By Rashid Abdallah
In
August 2018, the then-Prime Minister Theresa May became the first British leader in
five years to visit sub-Saharan Africa, making a three-day trip that included
meetings with the presidents of South Africa, Nigeria and Kenya.
May
was on the continent to boost post-Brexit trade and convince African leaders
that the United Kingdom's exit from the European Union would provide their
nations with new and lucrative trade and investment partnerships with the UK.
Then British Prime Minister Theresa May is greeted by Kenya's President Uhuru Kenyatta at the State House in Nairobi, Kenya August 30, 2018 |
In a
speech in Cape Town, she pledged four billion pounds ($5.3bn) in support for
African economies, to create jobs for young people. She also pledged a
"fundamental shift" in aid spending to focus on long-term economic
and security challenges rather than short-term poverty reduction.
May's
promise to create a "global Britain" that views Africa as a primary
trade partner triggered excitement and expectation on the continent. However,
her May 2019 resignation and Boris Johnson's rise to power put the realisation
of a stronger relationship between post-Brexit Britain and Africa into question.
Unlike
May, Johnson barely showed any interest in Africa, instead focusing his
attention solely on convincing the British public that he is the right man to
"get Brexit done".
Nevertheless,
African leaders, especially the ones from former British colonies who already
have significant trade relations with the UK, doubled down on their efforts to
charm Britain into making them primary trade partners after Brexit.
Following
Boris Johnson's stunning electoral victory on December 12, for example,
Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari swiftly sent him a congratulatory message,
wishing the prime minister well and expressing his hopes for stronger ties
between Nigeria and the UK.
Ghana's
Nana Akufo-Addo also offered his congratulations to
Johnson, saying, "we have an opportunity, together, to renew and
strengthen the relations between our two countries, focusing on enhancing trade
and investment, and scaling up prosperity for our peoples".
Buhari
and Akufo-Addo's statements were not empty pleasantries, rather they were
expressions of an ever-growing belief across the continent that post-Brexit
Britain could provide a quick fix for stagnating African economies.
It
is still questionable, however, whether the anticipated new relationship will
ever materialise and, perhaps even more importantly, whether Africa will be
able to benefit from it if and when it does.
First
of all, it is highly unlikely that Johnson is going to give priority to
securing new deals with African nations following his country's imminent exit
from the EU. After all, the populist prime minister never embraced his
predecessor's dreams for a "global Britain" and focused instead on
building closer ties between London and Washington.
Moreover,
many African countries currently have preferential access to the UK because of
trade deals hashed out over the years with the European Union, such as Economic
Partnership Agreements (EPAs) and the Everything But Arms (EBA) initiative.
Following Brexit, it may take considerable time for each nation to replace
these with equivalent or better deals, and they may be forced to pay increased
tariffs for their exports to the UK in the process.
But
even if a new partnership between the UK and African nations does miraculously
take shape soon after Britain's exit from the EU, it will not be easy for a
continent weighed down by multiple domestic challenges to make immediate gains.
A
significant percentage of any gain African nations may make from a lucrative
trade partnership with post-Brexit Britain, for example, will immediately be
cancelled out due to their existing debt to the continent's mega-investor,
China. While Chinese debt cannot
stop Africa from forming new partnerships, it will indeed make any future deal
less profitable.
But
beyond the debilitating effects of the Chinese debt-trap Africa is currently
in, there are other, and entirely home-grown reasons why Africa will likely not
be able to capitalise on Britain's imminent exit from the EU.
In
the recent past, African countries have signed countless cooperation agreements
with nations across the world, from the EU to the US and Turkey. Every country
in the world, after all, wants a share of Africa's rich resources. But, despite
the plethora of investments, African countries sank ever
deeper into poverty. Today, Africa is the
world’s second-fastest-growing region, and yet 100 million
more Africans live in extreme poverty today compared with the 1990s.
Sub-Saharan Africa, in particular, is home to the largest share of people
living in extreme poverty.
The
main reason behind African nations' inability to reap the rewards of
international cooperation and investment is corruption. Cooperation with
post-Brexit Britain, therefore, can yield significant dividends for Africans
only if African countries clean up their acts on the domestic front.
Most
African countries are blessed with huge reserves of precious natural resources
as well as young and capable populations. Moreover, they have long been
receiving financial support from the international community. While all this
could not have reversed all the damage colonialism has done to the continent,
under better domestic conditions, it could have triggered an economic boom and
carried most African nations out of poverty.
That
boom, however, failed to materialise. Elites
across the continent chose to line their pockets rather than help elevate their
nations. Corruption flourished, and tax revenues and foreign aid were diverted
into the bank accounts of the select few while masses were left to fend for
themselves with little to no support from their governments.
If
African leaders want to form a genuinely beneficial partnership with
post-Brexit Britain, they need to devise a new approach to fighting corruption. Furthermore, they need to start exercising fiscal
prudence and entrenching good governance. As long as
the upper echelons of African societies remain rotten, a hike in British
investments and trade, however significant it may be, will not help the peoples
of Africa.
In 2012, Nigeria was estimated to
have lost over $400bn to corruption since
independence. In 2018, it was ranked 144 out of 180 countries in
Transparency International's Perception of Corruption Index. Many other African
countries experience similarly high levels of corruption and bad governance.
Equitable development will remain a mirage in such an environment even if these
countries were to make a deal with God, not merely with the UK.
It
is naive to believe that corrupt African leaders who have led their countries
to destitution will allow the benefits from a future UK trade deal trickle down
to regular Africans in need and elevate the continent. It is true
that Brexit can be an opportunity for Africa, but only if the continent's
leaders finally move away from corruption and start working to help their
people rather than themselves. – Al Jazeera
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