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Want to help Africa? Do business here

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    Thank you very much, Chris. Everybody who came up here
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    said they were scared. I don't know if I'm scared,
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    but this is my first time of addressing an audience like this.
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    And I don't have any smart technology for you to look at.
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    There are no slides, so you'll just have to be content with me.
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    (Laughter)
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    What I want to do this morning is share with you a couple of stories
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    and talk about a different Africa.
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    Already this morning there were some allusions to the Africa
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    that you hear about all the time: the Africa of HIV/AIDS,
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    the Africa of malaria, the Africa of poverty, the Africa of conflict,
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    and the Africa of disasters.
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    While it is true that those things are going on,
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    there's an Africa that you don't hear about very much.
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    And sometimes I'm puzzled, and I ask myself why.
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    This is the Africa that is changing, that Chris alluded to.
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    This is the Africa of opportunity.
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    This is the Africa where people want to take charge of
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    their own futures and their own destinies.
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    And this is the Africa where people are looking for partnerships
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    to do this. That's what I want to talk about today.
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    And I want to start by telling you
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    a story about that change in Africa.
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    On 15th of September 2005, Mr. Diepreye Alamieyeseigha,
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    a governor of one of the oil-rich states of Nigeria,
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    was arrested by the London Metropolitan Police on a visit to London.
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    He was arrested because there were transfers of eight million dollars
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    that went into some dormant accounts
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    that belonged to him and his family.
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    This arrest occurred because there was cooperation
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    between the London Metropolitan Police
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    and the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission of Nigeria --
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    led by one of our most able and courageous people: Mr. Nuhu Ribadu.
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    Alamieyeseigha was arraigned in London.
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    Due to some slip-ups, he managed to escape dressed as a woman
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    and ran from London back to Nigeria where,
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    according to our constitution, those in office
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    as governors, president -- as in many countries --
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    have immunity and cannot be prosecuted. But what happened:
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    people were so outraged by this behavior that it was possible
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    for his state legislature to impeach him and get him out of office.
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    Today, Alams -- as we call him for short -- is in jail.
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    This is a story about the fact that people in Africa
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    are no longer willing to tolerate corruption from their leaders.
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    This is a story about the fact that people want their resources
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    managed properly for their good, and not taken out to places
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    where they'll benefit just a few of the elite.
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    And therefore, when you hear about the corrupt Africa --
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    corruption all the time -- I want you to know that the people
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    and the governments are trying hard to fight this
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    in some of the countries, and that some successes are emerging.
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    Does it mean the problem is over? The answer is no.
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    There's still a long way to go, but that there's a will there.
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    And that successes are being chalked up on this very important fight.
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    So when you hear about corruption,
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    don't just feel that nothing is being done about this --
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    that you can't operate in any African country
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    because of the overwhelming corruption. That is not the case.
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    There's a will to fight, and in many countries, that fight is ongoing
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    and is being won. In others, like mine,
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    where there has been a long history of dictatorship in Nigeria,
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    the fight is ongoing and we have a long way to go.
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    But the truth of the matter is that this is going on.
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    The results are showing:
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    independent monitoring by the World Bank and other organizations
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    show that in many instances the trend is downwards
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    in terms of corruption, and governance is improving.
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    A study by the Economic Commission for Africa showed
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    a clear trend upwards in governance in 28 African countries.
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    And let me say just one more thing
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    before I leave this area of governance.
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    That is that people talk about corruption, corruption.
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    All the time when they talk about it
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    you immediately think about Africa.
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    That's the image: African countries. But let me say this:
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    if Alams was able to export eight million dollars into an account in London --
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    if the other people who had taken money, estimated at
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    20 to 40 billion now of developing countries' monies
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    sitting abroad in the developed countries -- if they're able to do this,
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    what is that? Is that not corruption?
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    In this country, if you receive stolen goods, are you not prosecuted?
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    So when we talk about this kind of corruption, let us also think
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    about what is happening on the other side of the globe --
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    where the money's going and what can be done to stop it.
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    I'm working on an initiative now, along with the World Bank,
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    on asset recovery, trying to do what we can
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    to get the monies that have been taken abroad --
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    developing countries' moneys -- to get that sent back.
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    Because if we can get the 20 billion dollars sitting out there back,
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    it may be far more for some of these countries
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    than all the aid that is being put together.
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    (Applause)
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    The second thing I want to talk about is the will for reform.
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    Africans, after -- they're tired, we're tired
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    of being the subject of everybody's charity and care.
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    We are grateful, but we know that
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    we can take charge of our own destinies if we have the will to reform.
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    And what is happening in many African countries now is a realization
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    that no one can do it but us. We have to do it.
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    We can invite partners who can support us, but we have to start.
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    We have to reform our economies, change our leadership,
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    become more democratic, be more open to change and to information.
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    And this is what we started to do
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    in one of the largest countries on the continent, Nigeria.
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    In fact, if you're not in Nigeria, you're not in Africa.
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    I want to tell you that.
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    (Laughter)
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    One in four sub-Saharan Africans is Nigerian,
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    and it has 140 million dynamic people -- chaotic people --
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    but very interesting people. You'll never be bored.
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    (Laughter)
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    What we started to do was to realize
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    that we had to take charge and reform ourselves.
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    And with the support of a leader
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    who was willing, at the time, to do the reforms,
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    we put forward a comprehensive reform program,
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    which we developed ourselves.
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    Not the International Monetary Fund. Not the World Bank,
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    where I worked for 21 years and rose to be a vice president.
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    No one can do it for you. You have to do it for yourself.
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    We put together a program that would, one: get the state
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    out of businesses it had nothing -- it had no business being in.
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    The state should not be in the business
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    of producing goods and services
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    because it's inefficient and incompetent.
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    So we decided to privatize many of our enterprises.
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    (Applause)
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    We -- as a result, we decided to liberalize many of our markets.
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    Can you believe that prior to this reform --
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    which started at the end of 2003, when I left Washington
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    to go and take up the post of Finance Minister --
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    we had a telecommunications company that was only able to develop
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    4,500 landlines in its entire 30-year history?
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    (Laughter)
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    Having a telephone in my country was a huge luxury.
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    You couldn't get it. You had to bribe.
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    You had to do everything to get your phone.
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    When President Obasanjo supported and launched
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    the liberalization of the telecommunications sector,
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    we went from 4,500 landlines to 32 million GSM lines, and counting.
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    Nigeria's telecoms market is the second-fastest growing in the world,
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    after China. We are getting investments of about a billion dollars a year
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    in telecoms. And nobody knows, except a few smart people.
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    (Laughter)
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    The smartest one, first to come in,
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    was the MTN company of South Africa.
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    And in the three years that I was Finance Minister,
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    they made an average of 360 million dollars profit per year.
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    360 million in a market -- in a country that is a poor country,
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    with an average per capita income just under 500 dollars per capita.
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    So the market is there.
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    When they kept this under wraps, but soon others got to know.
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    Nigerians themselves began to develop
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    some wireless telecommunications companies,
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    and three or four others have come in.
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    But there's a huge market out there,
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    and people don't know about it, or they don't want to know.
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    So privatization is one of the things we've done.
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    The other thing we've also done is to manage our finances better.
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    Because nobody's going to help you and support you
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    if you're not managing your own finances well.
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    And Nigeria, with the oil sector, had the reputation
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    of being corrupt and not managing its own public finances well.
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    So what did we try to do? We introduced a fiscal rule
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    that de-linked our budget from the oil price.
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    Before we used to just budget on whatever oil we bring in,
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    because oil is the biggest, most revenue-earning sector
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    in the economy: 70 percent of our revenues come from oil.
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    We de-linked that, and once we did it, we began to budget
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    at a price slightly lower than the oil price
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    and save whatever was above that price.
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    We didn't know we could pull it off; it was very controversial.
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    But what it immediately did was that the volatility
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    that had been present in terms of our economic development --
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    where, even if oil prices were high, we would grow very fast.
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    When they crashed, we crashed.
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    And we could hardly even pay anything, any salaries, in the economy.
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    That smoothened out. We were able to save, just before I left,
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    27 billion dollars. Whereas -- and this went to our reserves --
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    when I arrived in 2003, we had seven billion dollars in reserves.
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    By the time I left, we had gone up to almost 30 billion dollars. And
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    as we speak now, we have about 40 billion dollars in reserves
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    due to proper management of our finances.
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    And that shores up our economy, makes it stable.
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    Our exchange rate that used to fluctuate all the time
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    is now fairly stable and being managed so that business people
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    have a predictability of prices in the economy.
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    We brought inflation down from 28 percent to about 11 percent.
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    And we had GDP grow from an average of 2.3 percent the previous decade
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    to about 6.5 percent now.
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    So all the changes and reforms we were able to make
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    have shown up in results that are measurable in the economy.
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    And what is more important, because we want to get away from oil
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    and diversify -- and there are so many opportunities
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    in this one big country, as in many countries in Africa --
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    what was remarkable is that much of this growth came
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    not from the oil sector alone, but from non-oil.
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    Agriculture grew at better than eight percent.
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    As telecoms sector grew, housing and construction,
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    and I could go on and on. And this is to illustrate to you that
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    once you get the macro-economy straightened out,
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    the opportunities in various other sectors are enormous.
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    We have opportunities in agriculture, like I said.
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    We have opportunities in solid minerals. We have a lot of minerals
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    that no one has even invested in or explored. And we realized
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    that without the proper legislation to make that possible,
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    that wouldn't happen. So we've now got a mining code
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    that is comparable with some of the best in the world.
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    We have opportunities in housing and real estate.
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    There was nothing in a country of 140 million people --
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    no shopping malls as you know them here.
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    This was an investment opportunity for someone
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    that excited the imagination of people.
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    And now, we have a situation in which the businesses in this mall
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    are doing four times the turnover that they had projected.
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    So, huge things in construction, real estate,
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    mortgage markets. Financial services:
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    we had 89 banks. Too many not doing their real business.
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    We consolidated them from 89 to 25 banks by requiring
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    that they increase their capital -- share capital.
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    And it went from about 25 million dollars to 150 million dollars.
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    The banks -- these banks are now consolidated, and that strengthening
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    of the banking system has attracted a lot of investment from outside.
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    Barclays Bank of the U.K. is bringing in 500 million.
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    Standard Chartered has brought in 140 million.
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    And I can go on. Dollars, on and on, into the system.
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    We are doing the same with the insurance sector.
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    So in financial services, a great deal of opportunity.
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    In tourism, in many African countries, a great opportunity.
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    And that's what many people know East Africa for:
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    the wildlife, the elephants, and so on.
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    But managing the tourism market in a way
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    that can really benefit the people is very important.
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    So what am I trying to say? I'm trying to tell you
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    that there's a new wave on the continent.
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    A new wave of openness and democratization in which, since 2000,
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    more than two-thirds of African countries have had
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    multi-party democratic elections.
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    Not all of them have been perfect, or will be,
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    but the trend is very clear.
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    I'm trying to tell you that since the past three years,
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    the average rate of growth on the continent has moved
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    from about 2.5 percent to about five percent per annum.
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    This is better than the performance of many OECD countries.
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    So it's clear that things are changing.
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    Conflicts are down on the continent;
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    from about 12 conflicts a decade ago,
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    we are down to three or four conflicts --
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    one of the most terrible, of course, of which is Darfur.
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    And, you know, you have the neighborhood effect where
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    if something is going on in one part of the continent,
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    it looks like the entire continent is affected.
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    But you should know that this continent is not --
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    is a continent of many countries, not one country.
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    And if we are down to three or four conflicts,
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    it means that there are plenty of opportunities to invest
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    in stable, growing, exciting economies
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    where there's plenty of opportunity.
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    And I want to just make one point about this investment.
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    The best way to help Africans today
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    is to help them to stand on their own feet.
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    And the best way to do that is by helping create jobs.
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    There's no issue with fighting malaria and putting money in that
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    and saving children's lives. That's not what I'm saying. That is fine.
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    But imagine the impact on a family: if the parents can be employed
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    and make sure that their children go to school,
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    that they can buy the drugs to fight the disease themselves.
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    If we can invest in places where you yourselves make money
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    whilst creating jobs and helping people stand on their own feet,
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    isn't that a wonderful opportunity? Isn't that the way to go?
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    And I want to say that some of the best people to invest in
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    on the continent are the women.
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    (Applause)
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    I have a CD here. I'm sorry that I didn't say anything on time.
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    Otherwise, I would have liked you to have seen this.
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    It says, "Africa: Open for Business."
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    And this is a video that has actually won an award
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    as the best documentary of the year.
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    Understand that the woman who made it
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    is going to be in Tanzania, where they're having the session in June.
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    But it shows you Africans, and particularly African women, who
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    against all odds have developed businesses, some of them world-class.
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    One of the women in this video, Adenike Ogunlesi,
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    making children's clothes --
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    which she started as a hobby and grew into a business.
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    Mixing African materials, such as we have,
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    with materials from elsewhere.
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    So, she'll make a little pair of dungarees with corduroys,
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    with African material mixed in. Very creative designs,
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    has reached a stage where she even had an order from Wal-Mart.
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    (Laughter)
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    For 10,000 pieces.
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    So that shows you that we have people who are capable of doing.
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    And the women are diligent. They are focused; they work hard.
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    I could go on giving examples:
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    Beatrice Gakuba of Rwanda, who opened up a flower business
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    and is now exporting to the Dutch auction in Amsterdam each morning
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    and is employing 200 other women and men to work with her.
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    However, many of these are starved for capital to expand,
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    because nobody believes outside of our countries
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    that we can do what is necessary. Nobody thinks in terms of a market.
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    Nobody thinks there's opportunity.
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    But I'm standing here saying that those who miss the boat now,
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    will miss it forever.
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    So if you want to be in Africa, think about investing.
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    Think about the Beatrices, think about the Adenikes of this world,
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    who are doing incredible things, that are bringing them
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    into the global economy, whilst at the same time making sure
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    that their fellow men and women are employed,
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    and that the children in those households get educated
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    because their parents are earning adequate income.
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    So I invite you to explore the opportunities.
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    When you go to Tanzania, listen carefully,
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    because I'm sure you will hear of the various openings that there will be
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    for you to get involved in something that will do good
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    for the continent, for the people and for yourselves.
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    Thank you very much.
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    (Applause)
Title:
Want to help Africa? Do business here
Speaker:
Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala
Description:

We know the negative images of Africa -- famine and disease, conflict and corruption. But, says Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, there's another, less-told story happening in many African nations: one of reform, economic growth and business opportunity.

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
19:49
TED edited English subtitles for Want to help Africa? Do business here
TED added a translation

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