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Professor Chukwuma Soludo |
This
year 2020 begins a new decade that promises to be one of dreadful disruptions,
with Africa holding the weakest end of the stick. In 2008/09, the global “great
recession” was triggered by financial crisis in the US (world’s largest
economy). Then, much of Africa was said to be decoupled from the crisis and
muddled through without severe devastation of its economies. This year, a
global health pandemic that has paused the global economy and certain to
rail-road it into synchronized recession (if not depression) was triggered by
the second largest economy, China.
Unlike before, multilateralism and global coordination framework are at their
weakest. National (local) self-defence is the rule. As before, the rich world
with its generous welfare system and huge financial war chest, is taking care
of itself (the US alone has US$2.2 trillion stimulus package). Africa is left
to its fate.
Covid-19
caught the world totally unprepared, and with no proven and available medical
response. Ad-hoc cocktails and learning-by-doing constitute the strategic
package. In most western countries, the cocktail of response has included a
coterie of defensive measures including: border closure; prepare isolation
centres and mobilize medical personnel/facilities; implement “stay at home”
orders or lockdowns except for food, medicine and essential services; campaign
for basic hygiene and social distancing; arrange welfare packages for the
vulnerable; and also economic stimulus packages to mitigate the effects on the
macro economy.
Many
African countries have largely copied the above template, to varying degrees.
Piece-meal extensions of “stay at home” or lockdown orders as in many western
countries have also been copied in Africa. But the question is: can Africa
really afford lockdowns, and can they be effective? Put differently, given the
social and economic circumstances of Africa and the impending ‘economic
pandemic’, can Africa successfully and sustainably defeat Covid-19 by copying
the conventional trial-and-error template of the western nations? In confusion
and desperation, the world seemed to be throwing any and everything at the
pandemic. Recall President Trump’s assertion that hydroxychloroquine “might
help”? The evidence so far (from limited sample) is that it probably actually
worsens the disease. The trial and error have left huge human toll and economic
ruins, and there is still no solution.
Let us
be clear: no one can blame African policymakers for the initial panicky copy
and paste response some weeks ago. No public officer wanted to be blamed for
doing nothing or not doing what others were doing. After these initial pilot
schemes, it is now time to ask the deep question: Is this the right approach
for Africa?
All
lives matter and African governments must do everything to protect or save
every life from the pandemic. The challenge is how. Africa faces two unsavoury
options: the conventional template, including lockdowns versus heterodox
(creative local) approaches without lockdowns. Both have risks and potential benefits.
Sadly, people will still get the disease and die under both approaches. People
will differ on the choice, depending on what is on their decision matrix: data,
resources, subjective preferences, and interests, etc. I focus on which option
(on a net basis) is achievable in the short to medium term, consistent with our
social and economic realities.
Our
thesis is that lockdowns in Africa suffer time-inconsistency problem without a
credible exit strategy; is unaffordable and could potentially worsen the twin
pandemic—health and economic—in Africa. We call for Africa to press the reset
button now, mainstream its collective, simple, smart learning-by-doing
solutions that could, in the end, be the African solutions for export to the
world. Covid-19 won’t be the end of techno-economic disruptions or health
pandemics even in this decade: this is an opportunity to think without the
box—to engender greater self-confidence in our capacity to think through our
problems, with authentic sustainable solutions.
Let me
illustrate why I believe that a strategy that includes lockdowns/border closure
is the worse of the two options given our social and economic realities.
(Recall that China isolated Wuhan,
and kept Shanghai, Beijing, and other major economic
engines open, and today, China supplies the world with medical equipment, face
masks, etc and raking-in hundreds of billions of dollars). The idea of a
lockdown (and border closure) implies that you will continue to do so (with
extensions) until such a time that you are satisfied that the spread of
Covid-19 has been arrested or on the decline (with the possibility of imposing
another round of lockdown if new infections surge). That is the catch: lockdown
for as long as required to stem the spread. The length of time required for
such lockdowns to ensure “effectiveness” in arresting the spread would make it
near impossible in much of Africa. If the strategy is to lockdown until
infections stop/significantly decline or so, then we would have a suicidal
indefinite waiting game.
First,
monitoring the spread requires effective testing, and Africa cannot afford
effective testing of its 1.3 billion people. New York State, with a population
of 20 million and a budget of $175 billion, is pleading with the US Federal
Government to assist with testing kits and facilities. Check out the number of
testing centres and facilities in each African country relative to their
populations. A joke in the social media narrated that the health minister of
Burundi was asked to explain the miracle in his country whereby the number of
infections was reported as zero. His response was: “it is simple: we don’t have
any testing kits”. Besides, there is stigma associated with the infection, and
on the average Africans only go to the hospital as the last resort. There are
also asymptomatic cases, and only the critically ill ones will report. So,
there will always be massive under-testing, and gross under reporting.
Furthermore,
social distancing in most parts of Africa will remain impractical. From the
shanties in South Africa’s townships to the crowded Ajengule or Mararaba in
Abuja/Nasarawa, or Cairo or Kinshasa to the villages and poor neighborhoods in
much of Africa, social clustering, not distancing, is the affordable,
survivalist culture. Communal living is not just about culture, it is a matter
of economic survival. Hence, the statistics on infections will be coming in
fits and stats: shall we be locking down and unlocking with each episode of
surge as there may probably be several such episodes (unless and until a cure
is found)? Even with over four weeks of “stay at home” or lockdowns in some
African countries, the reported daily infections continue to rise. Some may
argue the counterfactual that without the initial lockdowns, the number of infections
could have been multiples. It is a reasonable conjecture or anecdote, albeit
without any proof. The question is the end game for a poor society such as
Africa? New infections have re-emerged in Wuhan, and both Singapore and South Korea
are going back to the drawing board. Since we cannot sustain lockdowns
indefinitely or even until the spread stops/declines, it means that we would
sooner or later remove the restrictions. What happens then? There would still
be infections, which can still spread anyway. Why not then adopt sustainable
solutions early enough without weeks of avoidable waste and hardship? Let us
think this through!
Next,
African states cannot pay for lockdowns. Many countries depend on budget
support from bilateral and multilateral donors, and with acute balance of
payments problems. They do not even have leg rooms to simply print money. Most
are now begging for debt relief and applying for urgent loans from the IMF and
the World Bank. In Africa, both the governments and the people are begging for
“palliatives”. The most that African states and their private charities can do
is “photo charity”—with much fanfare, drop a few currency notes or grains here
and there for some thousands when millions are in desperate need, just to be
seen to have “done something”. At a fundamental level, most African states do
not have credible demographic data to identify and target the most vulnerable.
In the western societies from where we copied the lockdown/border closure,
their citizens are literally paid to stay at home (by silently dropping monies
into their accounts plus other incentives). Check out the trillions of dollars,
Euros, and pounds in support to the vulnerable and stimulus packages. Despite
these, check out the restiveness/protests in several of these countries and the
unrelenting pressure to eliminate the restrictions (even in countries where
thousands are dying each day due to Covid-19). Given that no government in
Africa can seriously pay for lockdowns, over one billion Africans are left to survive
if they can or perish if they must.
Without
government support, no more than 5% of Africa’s 1.3 billion people can possibly
survive any prolonged lockdown on their own finances. Most of the others have
no assets or savings to live on for any prolonged period, and there is no
social insurance (welfare system). Without the pandemic, the African economic
space is already in dire straits, with unacceptable unemployment rate
(especially youth unemployment) as well as endemic poverty. In 2007, I evaluated
the structure of deposits in Nigerian banks and found that only 8% of the bank
accounts had balances of N300,000 (over $2,500 then) and above, and these
accounted for 95% of the total deposits. The remaining 92% of bank accounts had
5% of total deposits. I understand that a recent study showed that only 2% of
bank accounts had N500,000 (about $1,300) and above. Also imagine the
dependency burden on this 2%. The dearth of infrastructure (basic electricity
is deficient) makes compulsion to stay at home hellish for most people. We have
lockdowns in Africa but without pausing several pressures for private
expenditures on the people: monthly house rents; banks’ interest payments for
micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs), electricity charges, etc.
With
some 80% of Africa’s population living from hand to mouth on daily toil and
hassle, complete lockdown would never be total, almost impossible in our social
settings. In most cases, the orders simply create opportunities for extortion
for the security agencies: those who pay, move about! Attempts to force
everyone into a lockdown for extended period may indeed be enforcing a
hunger/stress-induced mass genocide. More people could, consequently, be dying
out of hunger and other diseases than the actual Covid-19. In normal times,
thousands die every day in Africa due to other illnesses and communicable
diseases—cholera, malaria, lassa fever, lower respiratory infections,
diarrhoeal diseases, tuberculosis, heart diseases, stroke, HIV/AIDS, yellow
fever, zika virus, measles, hepatitis, typhoid, small pox, Ebola, Rift valley
fever, monkey pox, chikungunya virus, pregnancy and child-birth related deaths,
renal failure; pneumonia, etc.
Lockdowns
worsen these as many of the victims of these now have little or no cash to attend
to themselves. Soon the pharmacy shops will run out of imported drugs. Even
local pharmaceutical manufacturing firms need imported inputs but cannot
efficiently source them under lockdowns/border closure (even more so with
restrictions in China and India). Soon local, adulterated ones may fill the
gap. A summary point is that the millions of persons in the street, who are
struggling between life and death each day with numerous other challenges do
not, and will never, understand why so much additional hardship is being
foisted upon them because of the novel coronavirus. For most of them (wrongly
though), it is an elite problem since for them, the “hunger/other disease virus
is more dangerous than coronavirus”. The hungry and desperate millions may be
forced to take desperate actions to survive, and little surprise that crime has
spiked in several African countries with lockdowns.
What
many do not seem to appreciate is that African economies are facing their worst
economic condition in decades. Commodity prices have fallen dramatically, and
for oil producers, the situation is precarious. IMF predicts that aggregate
Africa will fall into a recession this year (the first in over two decades) but
possibly rebound next year. For oil producers, it all depends on what happens
to oil prices in the coming months and how they creatively craft a plan to
transition to the world with little or no oil. If appropriate measures are not
taken quickly, some oil producers may slide into depression. But border closures/lockdowns
that dramatically affect the labour market and supply side (as well as demand
side) of the economy will only worsen the situation, especially with little or
no room for effective fiscal/monetary stimulus. Government revenues will be
severely affected.
Thousands
of MSMEs will die under the weight of formal and informal loans, bills (rents,
electricity, wages, interest, etc) that continue to accumulate under lockdowns
as well as low demand for their goods and services. Some countries are busy “announcing”
fantastic figures of helpline for the MSMEs (and much of it will end at the
announcements) but without a clear path to address the legacy burden on the
firms--- the persisting bills! Most of the owners of the MSMEs will probably
consume their business capital during the lockdowns, with no clear helpline
afterwards. The US Senate just passed a bill for $484 billion “More
Small-Business Stimulus”, including a $320 billion “Paycheck Protection
Program” to enable small businesses pay their staff salaries for two months.
This follows the exhaustion of earlier $350 billion for small businesses under
the $2.2 trillion stimulus package. The above is just an example of what
western countries from whom we copied the lockdown strategy are doing for their
MSMEs—which Africa cannot afford.
Millions
of poor farmers will be hard hit. Their perishable products that need the
informal public transport to reach the cities will be wasted; while millions
that need transport to their farms cannot do so. Agriculture in Africa is
rain-fed and seasonal. Lockdowns during the planting season could threaten food
security in months ahead. Inflation will shoot up in many African countries,
and with critical food shortages later. Manufacturing firms need imported
inputs, machinery, and spare parts. Countries under lockdowns are consuming
their old stocks. Even after lifting the lockdowns/border closure, it may take
months for normalcy to return in some countries.
Each
day that any of the major African economies stays under lockdown costs Africa
billions of dollars in lost income but with debatable benefits. Given its
financial and structural weaknesses, Africa does not have the luxury of using
the same “conventional tools” of the western countries in the face of the twin
pandemic. At the minimum, Africa needs its full population (its most important
asset) working at full throttle to have any chance of defeating the impending
economic catastrophe.
What should
Africa do?
We
should think African but act locally and opportunistically to survive and
prosper, and exploit the global opportunities offered by the crises. Every
shock or pandemic presents opportunities. Solutions need to be
multidimensional, far beyond economics and western medicine. Ad-hoc response
will be a wasted opportunity. Africa needs a package for creating sustainable
prosperity in a world of continuous techno-economic-health disruptions. Such
disruptions will become the new normal in the decades ahead, and we should
better get used to that. Only societies that anticipate and plan for such
disruptions will opportunistically exploit them, while others mourn and blame
the shocks. The way we work, socialize, meet etc will not be the same after
these crises. Welcome to the decade of rapid creative destructions!
As a
first step, African countries should urgently dismantle the border closures as
well as the stay at home/lockdown orders. Hopefully, some useful data were
gathered, and lessons learnt that will help in crafting simple, smart, and
sustainable heterodox responses. Africa cannot afford lockdowns that will prove
ineffective anyway.
Opening
Africa does not mean abdication of responsibility by the governments.
Governments should lead in the mobilization, education, and possibly equipment
of the people to take personal responsibility for their safety; mainstream the
African spirit of community/collective action by mobilizing the churches,
mosques and civil society organizations to lead in the public education and
mobilization; and finally for the government to do its utmost best in providing
public healthcare. An enduring lesson of this pandemic is that African
countries must take public healthcare seriously. There will be future health
pandemics and we should better get ready today. Professionals, religious
leaders, CSOs and community leaders should be mobilized to agree on simple,
smart solutions consistent with our financial and social realities. Our western
and local (herbal) medical experts and research institutions should all be
mobilized to come up with solutions. Those with pre-existing conditions might
receive special treatment. The president of Madagascar is reported to have announced that his country has found
its own cure for Covid-19 and has ordered schools also to reopen. The west is
still on a trial-and-error mode, and why shouldn’t we experiment as well?
Africa fought and survived Ebola without lockdowns and we can do even better
this time.
Our
model should be learning-by-doing while mainstreaming basic common-sense tips
such as: mandatory wearing of masks in public, basic hygiene, disinfection of
all open markets every early morning and all places of public gatherings,
practical social distancing tips, provision of hand washing facilities in
public places, production and use of hand sanitizers, gloves, etc. For example,
all public transport vehicles—taxi, buses, trains, airplanes might require
disinfection of the vehicle before use, and for all passengers to wear masks
and with hand sanitizers. Can you imagine the thousands of jobs to be created
in producing face masks, hand sanitizers, gloves, etc for 1.3 billion people?
But this cannot happen under a lockdown. New opportunities! Everyone wants to
live, and Africans will learn and adapt quickly. Staying at home will become a
choice, not a compulsion. The slogan could be: “stay at home if you can, or
smartly go to work if you must”. We can only defeat the challenge by
confronting it, and not by playing the Ostrich only to still confront it the
day after.
Every
African society has some local herbs that, to use President Trump’s phrase,
“might help”. While the UK and others are experimenting with vaccines, you
never know if an Africa herb might be the cure. Necessity is the mother of
invention, and only those who dare, succeed! With enough education and mobilization,
the infection rate will be drastically reduced without pausing the lives of 1.3
billion people.
The
real challenge is the potential economic catastrophe that many African
economies face. How policymakers respond depends on how they interpret the shocks:
as temporary or permanent structural shifts. But howsoever they choose to see
it, one thing is certain: several more similar shocks (not necessarily in exact
form) are on the way.
What
is evident so far is that most African policymakers (typically) think of the
shocks as temporary, and consequently seem to believe that they can just
stimulate their way out of it and wait for the next one. African multilateral
financial institutions (e.g. AfDB and Afreximbank) have announced packages to
assist Africa ride over the shocks. The World Bank and the IMF have provided
quick disbursing windows for us to borrow. African finance ministers have
called for moratorium on debt servicing, and most have applied for the cheap
loans from Washington. Several African countries have “announced” intervention
funds that, at best, constitute a drop in the ocean relative to need. The
buffers and institutions for dynamic adjustments are weak or absent. In most
countries, subnational governments are pleading for bailouts from their
cash-strapped central governments. Many of these subnational governments will
soon realize that they are basically on their own, and many could become
fiscally insolvent.
After
most African countries empty all their piggy banks now, and borrow their full
tranches at the Fund and the World Bank, secured moratorium on existing debt
etc, what happens with the next disruption in a few years’ time? Or like the
African musician, Oliver de Coque sang:
“let us enjoy life today, and after that we can worry about tomorrow”? But that
tomorrow is a few hours away. Because of these crises, many African currencies
(especially the oil producers) might likely depreciate significantly. Servicing
these external debts tomorrow with the exchange rate then, would require heavy
lifting. But it is difficult to see how a competitive real effective exchange
rate regime will not be a critical component of their comprehensive strategy
for diversification and global competitiveness.
Politicians
with short-term electoral cycles typically have short time horizons or suffer
policy myopia. This is not just an African problem. It is a typical problem of
multiparty democracies with short term electoral cycles and term limits.
However, extreme cases abound in some African states especially because the
civil service (that ought to ensure longer term continuity) is very weak. With
eyes on the next election, opportunistic populism wins. Rather than confront
the underlying structural dysfunction, the easiest escape is to pile up debts
and contingent liabilities. This is the circularity that has brought Africa to
the present embarrassment whereby barely some years after massive debt
cancellations/reliefs from our creditors, we are again pleading for “debt
relief”. But several future shocks are on the way. When and how can African
countries escape this circular trap? This is a short question but with a long
answer. Each country’s economic/development team should get to serious work.
For
the countries that see the shocks as signalling structural shifts (which it
largely is), the focus should be on exploiting the opportunities offered by the
crises to press the re-set button. It requires a realistic diagnosis and
admission that the existing business model has been rendered obsolete. Crafting
a new business model that encompasses the whole range of institutional,
technological, structural, macroeconomic, and even politico-governance
arrangements takes time and demands for disruptive thinking. It would require
mainstreaming creative non-debt-creating financing options and new forms of
economic partnerships. But these require longer-term perspectives and a form of
inter-generational planning. There lies the conflict versus the opportunity and
points to what separates politicians from statesmen. Politicians think of the
next election, while statesmen think of the next generation. We pray for
Africa’s political statesmen (a seeming contradictory combination—be a
politician and statesman at the same time). That is why I strongly support the
re-opening of all of Africa urgently, and let all hands get to work to help
them succeed.
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