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REGIONAL INTEGRATION Presentation by Mark D. Tomlinson

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REGIONAL INTEGRATION. Presentation by Mark D. Tomlinson. AFRICA: VERY LARGE, VERY SMALL. Africa is larger that the US, Europe, Brazil, Australia and Japan combined. GDP of 47 economies of sub-Saharan Africa in aggregate approximately GDP of Belgium Median GDP about $4 billion; a modern city - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: REGIONAL  INTEGRATION

REGIONAL INTEGRATION

Presentation by Mark D. Tomlinson

Page 2: REGIONAL  INTEGRATION

AFRICA: VERY LARGE, VERY SMALL

• Africa is larger that the US, Europe, Brazil, Australia and Japan combined.

• GDP of 47 economies of sub-Saharan Africa in aggregate approximately GDP of Belgium

• Median GDP about $4 billion; a modern city• Basic services to median population of 15million?• Infrastructure over median land area equivalent to

France?

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Page 4: REGIONAL  INTEGRATION

SQUARE MILES POPULATION (2004)

Africa 11,715,721 885 million

Belgium 11,787 10,4 million

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SQUARE MILES POPULATION (2004)

Europe 3,120,066 584 million (excl. Russia) Mozambique 308,653 19,2 million

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SSA GROWTH RATESGrowth• Sub -Saharan Africa 1995-2003 3,3%

SSA in 2003:• 19 countries < 3% pa• 14 countries 3%-5% pa• 13 countries > 5% pa

SSA in 2004: 5.0% Best in 8 yrs!• But no country will reach MDGs• MDGs require sustained growth of 7%pa. How?

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NEED MORE EXPORT LED GROWTH

Many countries have not been able to take advantage of trade opportunities because of supply side constraints throttling competitiveness.

• Africa’s share of global trade continues to slide: 3% in 1980 about 1.5% today.

• Intra-regional trade lowest for any region, average about 10% of GDP

• FDI remains about just 1% global total, with most going to South Africa.

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COMPETITIVENESS ISSUES

• Capital inefficiencies in many sectors: increases to manufacturing costs

• Serious infrastructure deficiencies: road and rail networks, ports, power systems, telecommunications

• Trade facilitation deficiencies: trade policy, customs regulations and administration, customs facilities

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CAPITAL OUTPUT RATIOS

Country GDP range Period Av. CapitaOutput

Ratio

Thailand $520-609 1963-1966 0.45China $440-603 1993-1996 0.32Indonesia $500-600 1980-1985 0.28

SSA $540-590 1990-2003 0.14SSA (inc. SA) $560-590 1997-2003 0.18

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MAINSTREAMING REGIONAL INTEGRATION WITHIN THE AAP

OBJECTIVE:Strengthen growth, particularly export-led growth through incorporating regional approaches into national PRS and CAS

PRIORITIES: * Policy reforms to improve the environment for private business, investment and trade;* Infrastructure, facilities and systems to sharpen competitiveness and improve agricultural production andtrade facilitation;* Improved service delivery through regional approaches.

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MAINSTREAMING REGIONAL APPROACHES IN THE AAP

PRIORITIES:

* Support to selected Regional Economic Communities (RECs)- assigned key roles for implementation of NEPAD- main fora for regional policy debate at senior level- key roles in preparing priority regional investments

* Capacity development- nationally and in RECs; important for progress on each objective

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REGIONAL APPROACHES: GROWTH

Incorporating regional programs in CAS will aim to reinforce support for growth in four areas:

• Implementation of customs unions. Harmonized regional customs facilities and systems

• Gap-filling in regional infrastructure. Focus on trade corridors, regional power systems and international telecommunications

• Financial sector development and integration. Focus on broadening access to financial services and introduction of trade-related instruments

• Agricultural productivity. Regional approaches to enhance agricultural research and technology development.

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REGIONAL APPROACHES: SERVICE DELIVERY

Main thrust will continue to be through national engagements. Regional approaches will complement in three areas:

• Management of water resources at basin level – water supply, irrigation, flood control, environmental objectives;

• Improving outcomes in tertiary education, health care through rationalizing facilities regionally;

• Combating migratory diseases, malaria, HIV/AIDS, tsetse.

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REGIONAL APPROACHES: RECsFor selected RECs, move from support for

specific TA to program engagements focusing on harmonization of main donor support (jointly with AfDB.) Focus:

• Capacity development of the REC closely aligned with near-term capacity needs in view of regional deliverables set by member states; and

• Strengthening capacity of the REC to select and prepare priority regional investments, including through establishment of multi-donor sub-regional funds.

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REGIONAL APPROACHES: CAPACITY DEVELOPMENT

•Improved regional statistics•Stocktaking of regional analyses•Identification of capacity development needs•Identification of roles: RECs, ACBF, others•Capacity building in specific contexts: near term deliverables and longer term needs.•Harmonization of approaches•Funding, implementation and M&E.

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REGIONAL PROGRAMS TO DATE•Existing portfolio of 14 projects, including 3 GEF•Total IDA commitment $632 million•Total disbursed $84.6 million; average age 2.5 years•Examples: West Africa Gas Pipeline, WA Power Pool, Emergency Locust Program, Regional Trade Facilitation, Capital Markets Development•FY05: $265 million in six operations•Strong pipeline ($2 billion) for IDA 14 in transport, energy, water, telecomms, financial sector, human development, and agriculture•Strong support from AFR management

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OPERATIONAL PRIORITIES* STRATEGY

- Lessons: IDA 13 retrospective of regional programs (equivalent to CPAR) plus OED review

- Regional Assistance Strategies (RAS): two in FY06 based on existing regional PRS, two in FY07. Explicit linkages into and among CAS

* NEW OPERATIONS- Strong demand for regional investment financing under NEPAD STAP. Build regional program to $500m pa. FY06 program $400m plus.- Non-lending engagements with RECs focusing on harmonization, gap-filling TA

- Capacity development* IMPLEMENTATION

- Partnership approaches- Identify best practice. Invest significantly

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Operational ChallengesStaffing- Ongoing. FY06: CD16 staffed as full CMU. Senior field positions plus

Washington staffStrategic Approaches - More effective RECs: policy and projects. Capacity.- Additional regional PRS, improved regional PRS- Outward looking CASOperations- Creating best practice: lending, non-lending, AAABudget- Regional working comparatively expensive- Invest in AAA to strengthen knowledge base for capacity development,

investment.

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Thank you!

More impact through regional approaches