Mapping Sub-Saharan Africa's Future
Conference Report
March 2005
The
views expressed are those of individuals and do
no represent official US intelligence or policy
positions. The National Intelligence Council routinely
sponsors such unclassified conferences with outside
experts to gain knowledge and insight to sharpen
the level of debate on critical issues.
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Conference Summary
The National Intelligence Council recently convened a group
of top US experts on Sub-Saharan Africa to discuss likely
trends in the region over the next 15 years. The group discussed
several major issues or drivers that will affect Africa, including
globalization and its impact on political development and
economic growth, patterns of conflict, terrorism, democratization,
AIDS, evolving foreign influences, and religion.
Perhaps the most important message delivered by the conferees
was that even in this age of globalization, local factors
will determine Africa's fate. Geography, decisions by
governments past and present, the presence of trained professionals,
the strength of civil society groups promoting democracy,
and the capabilities of the local police and security forces
all have the potential decisively to affect the performance
of individual African countries in the next 15 years.
Conference participants agreed that most of Africa will
become increasingly marginalized as many states struggle to
overcome sub-par economic performance, weak state structures,
and poor governance. Globalization will accelerate increasing
differentiation among and within African countries. Reform
efforts will continue to be complicated by structural obstacles,
"neighborhood effects," such as the cross-border
spillover of conflict, and African skepticism about globalization
and a fate increasingly tied to international markets.
-
South Africa, Africa's oil producing states, and a handful
of other African countries committed to governance reforms
have the best chance of attracting international investment
needed to compete and survive.
- Other African countries-including some failed states-plagued
by poor leadership, divisive ethnic politics, decayed government
institutions, geographic constraints, and a brain drain
may be unable to engage the international economy sufficiently
to reverse their downward trajectory.
Participants saw the level of violence in Africa as unlikely
to change appreciably in the next 15 years. Most conflicts
will be internal. Many African security forces will undergo
further atrophy due to low economic growth, shrinking foreign
military aid, and the impact of AIDS.
Among the other key conference conclusions:
Africa is unlikely to become a major supplier of international
terrorists due to the profound differences between Islam practiced
in Africa and in the Middle East. Foreign terrorists,
however, may seek sanctuary in Africa or attempt to hide weapons
and assets there. The overwhelming majority of terrorist
activity in Africa will involve or be caused by indigenous
groups waging war against local governments and populations.
Most African countries will continue to proclaim a public
adherence to democracy and no other form of government
will significantly challenge the nominal allegiance to regular
elections; however, commitment to democracy in Africa
will remain a "mile wide and inch thick." Even
so, relatively few of the old-style authoritarian states will
not hold elections at all.
-
Those countries that are consolidating democracy will
make significant gains: multiparty elections will become
institutionalized and the operations of their parliaments,
courts, and other institutions will improve. By 2020,
for this set of African countries, any turnback from democracy
will be almost inconceivable.
Regarding AIDS, even with relatively optimistic assumptions
about a vaccine and the roll-out of anti-retrovirals (ARVs),
it is clear that there will be very large increases in the
number of people who will die in the next ten years given
weak medical care distribution systems. At the same time,
the experts judged that it is not clear if AIDS can be
directly tied to state collapse in the way that was feared
and anticipated a few years ago.
Some traditional foreign powers, including France and
the United Kingdom, probably will continue to disengage gradually
from Africa while newer actors, especially China, are likely
to play larger roles. China already has a significant
impact on Africa—raising some commodity prices—as
Beijing searches for secure sources of raw materials. Tensions
may be exacerbated, however, by cheap Chinese goods flooding
African markets, with a consequent effect on weak domestic
manufacturing bases, and by the presence of larger numbers
of Chinese workers in Africa. Over the next 15 years, there
is probably a greater possibility of India developing a distinct
foreign policy with political interests toward Africa.
Included among the possible "upside surprises"
the group identified were: the potential for improvements
in hydrocarbon managemen;t scientific advances
in agriculture such as those that helped Asia in the 1960s
and 70s; technological developments that fight AIDS,
malaria, and other infectious diseases and push upward the
political and economic trajectory of some countries; development
of regional and internal peacekeeping doctrine and capabilities
to allow for more timely interventions and more decisive resolutions
to conflicts; and positive developments in the debt management
that boosts private and public investment levels.
Downside scenarios included: Nigeria as a failed state,
dragging down a large part of the West African region; some
type of ecological downturn; and conflict over water.
Discussion
This paper summarizes a one-day conference of US experts
on Africa convened in January 2005 and sponsored by the National
Intelligence Council to discuss likely trends in Sub-Saharan
Africa over the next 15 years. Participants were asked to
consider the recently-released National Intelligence Council
report Mapping the Global Future, although the
conference was not designed to be a point-by-point response
to the NIC project which projects global trends and possible
scenarios out to 2020. As with the 2020 study, our focus
was not to describe every trend that will affect Africa but
to highlight those issues that will drive important developments
and that therefore must be considered by policymakers.
Marginalization, Differentiation
Over the next 15 years, Sub-Saharan Africa will become less
important to the international economy. The high growth rate
projected for the global economy in the NIC 2020 study will
not be matched by African countries, which will fall far below
the rates projected for the fast-growing East Asian nations.
Hydrocarbon exports will certainly boom but they are limited
and distinctly focused within enclave economies in a few states.
Indeed there is evidence to suggest that hydrocarbons have
retarded African development, promoting patronage and misrule
by African leaders rather than national development. Africa's
overall marginality affects individual country performance
because "neighborhood effects" matter. Investment
is flooding into Vietnam today—not only because of Hanoi's
economic policies but because investors are bullish about
Asia in general. More generally, the type of problems that
African leaders will confront—marginal economic performance,
weak state structures, poor governance—will be increasingly
different from the issues that even other developing world
leaders will confront.
Increasing Differentiation
In the context of increasing overall marginality, the
most profound trend in Africa will be the increasing differentiation
among African countries across any measurable line of performance.
For instance, a few African countries (such as Botswana and
Mauritius) have already achieved high growth while a number
of other countries (Nigeria) are in significant ways poorer
than they were at independence. Some countries have established
relatively well-functioning democracies (such as Ghana, Benin,
South Africa), while increased lawlessness and anarchy can
be found in large parts of West and Central Africa. Finally,
a few states have consolidated a sense of national identity
while others have been fractured by civil war. Of course,
a large number of states remain in the middle of each indicator
with performances that tend to be ambiguous. Generally, in
Africa, "all bad things go together," as those countries
that have suffered instability also have seen their growth
rates plummet and their populations subject to horrific abuses.
The ties that bind all the good things together are less clear:
Ghana has been both a good economic performer and has developed
a laudable democratic system; Uganda has been an above-average
economic performer but has retained an authoritarian political
system; while South Africa solved one of the most divisive
domestic conflicts of the twentieth century and developed
an extraordinarily liberal political system, but has yet to
see economic growth above the continental mean.
Globalization will in all likelihood accelerate the differentiation
among African countries. Those countries doing well will
be able to access an international economy that is extremely
buoyant and will be readily accepting of their goods. Technology
flows from the international economy to those well-performing
African countries with relatively high governance standards
will allow some countries to leapfrog over some development
challenges. At the same time, those countries doing poorly
will be increasingly subject to the other side of globalization:
illegal drug trades, arms traffickers, and a large global
gray market that allows governments that seek to stripmine
their own countries to sell all kinds of goods (e.g., timber,
diamonds) to willing buyers outside of international supervision.
It will be ever easier for capital to flee areas of poor performance.
Globalization therefore can promote both virtuous cycles of
growth and whirlpools of decline. Indeed, the number of countries
in the middle on growth and governance performance may decline
as the forces of globalization continually reward success
or aggravate failure.
A Stable Hierarchy
In addition, the hierarchy of nations in Africa in terms
of their economic, political, and state performance will be
unlikely to change markedly in the next 15 years. Certainly,
some countries will have significant reversals of fortune
(for better or worse) due to leadership changes, exogenous
economic shocks, or developments in their regions that cannot
be predicted in advance. However, it would be surprising
if, in general, the set of countries that are the current
leading performers in categories were substantially different
from those in 15 years. Similarly, those countries that are
lagging substantially below the continental average will,
more than likely, continue to be at the bottom of the league
in 15 years.
Part of the reason for this inertia is that while the world
can change rapidly in a decade and a half, countries take
much longer to substantially change directions. African countries
also are substantially affected by structural factors that
profoundly influence their economic and political performance.
Coastal countries tend to have tremendous advantages, especially
compared to the landlocked countries of the Sahel and Central
Africa. Indeed, there is a class of African countries—which
includes Burkina Faso, Central African Republic, Chad, Mali,
Mauritania, and Niger)—that are so burdened by their
extreme climate, related problems of health and disease, and
poor geographic position that it is not clear that any economic
model offers them a path toward development. Civil society
groups that pressure for democracy are also not found uniformly
across the continent, but tend to be disproportionately located
in coastal states where there were better universities and
where they have contacts with international society. The
civil society groups that are relatively powerful have already
succeeded in their own countries, while any new pro-democracy
civil society adherents will emerge only slowly.
Paradoxically, other countries may be burdened by their seemingly
munificent resource endowment. It is unlikely that the major
oil producers (Angola, Equatorial Guinea, Nigeria, Sao Tome,
Sudan) would have a future significantly different than the
ruinous record of petroleum producers to date.
The nature of reform past and future also affects the possibility
for changes in the African hierarchy. The most dramatic political
developments in the last 15 years in Africa have been the
collapse of the neo-patrimonial state and the advent of multiparty
elections (albeit of enormously varying quality) almost everywhere
on the continent. On the economic front, most African countries
also eliminated the most egregious economic imbalances, notably
the black market in foreign currency. What is left are the
much harder, less dramatic, but perhaps more substantive reforms
that will inevitably take a great deal of time and will only
yield progress slowly. For instance, African countries must
follow-up the dramatic roll-out of multiparty elections with
difficult reforms to strengthen legislatures, the judiciary,
and the developing national cultures of rights. Indeed, strengthening
democratic institutions is particularly important in Africa
because there will inevitably be ethnic and other groups that
have mobilized, but have lost in elections and must be reassured
that their interests and rights will be protected even if
they are not in power. On the economic front, countries face
a complex governance agenda where progress is necessary but
inevitably slow and difficult to manage. Similarly, apartheid
need not be overcome again; rather, South Africa now faces
the more mundane, but exceptionally difficult, task of increasing
its rate of economic growth while redistributing wealth.
The focus of South Africa's approach—growth or redistribution—may
well decide its economic fate. It will be hard for countries
to significantly change their place in the African performance
hierarchy while they are implementing these difficult but
necessary reforms.
There are also important "neighborhood effects"
that some African countries may not be able to overcome.
As is clear from West Africa, conflict in one country can
spill over and infect an entire region. Similarly, if one
of the large countries that tend to dominate Africa's
regions (e.g., Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ethiopia,
Nigeria) go badly wrong—or continue to do so, as in Congo's
case—the small states surrounding them may have limited
degrees of freedom in which to operate. Thus, the efforts
of even extremely well-intentioned governments towards governance
and democratic government may not transfer into dramatic relative
changes in performance because they are stuck in a "bad
neighborhood." On the other hand, Zimbabwe proves definitively
that governments determined to decline can ignore the positive
developments around them.
Finally, emerging from economic decline—the condition
of many African countries since the mid-1980s—is extremely
difficult. Ghana began dramatic reforms in the early 1980s
but it took almost 15 years for it to return to the level
it was in the early 1960s. Roads, universities, agricultural
extension systems, judiciaries, and many other institutions
are extremely hard to reconstitute once they have decayed
to the parlous state found in many African countries. Most
importantly, the brain drain from which Africa continues to
suffer means that even good leaders with considerable political
skills will have difficulty turning their countries around
because they essentially have to wait to create entire new
cohorts of trained professionals to tackle problem areas.
African countries therefore will react to and benefit from
different global and regional trends in many different ways;
but they will face substantial structural obstacles to changing
substantially their individual political and economic glide
paths in what is, by historical standards, a very short period
of time. This is not to argue that African countries are
destined for a particular fate (although the Sahelian countries
face monumental obstacles when trying to overcome their geography);
rather it is to note that in Africa, more so than in perhaps
any other region, the choices leaders make are mediated by
a series of structural obstacles that can be enormously frustrating.
It is therefore important not to set the bar too high, or
to conflate the long-term nature of the crisis with cynicism
about prospects for change.
Globalization
Perhaps the biggest difference between the NIC's 2020
report and its predecessor that examined prospects out to
2015 is that globalization is now viewed as a "megatrend:"
"a force so ubiquitous that it will substantially shape
all the other major trends in the world of 2020." This
conclusion appears to have been driven in large part by the
estimate that the international economy will be roughly 80
percent larger in 15 years, most notably driven by exceptionally
high growth rates in the populous countries of Asia. Africa
has been the continent least positively affected by globalization
to date and the challenge to take advantage of the positive
trends in the global economy will be substantial.
This is not to say that the positive effects of globalization
will have no effect on Africa. Cell phones have already caused
a communications revolution in Africa and the Internet is
spreading at an extraordinary rate, albeit beginning from
a very low base. The now significant diaspora communities
that many African countries have in western nations will continue
to increase the amount of money sent back to Africa. Remittances
in many cases will be among the most important "export"
earners for African countries, reflecting both the magnitude
of these flows but also the failure to develop non-traditional
exports. Whether remittances from abroad in the future will
go to investment, as opposed to the current pattern of enhancing
consumption and housing, is unclear and will depend on the
governance trajectories of the countries, the extent of the
ties that bind these diaspora communities over generations,
as well as local perceptions of the long-term investment climate.
African countries will, of course, also be exposed to the
downside of globalization. The ferocious competition that
the international economy will foster in the next 15 years
will be a profound challenge to any attempt at African industrialization.
Indeed, the bar continues to be raised on what is necessary
for a government to do in order to foster a competitive international
economy. Governance practices that might have been acceptable
in the 1960s when there was relatively little competition
will not be acceptable in the next 15 years. Even Ghana,
an improved economic performer, has not been able to increase
its growth rate above four percent because of long-standing
governance problems, including unclear land tenure that has
led to unending disputes about property rights in the rural
areas and a judiciary whose ability to enforce contracts is
questionable.
Corruption will pose a particular challenge to African countries.
Some countries will notably benefit from the increasing official
international allergy to corruption. However, those countries
that do not have particular good governance practices will
face ever-more temptations from the international economy
that will increasingly include buyers not influenced by national
or international codes of conduct. China, in particular,
has not shown much concern with promoting governance as it
expands its economic reach.
Finally, it is also not clear whether the traditional cycle
of industrial migration that caused textile and electronic
firms to move from Japan, to East Asia, to Southeast Asia
in search of cheap workers—as their own work forces became
richer—will hold given that China and India seem to have
essentially an infinite number of low-skill workers. The
international economy had considerable space for countries
to begin export drives in the past, but China and India may
now clog markets for many years to come.
Typology of Globalization: Winners and Losers
Different types of countries will benefit from globalization
in different ways. The benefits of globalization can fall
selectively across geographic areas. Cities may benefit because
they are agglomerations of highly-trained professionals but
rural areas may be hurt. Similarly, one country in an area
may benefit from being able to access the international economy
but this does not mean the region will benefit. The development
of high-speed Internet lines to Accra will not necessarily
have any effect on surfers in Lomé.
South Africa is perhaps unique: It has a substantial
technical base, an indigenous business class, and, probably
uniquely amongst African countries, an ability to attract
large amounts of talented individuals from the surrounding
region. South African companies are sitting on massive amounts
of capital that, if invested locally, would significantly
boost growth. South Africa still has to adopt a myriad of
policies to take advantage of the international economy but
it has far more potential than almost any other country on
the continent to take advantage of the positive trends in
the international economy. In particular, the social basis
for growth largely exists in South Africa. It is the government
that, to date, has yet to commit itself to achieving a high
growth rate and to implementing the necessary redistribution
measures within a context of heightened participation in the
international economy.
A second group of countries that will react to globalization
in roughly similar ways includes the oil producers.
Global demand for hydrocarbons will be extremely robust in
the next 15 years and these countries will face the nominally
happy chore of disposing of large amounts of export revenue.
However, to date, oil-producers have had very poor development
records and much of the oil revenue that African producers
receive has been wasted. In most petroleum producing countries,
the path to wealth for elites is found in greater access to
state-controlled oil revenue rather than through private sector
investment. It is unlikely that the ability of oil producers
to leverage their revenue streams will improve markedly in
the next 15 years. Indeed, the increasing presence of China
(which already acquires 25 percent of its oil from Africa)
may actually put a brake on international efforts to promote
governance amongst oil producers because Beijing is so skeptical
of any action that interferes with what it views as sovereign
domestic prerogatives.
A third group of countries are those that will make enough
deliberate reforms in governance to attract international
investment, retain trained manpower, and take advantage of
new technological developments. These "better
governance" countries are likely to be coastal,
speak English, and already have a relatively high growth record,
although Kenya may be exceptional in this regard. The current
round of globalization is based on constantly improving information
technology and therefore requires relatively large cadres
of trained professionals and, of course, disproportionately
benefits this class of people. Ghana demonstrates that Africa
can be a destination for outsourcing and such service jobs
will become even more important in the next few years. How
many countries actually join the "high-governance-achieving
club" will depend in good part on the social basis for
growth in each country. Leaders will have to define or create
a constituency that demands and values high growth and is
able to make the necessary adjustments in government policy
in order to participate in the international economy. It
will be much easier for leaders in coastal countries who have
already begun reforms to nurture and increase this constituency
through economic progress tied to globalization.
Finally, poor governance countries or failed states
(those where basic government institutions have decayed to
the point where they cannot make governance decisions) may
not be able to engage the international economy positively
because of their poor decisions or because their geography
is so constraining that leadership decisions cannot deflect
a downward trajectory. As a result, negative trends in these
countries are likely to be aggravated by globalization. In
particular, highly trained professionals from these countries
will find it ever easier to migrate.
Differentiation Within Countries
A final aspect of globalization will be to increase differentiation
within many African countries. Globalization will
benefit especially urban areas that can be connected in real
time to the vast information flows that the international
economy will generate and where the educated elite in each
African country will inevitably locate to the urban areas.
The rural-urban divide is therefore likely to be further aggravated
in many countries. In some ways, Africa may return to an
almost colonial model of development where the state and significant
economic activity was found in the capital but only sporadically
elsewhere ("afrique utile" versus "afrique
inutile"). Countries that perform well will be able
to push against these trends, but the average African country
may see its rural areas become every more marginalized.
An African Vocabulary for Development?
An important variable over the next 15 years will be if
African countries can finally formulate their own "globalization
vocabulary," which will allow them to successfully tap
the opportunities posed by globalization. Many African leaders
have been slow to embrace globalization, even as they adopt
may of the reforms demanded by the international financial
institutions, because they do not know where their economies
are heading. Indeed, many African elites, even in the relatively
well-performing countries, have yet to embrace the upside
of globalization in ways commonly found in East Asia. Few,
if any, African leaders tell their fellow citizens that they
must "export or die." Many African leaders believe
that the international economy is still rigged so that Africans
will never prosper. Some accurately perceive a loss of domestic
political control if sources of wealth are hitched to external
forces beyond their control.
If African leaders can develop their own vocabularies to
explain economic development to their citizens, the likelihood
of a political consensus developing in favor of growth will
be much higher. If such indigenous perspectives are not adopted,
the chances for high growth in most African countries will
be extremely limited. There is a profound need to ground
globalization in local realities.
It is clear that part of the emerging, still inchoate, African
perspective on globalization differs considerably from conventional
orthodoxies. The West, and the United States in particular,
places considerable stress on the market forces inherent in
globalization, believing (or fearing) that powerful international
markets have compelling political implications. Africans
hope that globalization emerges as a set of international
institutions that will promote governance, especially in the
form of the New Partnership for Africa's Development
(NEPAD), that will to some extent insulate them from the cold
wind of the market. Although it is largely ignored in the
United States, NEPAD consumes a significant portion of current
African discussions on development and, critically, is a substantial
part of South Africa's and Nigeria's foreign policies.
It is hardly exceptional for the weak to put their faith in
international institutions that they will influence by fiat,
or—as in the case of NEPAD—create outright, rather
than in markets that will be dominated by the strong. There
are obviously many obstacles before the peer review mechanism
in NEPAD (the critical part) succeeds; however, Africans are
likely to continue to focus on developing this continental
architecture long after the West has given up on it as another
failed program.
The African State
Most territorially defined African states will continue to
exist formally in 2020. While there may be boundary changes
in Sudan, Somalia, and a few other places, the legal map of
Africa will not change significantly. However, the informal
map of power will become more confused. Some African governments
will continue to consolidate administrative capabilities and
military might and will therefore have substantially more
ability to influence their own citizens and neighbors in the
next 15 years. Other countries will continue to lose capabilities,
largely because of persistent revenue crisis and the ability
of non-state actors including NGOs, traditional leaders, insurgents,
criminals, and terrorists, to operate in areas where the formal
presence of government is limited. These "archipelago
states" may constitute the plurality of all countries
in Africa as it will be relatively common for the capital
informally to cede control over parts of their hinterland,
especially since globalization constantly pushes economic
activity to the capital, or the few major urban, agglomerations.
A certain number of African states will also essentially be
taken over by the international community. While it is doubtful
that any African states will become long-term trustees of
the United Nations, international supervision of some failed
or failing states will become more common and accepted.
Those African countries that fail are unlikely to receive
significant assistance from international peacekeepers. South
Africa and other African militaries have only limited peacekeeping
capabilities. While international commitment to peacekeeping
is likely to increase, it probably will not keep up with African
demand. When foreigners intervene, they are usually best
at reconstituting order in the cities. The rural areas in
countries that have been "peacekept" tend to remain
ungoverned for years. The international community has also
found it easier to intervene in small countries, for obvious
reasons. Large countries that spiral downward are therefore
likely to have especially complicated maps of power where
vast areas may be formally ungoverned.
A few aspects of state territoriality will "harden"
in the next 15 years. It is likely, for instance, that refugees
will find an increasingly hostile reception amongst nominal
host governments. Many African governments have learned that
conflicts in neighboring countries can drag on for many years
and that a commitment to house refugees can be a very long-term
commitment. Refugees have also been a cause of destabilization
in many areas.
Patterns of Conflict
Africa was the site of much of the military conflict in
the world in the 1990s and there is no reason to believe that
its share of world violence will change appreciably in the
next 15 years. As in the past, most African conflicts will
be internal, although the pattern of outsiders intervening
in civil wars, either to help one of the protagonists or to
protect themselves from the fallout of the conflict, will
continue. African governments and rebels will continue to
take advantage of the international market for basic weapons
and, increasingly, logistics and higher-order military functions
such as aerial reconnaissance.
Most African countries will not be able significantly to
increase the prowess of their security forces, in good part
because of continued low economic growth and the paucity of
foreign military assistance. The impact of HIV-AIDS on militaries
may also constitute a destabilizing force. Indeed it is likely
that formal militaries in many countries will undergo further
significant atrophy, occasionally to be replaced outright
by informal militias that are recruited opportunistically
by leaders when there is a threat. Such armed civilians will
inevitably destabilize their own countries and be an enormous
threat to their fellow citizens. However, a few African countries
that already have capable military forces (e.g., Angola) will
be able to continue to increase the prowess and, perhaps,
the size of their armed forces, encouraged, in part, by the
departure from African of some traditional powers.
Terrorism
Given that significant portions of Africa—those areas
outside the nations' capitals—will essentially be
ungoverned, there will be many opportunities for terrorist
groups that threaten the West to seek haven across the continent.
However, it is unlikely that Africa will become much of a
supplier of international terrorists because of the profound
differences between the Islam practiced in Africa and that
in the Middle East. Nor will terrorist groups find supportive
governments in Africa akin to the Taliban regime in Afghanistan.
However, those terrorists groups seeking sanctuary for their
fugitive principals or who want to hide dangerous weapons
may find the distant regions of some African countries inviting
precisely because they are unlikely to be interrupted by government.
The ability of terrorists to use Africa as safehaven only
naturally increases the probability that these armed groups
will seek to attack soft Western and Israeli targets on the
continent. The likelihood of foreign terrorist groups operating
in Africa is reduced, however, by the relative absence of
effective communication links with the outside world, essential
to international terrorist operations, and by the threat that
these foreign groups would become mired in domestic conflicts.
Indeed, an overwhelming majority of terrorism in Africa will
be caused by indigenous groups waging war against their own
or neighboring governments or against other population groups,
defined by religion or ethnicity. Indeed, most wars in Africa
today seldom see armed, uniformed combatants fighting each
other but are much more likely to involve poorly trained soldiers
or guerrillas terrorizing local populations. The tendency
for those killed in African conflicts to be women, children,
and other civilians is likely to remain or perhaps get worse.
African countries will actively seek the increasing amount
of available Western counterterrorism funding, especially
given the threat from international terrorists to their own
domestic situations even if the targets are foreigners. For
instance, the attacks in Mombassa on Israeli targets in 2002
undoubtedly hurt Kenya far more than Israel, as international
tourism to East Africa was dealt a stunning blow.
Everyday Violence
The less understood aspect of violence in Africa is the
everyday threats that an increasing number of citizens face.
Africa will continue to become far more dangerous as the supply
of machine guns, rocket-propelled grenades, and mortars becomes
even easier to access. The increasingly number of unemployed
and impoverished will further increase the level of crime
and general insecurity. There is also no reason at present
to believe that the police in most African countries will
become more adept, especially given the funding crisis that
most African countries will face. However, states with high
levels of violence will not automatically be failed states;
indeed, the ability of African countries to continue to muddle
along despite high levels of violence should not be underestimated.
For instance, 20,000 people have been killed in Nigeria while
that country has maintained its democratic façade. Thousands
have also died in Congo during the period when all formal
fighting was supposed to have ended.
The NIC 2020 report argues that pervasive insecurity will
occur across large parts of the world as economic and political
processes upset traditional practices. Insecurity will be
very high in Africa, although it is more likely to stem from
political conflict and crime rather than economic change,
which has the potential for a significant upside.
Democracy in Africa
Most countries in Africa will continue to hold multiparty
elections on a regular basis, although these elections will
continue to vary considerably in quality. Almost all countries
across the continent will continue to proclaim a public adherence
to democracy and no other form of government will significantly
challenge the nominal allegiance to regular elections. The
media will continue, in most countries, to reflect a variety
of viewpoints. The continued liberalization of radio and
television will produce a cacophonous stream of African political
views. The impact on domestic politics of this liberalization
is difficult to assess, although it can be expected to produce
more visibly contentious processes of government, particularly
given greater vitality in the NGO sector. NGOs are increasingly
the loyal opposition in the African polity given weak institutions
and immature methods of parliamentary practice.
Typology of Democratic Achievement
However, commitment to democracy in Africa will remain
a "mile wide and inch thick." Therefore, the critical
determinants of democratic success will be the social coalition
that actually is actively in favor of democracy. The democratic
consolidators will make significant gains in improving
their democratic performance. Indeed, multiparty elections
will become institutionalized in these countries and they
will improve the operations of their parliaments, courts,
and other institutions. By 2020, for this set of African
countries, any turnback from democracy will be almost inconceivable.
It is likely that the countries making the most progress
on democracy are the ones that have already had free and fair
elections. Democratic consolidations will, on average, be
in the coastal countries, where relatively strong civil societies
are committed to democracy and have already spent a decade
or more (as was the case in both Ghana and Kenya) pushing
authoritarian rulers aside. The "plateauing" of
African states—that is, the difficulty states confront
in changing their relative democratic performance over the
next 15 years—is due largely to structural factors that
determine the size of the urban-based elite demanding democratization.
In most countries, this elite has now exercised whatever power
that it can. As a result, there are unlikely to be too many
democratic surprises over the next 15 years.
The advantage of coastal countries that have elements of
civil society committed to democratization can be seen when
comparing Kenya with Uganda. Although Uganda stabilized in
the late 1980s and has had excellent economic performance
for the past 15 years, it has lagged on democratic performance
and is one of the few African countries where there is still
an argument about the benefits of multiparty democracy. Kenya
experienced authoritarian rule for a much longer period of
time but, once the old rulers were finally removed from office,
has made democratic progress at a relatively higher rate.
Another set of approximately 15 to 20 countries will continue
to be democratic aspirers. Most will continue to have
multiparty elections, but the quality will vary and citizens
will continue to believe that there is a significant possibility
that their democratic system or certain basic institutions
face the real danger of collapse. Finally, about twenty states—roughly
the same number as today—will experience authoritarian
or semi-authoritarian rule. These countries may have
regularly scheduled multiparty elections but the outcome of
those votes will not be in doubt. Also included in this category
will be the increased number of failed states in Africa that
will not have even the mechanisms for voting in place.
There will probably be considerable movement between the
last two categories of countries that aspire to democracy
and those that have essentially authoritarian rule. Indeed,
given that multiparty elections will continue throughout the
continent, there will be relatively few old-style authoritarian
states that do not hold elections at all.
The forms of democracy that African countries adopt or aspire
to will not be substantially different from the current variety
of western practices. There is, of course, considerable diversity
in Western democratic practices (compare Switzerland to the
United Kingdom) and African countries will adopt a similar
variety of practices. However, there will not be a palpable
form of "African democracy" that is adopted commonly
across the continent.
Indeed, it is federalism—a particular form of Western
democracy—that is increasingly being adopted across Africa.
Whether federalism is a comprehensive, or even appropriate,
answer to Africa's problems remains unclear. Federalism
is more likely to succeed if the impetus for conflict is ethnic
division that has a strong geographic component. As Africa's
ethnic communities still have a territorial basis, federalism
may well work to devolve the locus of resource disputes from
the center to the periphery. In contrast, if African conflicts
are more centered on religion, it will be far more difficult
for federalism to be effective because religious identity
is less likely to be geographically defined. Indeed, religious
identity is changing quickly in Africa and will therefore
thwart many efforts to draw boundaries around defined communities
of believers. The success of federal attempts will depend,
too, on the ability and willingness of central governments
to permit funding of regional, alternative centers of power
and authority.
AIDS
The AIDS trend in Africa will obviously depend on technological
developments, especially the production of a vaccine. However,
even if with relatively optimistic assumptions about a vaccine
and the roll-out of anti-retrovirals (ARVs), it is clear that
there will be very large increases in the number of people
who will die in the next ten years. The rates of infection
in Southern Africa are remarkable because no one ten years
ago had predicted that 35 percent of the adult population
(about the levels in Swaziland and Botswana) could actually
be infected. In other parts of Africa, rates are much lower.
In particular, much of West Africa has yet to see the disease
breakout beyond the 5 to 7 percent infection rate. Why this
is so is unclear, but there appears to be an inverse relationship
between infection rates and the percent of the population
that is Muslim.
Progress will undoubtedly continue in the development and
provision of relatively inexpensive ARV's. However,
it is less clear that African countries have the medical systems
to deliver the medicines effectively, nor, in some cases,
the political will to roll these out. African countries currently
do not provide formal medical care to a substantial portion—sometimes
a majority—of their populations. Ramping up to a high
level of ARV provision and monitoring will present such a
substantial challenge that few African countries will be able
to meet it in the near term. Moreover, improper distribution
of antiretrovirals may prompt the mutation of even more virulent
forms of the virus.
For years, the impact of AIDS on political and economic systems
has been a source of immense speculation. Since AIDS tends
to strike the working populations and the relatively affluent,
as opposed to many diseases that afflict the old, the infirm,
and the poor, it has the potential to deal a devastating blow
to precisely the parts of the workforce where African countries
are the weakest. Indeed, the figures regarding AIDS prevalence
within important institutions are already shocking: some
militaries are reporting that one-third of their soldiers
are infected, with even higher rates among combat units.
However, it is not at all clear if AIDS can be directly tied
to state collapse in the way that was feared a few years ago.
The militaries that have high levels of infected soldiers
largely work around the virus by releasing those who actually
become sick and recruiting others. The virus also affects
rebel groups and other challengers to the state; indeed, the
virus may affect those who threaten the state more because
they are less likely to have access to medicines. More generally,
connecting the dots between AIDS prevalence and actual political
and economic outcomes is extremely difficult. There is no
doubt that having a significant percent of the most capable
people die has economic costs and is a political burden.
However, the prevalence of AIDS is highest in Southern Africa
but this is also the region that has performed, overall, the
best in Africa. Zimbabwe and Angola, the two poor performers
in Southern Africa, can tie their poor governance records
directly to the decisions made by their governments rather
than damage caused by the virus.
New "Influentials"
The implications of the rise of India and China was another
major emphasis in the NIC 2020 report. China already has
a significant impact on Africa as it searches for secure sources
of raw materials. This has had the salutary effect of raising
some basic commodity prices. China does not have clear political
interests in Africa beyond waging its continual war against
diplomatic recognition of Taiwan. To date, African leaders
have responded to China's interest in Africa positively,
seeing it as an alternative source of investment and countervailing
force to Western interests and influence, a perception heightened
by the Chinese practice of offering 'gifts.' Over
time, however, African states may begin to realize that China's
interest is motivated less by altruism than by hard-nosed
business concerns. Tensions may be exacerbated by the flooding
of African markets by cheap Chinese goods, with a consequent
effect on weak domestic manufacturing bases, and by the presence
of larger numbers of Chinese workers in Africa.
Over the next 15 years, there is probably a greater possibility
of India developing a distinct foreign policy with political
interests toward Africa. India has the relative advantage
of geography and of speaking English. India also has a strategic
interest in the Indian Ocean. Indeed, it is more likely that
India will have a foreign policy toward the Indian Ocean littoral
than to Africa in general, as evidenced by the development
of the IBSA (India, Brazil, and South Africa) forum.
At the same time, some of the traditional powers that have
engaged Africa are likely to leave the scene gradually. The
generation of French leaders who saw their country's
destiny intertwined with Africa has now retired and their
successors see their future in Asia and Central Europe. The
United Kingdom has been progressively disengaging since independence,
even though it will continue to influence the policies of
international institutions toward Africa.
As politics abhors a vacuum, other powers will find Africa
an inviting arena. Iran, Egypt, other middle range powers
may find it relatively easy to maneuver in Africa. However,
it is likely that, overall, there will be less foreign involvement
in African affairs, leaving more room for African powers and
domestic agents to influence individual countries and the
paths of conflict.
Religious Conflict
The NIC 2020 report notes the rise of identity politics
everywhere and that communal conflict will become increasingly
important as NGOs and others vie for attention. Africa has
experienced some religious conflict to date, especially in
Nigeria, but one of the great unanswered questions is how
much more violence religious diversity will promote. Africa
is at the center of many proselytizing efforts worldwide:
the Catholic Church has made Africa a priority while Pentecostal
and Evangelical Christian movements spend millions of dollars
on recruiting large numbers of Africans. Iran has also devoted
substantial efforts to fostering its religious and political
views in Africa. Finally, Saudi Arabia has spent large amounts
of money to export its exclusionary Wahhabi tradition.
The state system in Africa is unlikely to divide into Muslim
versus non-Muslim states, not least because of the split personality
of many African states in this respect. North African states
will continue to identify much more with the Middle East and
will probably not have active foreign policies toward Africa.
The interior African states, composed overwhelmingly of Muslims,
are unlikely to pose any threat to their neighbors. It is
highly unlikely, no matter other domestic developments, that
Nigeria will develop a distinct identity as a Muslim state,
although religious conflict centered around Islam within Nigeria
is likely to continue.
On the other hand, the states with significant Muslim populations
on the East Coast of Africa (e.g., Kenya, Somalia, Djibouti)
may be drawn into the conflict/terror networks emerging out
of the Arabian Gulf. There are deep historical links between
East Africa and the Gulf and continual traffic in people,
including, possibly, principals in terror networks.
Rather than explicit conflict fueled by religious extremism,
it is likely that the most important related trend in Africa
affecting the United States is the further development of
pockets of radical Islam that are hostile to the West and
that actively provide support and sanctuary to international
terrorists. Radical Islam will find explicit support amongst
a small but increasing number of state officials, as is the
case in Northern Nigeria today. More common will be the adherents
of radical Islam who find friendly communities grateful for
material support from Iran and/or Saudi Arabia, and who can
operate with relatively little fear of government detection.
Upside Surprises
While all are low probability, a variety of issues might
cause our analysis to be incorrect in certain areas and, more
generally, not optimistic enough. Certainly, if hydrocarbon
management were improved across the continent, Africa's
future in 2020 would look distinctly more positive. If Angola,
Nigeria, and Sudan—three of Africa's largest and
most important countries—actually began to use their
revenues from oil in productive ways, these states would become
stronger, tens of millions of Africans would benefit from
reduced poverty, and the impact on the region might be significant.
Better hydrocarbon management might come about because of
international pressure to promote the transparency of resource
flows, aided by domestic constituencies who have grown tired
of the fraud associated with wasting assets.
Similarly, if agriculture were to show productivity
gains in a significant number of countries, there would be
a general boost in growth, but also a change in the urban-rural
terms of trade that we portray above as generally favoring
the cities. African agriculture could become more productive
if it was the beneficiary of the kind of scientific advances
that helped Asian agriculture in the 1960s and 1970s. Africa
currently has the lowest level of inputs and the lowest yields
compared to genetic potential of any region on earth. Thus,
in many areas where there is substantial "low-hanging
fruit" relatively small amounts of investment could lead
to significant productivity advances. Of course, the same
genetic modification technology that might help African agriculture
could potentially hurt the comparative advantage of other
African countries. For instance, genetic advances that allowed
other countries elsewhere in the world to grow high quality
tropical beverages (cocoa, tea, coffee) would hurt many African
countries.
Technological developments that allowed Africa to fight
AIDS, malaria, and other infectious diseases in an appropriate
manner would also be extremely significant and would probably
deflect upward the political and economic trajectory of some
countries. It is unfortunate to note that, primarily because
of AIDS and ever-more-resistant mosquitoes, Africa has become
a far more unhealthy place than it was 15 years ago. Technological
developments in the next 15 years that allow the continent
to regain this lost ground would be vitally important (and
probably surprising) but would only return the region to where
it was in the early 1980s.
Another upside surprise that would be of great significance
would be the development of regional and internal peacekeeping
doctrine and capabilities that would allow for more timely
interventions in African conflicts and more decisive resolutions
to the wars. Currently, peacekeeping efforts in Africa face
a variety of problems, from getting rebels to the table, to
supplying the correct number of peacekeepers armed in ways
that they can actually project force, to finding mediators
who are actually willing to call an end to negotiations if
progress is not being made. If the necessary continental
or international architecture were to be developed so that
war could be addressed more forthrightly, our projections
for Africa would improve considerably. Similarly, if more
effective practices of international assistance in developing
local police forces could be found, domestic stability and
security may improve, a critical precursor to greater investment
and growth.
Finally, positive developments in the management of international
debt might be helpful to Africa. The prospects for increased
levels of investment, both private and public, will be affected
by how the continuing high levels of international indebtedness
are addressed over the period of our projection. There now
seems to be a clear consensus that repayment of international
debt is not consistent with maintaining adequate levels of
economic growth and the international community is exploring
different ways to achieve the needed debt relief. Accomplishing
this is a necessary, but likely not a sufficient condition,
for private sector investment in most countries (apart from
the mineral sector), while the public sector resources liberated
by debt relief are in many cases targeted toward health and
education, among other areas, by the international organizations
organizing and promoting debt relief efforts.
Downside Risks
Other potential developments might accelerate decline in
Africa and reduce even our limited optimism. The most important
would be the outright collapse of Nigeria. While currently
Nigeria's leaders are locked in a bad marriage that all
dislike but dare not leave, there are possibilities that could
disrupt the precarious equilibrium in Abuja. The most important
would be a junior officer coup that could destabilize the
country to the extent that open warfare breaks out in many
places in a sustained manner. If Nigeria were to become a
failed state, it could drag down a large part of the West
African region. Even state failure in small countries such
as Liberia has the effect of destabilizing entire neighborhoods.
If millions were to flee a collapsed Nigeria, the surrounding
countries, up to and including Ghana, would be destabilized.
Further, a failed Nigeria probably could not be reconstituted
for many years—if ever—and not without massive international
assistance.
While many other downside risks are imaginable given the
precarious state of most African countries, the possibility
of some type of ecological downturn should be noted.
Such a large portion of Africa hovers just above poverty and
is still so dependent on the land that the continent is still
especially vulnerable to changes in climate or the outbreak
of new diseases. There is also the possibility for conflict
over water among the ten riparian states that comprise
the Nile Basin. The relationship between Ethiopia and Egypt
has been tense for years because of water and, if not handled
carefully, this issue has the potential to be the next big
conflict in Africa.
Conclusion
Perhaps the central message of this report is that in an
age of globalization, local factors will determine Africa's
fate. Geography, decisions by governments past and present,
the presence of trained professionals, the strength of civil
society groups promoting democracy, and the capabilities of
the local police and security forces all have the potential
to decisively affect the performance of individual African
countries in the next 15 years. Such forces are not determined
by international markets in the first instance, although the
reaction of global forces to local developments in any of
these areas must be considered. As none of these basic aspects
of the political system can be changed easily, if at all,
in as short as 15 years, the most likely prediction is that
the current hierarchy of African performers will continue,
albeit distributed across an ever broader spectrum. Globalization
may be the "megatrend" of the 21st century but Africa's
destiny still is to be determined by African circumstances.
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