Africa Progress Report 2014
Africa is a rich continent. Some
of those riches – especially oil, gas and minerals – have driven rapid
economic growth over the past decade. The ultimate measure of progress,
however, is the wellbeing of people – and Africa’s recent growth has not
done nearly as much as it should to reduce poverty and hunger, or
improve health and education.
To sustain growth that improves the
lives of all Africans, the continent needs an economic transformation
that taps into Africa’s other riches: its fertile land, its extensive
fisheries and forests, and the energy and ingenuity of its people. The
Africa Progress Report 2014 describes what such a transformation would
look like, and how Africa can get there.
Agriculture must be at the heart that
transformation. Most Africans, including the vast majority of Africa’s
poor, continue to live and work in rural areas, principally as
smallholder farmers. In the absence of a flourishing agricultural
sector, the majority of Africans will be cut adrift from the rising tide
of prosperity.
To achieve such a transformation, Africa
will need to overcome three major obstacles: a lack of access to formal
financial services, the weakness of the continent’s infrastructure and
the lack of funds for public investment.
The Africa Progress Report 2014
describes how African governments and their international partners can
cooperate to remove those obstacles – and enable all Africans to benefit
from their continent’s extraordinary wealth.
Source: http://africaprogresspanel.org/publications/policy-papers/2014-africa-progress-report/
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