• Operates like a private equity fund• Self sustainable and has to have strict investment rules to avoid

political interference

Attracting finance to the region

Page 41: Fuelling Africa Fuelling the economic development of Mozambique and Southern Africa – Empowering its people 2 – 5 December 2013 Maputo Mozambique Speaker:

• Sovereign wealth funds – Saving fund – inter-generational

• Investments in private equity, real estate and infrastructure, generally in foreign markets

• Share present wealth with future generations • Useful commitment mechanism curtailing short term political

spending• It is only advisable when economies are mature (not

developing)

Attracting finance to the region

Page 42: Fuelling Africa Fuelling the economic development of Mozambique and Southern Africa – Empowering its people 2 – 5 December 2013 Maputo Mozambique Speaker:

• Problems encountered by funders of Infrastructure projects and Mega Projects– Restriction of movement of capital cross border– Investors demands of returns of 25% in US$ terms– Corporate may accept 10% - 15% as criteria used WACC– Labour and wage cost, skill base, productivity, cost to get

products to market and scalability– Market liquidity, portfolio diversification and requirement

for better governance including international best practices regarding corporate disclosure and reporting

– Nature of projects require minimum guarantee of medium to long term political and social stability

Attracting finance to the region

Page 43: Fuelling Africa Fuelling the economic development of Mozambique and Southern Africa – Empowering its people 2 – 5 December 2013 Maputo Mozambique Speaker:

THANK YOU

Attracting finance to the region