AFRICA'S DEVELOPMENT CRISIS: AGRICULTURAL STAGNATION. POPULATION EXPLOSION, AND ENVIRONMENTAL DEGRADATION Robert S. McNamara - af TlSD Librry RETURN to L-3600 -. . i~ Address to the Africa ~ e a ' d e r s hForum Ota, Nigeria June 2 1,1990 AFRICA'S DEVELOPMENT CRISIS: AGRICULTURAL STAGNATION, POPULATION EXPLOSION, AND ENVIRONMENTAL DEGRADATION by < Robert S. McNamara , Address to the Africa Leadership Forum Ota, Nigeria June 21, 1990 I am deeply indebted t o Edward V.K. Jaycox and the staff of the World Bank's Africa Region for assistance in preparing this paper - in particular t o Gerard Rice and Kevin Cleaver. I would also like t o thank Caio Koch-Weser, Stephen O'Brien, Dunstan Wai, Hazel Denton, David Berk, lshrat Husain, Joanne Salop, and Satia Yalamanchili. TABLE OF CONTENTS I. THE EXTENT OF THE CRISIS AND ITS IMPACT O N SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT Introduction The Situation Today A Multifaceted Crisis Signs of Hope 11. AGRICULTURAL STAGNATION, POPULATION EXPLOSION AND ENVIRONMENTAL DEGRADATION The Nexus Agricultural Performance Population Growth Environmental Degradation The Vicious Cycle Ill. TARGETS AND ACTION PROGRAMS Transforming Agriculture Slowing Population Growth Protecting the Environment IV. A STRATEGY FOR SUSTAINABLE AND EQUITABLE GROWTH A Long Road A Strategic Agenda Continued Adjustment People-Sensitive Development Africa's Entrepreneurs Regional Integration Building African Capacities The Question of Governance Donors' Responsibility V. CONCLUSION: A GLOBAL COALITION FOR AFRICA ANNEX APPENDIX TABLES ABBREVIATIONS CAB - Current Account Balance GDI - Gross Domestic Investment GDP - Gross Domestic Product GNFS - Goods and Non-Factor Services GNP - Gross National Product ICOR - Incremental Capital Output Ratio M - Merchandise Imports mtme - Millions of Tons of Maize Equivalent NGOS - Non-GovernmentalOrganizations ODA - Official Development Assistance X - Merchandise Exports I. 'THE EXTENT OF 'THE CRISIS AND ITS IMPACT ON SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT Introduction It is an honor and a privilege for me t o participate in a meeting of the Africa Leadership Forum. During my stay at the World Bank, I looked forward t o my visits t o this continent-to see the land and t o meet with the people. Some of Africa's greatest leaders became my friends, including Leopold Senghor, Julius Nyerere, Jomo Kenyatta and, of course, Olusegun Obasanjo. I feel at home when I am in Africa. I also know that I can be frank and candid in exchanging views with you-as I intend t o be today. I will address the fundamental development challenge that faces this generation of Africans. But my remarks will also, I hope, carry a message for future generations. In 1983 the Economic Commission for Africa, in its report ECA and Africa's Development 1983-2008,stated : "The picture that emerges from the analysis of the perspective of the African region by theyear 2008, underthe historical trend scenario, isalmost a nightmare...Firstly, the potential population explosion would have tremendous repercussions on the region's physical resources such as land and the essential social services: education, health, housing, nutrition, water, etc. Atthe national level, the socio-economic conditions would be characterized by a degradation of the very essence of human dignity. The rural population, which would have t o survive on intolerable toil, will face an almost disastrous situation of land scarcity-whole families would have to subsist on a mere hectareof land. Poverty would reach unimaginable dimensions ..." Seven years haveelapsed since that report was published. What has happened in the intervening period? Put very bluntly, the situation has worsened. Africa is a continent 1 in crisis and there is little reason to believe that current development programs will reverse the adverse trends. The situation five years from now is likely to be worse, not better. The Situation Today A child born today in Sub-Saharan Africa faces a bleak set of statistics. The oddsare one in ten that he or she will not live more than a year; theoddsareone in twentythat thechild's motherwill diegiving birth. The child born today in Sub-Saharan Africa can expect to live for only 50 years-25 years less than children in the industrial countries. The newborn African child enters a world in which one person in five does not receive enough food to lead a productive, healthy life. There is only one doctor for every 25,000 people, compared with one for every 550 people in the industrial countries. Bythe time the child born today is 22, if present population growth continues, Sub-Saharan Africa's population will have doubled. When the child is 45, it will have quadrupled. And all this in a region where many people are already poorer than they were 30 years ago, where there is mass unemployment and widespread malnutrition, and where the number of people living in absolute poverty is expected to expand by over 75 million within the next decade. Thechild born today in Sub-SaharanAfrica comes intoa placein the midst of an unprecedented crisis. Or as Nigeria's Chinua Achebe has so poignantly described it, into a place where Things Fall Apart. A Multifaceted Crisis Sub-Saharan Africa unquestionably poses the greatest develop- 2 ment challenge facing the planet today. The problems are deep- seated and multifaceted. Poverty. A fundamental problem is poverty. Of the more than one billion people living in the developing world on less than $375 per year (compared t o per capita income in the United States of $20,000), over 16 percent live in Sub-Saharan Africa. By the year 2000 it is projected that the region will account for 30 percent of the world's poor. While the incomes of most of the world's poor-those living in East and South Asia-rose in the 1980s, they fell in Sub-Saharan Africa. W h ~ l e infant mortality, school enrollment rates and other indicators have continued t o improve for most of the developing world, they have stagnated or declined forthe poor of Africa. Bytheyear2000 child mortality is projected t o fall t o around 30 deaths per thousand in East Asia; in Sub-SaharanAfrica itwill still hover around 135 perthousand-- the highest in the world. It is expected that most regions in the developing world will achieve universal primary-school enrollment by the end of this decade. Sub-Saharan Africa is the exception. Economic Growth. A major cause of the deep incidence of poverty in Africa has been economic and political mismanage- ment in the face of adverse external conditions. This has led t o inefficiency, low productivity, meager returnson investment, and extremely low rates of economic growth. On average, for three decades since 1 960, economic growth in Sub-SaharanAfrica has barely kept ahead of population growth. And in the 1980s, per capita income declined by around 20 percent. Today, this region of 45 countries and 500 million people has a total GDP of less than $140 billion-the same as a small European country like Belgium, which has only 10 million people. Agriculture. Agricultureisthe backboneof Sub-Saharan Africa's economy. The mass of Africa's people still dwell in villages and earn their living cultivating family farms of between five and 15 acres. Although Africa's agriculture has grown over the last three decades-by about 2 percent a year-it has not kept up with population growth. 3 Population. The population is expanding at a rate rarely, if ever, seen in any large region in human history-currently about 3.1 percent a year. In the nineteenth century, as the European nations industrializedand developed, their populations doubled over a period of 90 years. African populations are currently doubling in about 22 years. Sub-Saharan Africa now has twice the population it had in 1965 and more than five times the population it had at the beginning of the century. Environment. This pressure of people, combined with tradi- tional agricultural practices, is causing environmental degrada- tion at an alarming pace-desertification, deforestation, soil ' / : erosion and destruction of vegetative cover. The major problem is not industrial pollution, but rather the depletion of Africa's natural resource base, which poses a major threat to both present and future generations. There are other economic indicators of the African crisis: Sub-Saharan Africa's debt has risen 25-fold since 1970 and now stands at about $140 b~llion-roughlyequal to its GDP. Relative to GDP, this makes Sub-SaharanAfrica the most heavily indebted region of the world. The region's terms of trade have dropped by 10 percent in the latter part of the 1980s. More seriously, Africa's share in world markets has fallen by half since 1970. Sub-Saharan Africa now accounts for less than 2 percent of all world trade, placing the region at the very margin of the global economy. Net financial transfers to Sub-Saharan Africa (in current dollars unadjusted for inflation), declined from an average of around $13 billion in the early 1980s to $7 billion in the mid-1980s, before rising again to $12 billion a year at the end of the decade (Table A--2 1 ). Private transfers dropped from around $3.3 billion in 1980 to a net negative transfer of about a billion dollars a year by 1988. Since the North-South dialogue of the mid-1 970s and the Brandt Report of 1980-which pushed for a more equitable distribution of international resources-the atmosphere for aid and investment in Africa has chilled. There is also the risk that recent events in Eastern Europe may divert future capital flows from Africa. Signs of Hope The general picture is gloomy. As with any general picture, however, it does not tell the wholestory. Since the UN Special Session on Africa in 1986, a substantial number of Sub-Saharan countries- including Nigeria-have embarked on programs of economic reform. These programs, often subsumed under the phrase "structural ad- justment." have been extremely difficult and painful but absolutely essential. Policies have been introduced that have the potential for rekindling growth, revitalizing agriculture, and increasing Africa's competitive- ness. The adjustment process has been far from perfect. There have been heavy costs as well as benefits, losers as well as winners. The process needs to be further refined. But it surely needs to continue if Africa is not to be left further and further behind. Policy reform is one sign of hope for Africa. So too is the fact that despite the general climate of aid fatigue, the donor community in- creased its disbursements to Sub-Saharan Africa in the latter part of the 1980s in response to the region's own efforts to bring about a turnaround. Net official development assistance (ODA) flows to Sub- Saharan Africa increased, on average, by about 7 percent a year in real terms during 1985-88. The region's share in worldwide net ODA disbursements increased from 23 percent in 1980 to around 32 percent in 1987. The World Bank, which was an important catalyst for increased assistance to Africa, has called for a 4 percent real annual increase in gross ODA financial transfers (which are particularly important for countries like Nigeria) forthe rest of this decade. This is an ambitious 5 target. But such levels of assistance should provide enough fuel to allow for at least modest per capita income growth. Compared to what happened to incomes in the 1980s, that would be no small accomplishment. Two years ago, at the first meeting of the Africa Leadership Forum, ChairmanObasanjocommented onAfricalsdevelopment performance over the past decade: "The bald fact is that Africa is a continent in dereliction and decay. We are moving backwards as the rest of the world is forging ahead," he said. What can be done? I do not have a complete answer. But of one thing I am sure. There is no quick or easy solution. Only by laying out long-term-and I mean 20- or 25-year-"indicative" development programs for each country, and for the region as a whole, can we tackle the problem in a realistic way. The programs must address the fundamental determinants of economic and social advance and they must show for each country-for the short, medium, and long term- the rates of progress that need to be achieved in each of the basic measures of human welfare. To register even a modest improvement in the quality of life, the Sub-Saharan economies must raise their rate of economic growth from less than one percent per annum-the level of the 1980s-to at least 4-5 percent a year (per capita income growth rates would need to rise from -2.8 percent to plus one or 2 percent). During the next decade, I see expansion of agricultural output as the foundation of growth. And that will requirethattherelationship between agricultural development, population growth, and preservation of the environ- ment-the subject of this conference-receive far more emphasis than in the past. I turn to that topic now. I will conclude my remarks with more general comments on development and on the role and responsibility of national leaders and the international community in accelerating its pace. II. AGRICULTURAL STAGNATION, POPULATION EXPLOSION AND ENVIRONMENTAL DEGRADATION The Nexus Africa must grapple with three major trends which have deeply affected its past development and which will largely determine its future prospects: agricultural stagnation, explosive population growth, and degradation of its natural resource base. The majority of the people of Sub-SaharanAfrica are dependent on the land for their living. But the land's capacity to produce is ebbing away under the pressure of rapidly growing numbers of people who do not have the wherewithal to put back into the land what they are forced to take from it. As the land's vegetative cover-trees, shrubs, grasses-shrinks, its already fragile soils lose the capacity to nourish crops and retain moisture. Consequently, agricultural yields fall and the land becomes steadily more vulnerable to the naturally variable rainfall, turning dry spells into droughts and periods of food shortage into famines. This vicious cycle spins in different ways and at different speeds in different places. There are important country variations. A few countries have performed moderately well in agricultural develop- ment (Kenya, Cameroon, Zimbabweareexamples), while others have performed extremely poorly (Table A-7). Some countries have very high population growth rates (Malawi, Tanzania, Zambia, Kenya, CGte d'lvoire are growing at or above 3.5 percent a year (Table A-9)). Others have more modest rates (for example, the Central African Republic, Chad and Mauritius are growing at below 2.5 percent). The nature of environmental degradation also varies from country to country. Some countries, such as those in the Sahel, Namibia and Botswana face serious desertification. Others in coastal West Africa are witnessing rapid destruction of their tropical forests. Some countries-like Madagascar, Lesotho and Mauritius-have already put national environmental programs in place. Despite these variations among countries, the basic linkages be- tween agricultural stagnation, population growth and environmental degradation are common for the region. And this nexu; poses a critical threat to Africa's development in the 2 1 st century. I turn next to what has been happening in each of the three areas. Agricultural Performance Agriculture is absolutely essential to Sub-Saharan Africa's growth and development. It contributes 34 percent of GDP, 40 percent of exports and 70 percent of employment. It is by far the largest sector of the economy. It is the sector on which the vast majority of Africans depend for their well-being and livelihood. If Africa is to meet its food requirements and generate the financial resources needed for its overall development programs, it simply must improve-and improve dramatically-its agricultural performance. The magnitude of this task comes into focus when one considers that over the last 2 5 years, agricultural production in Africa rose by only about 2 percent a year-below the average population growth rate of about 2 . 8 percent (Tables A-7 and A-9). Per capita food production has declined; food imports are increasing at about 5 percent per year; and food aid has expanded at nearly 6 percent a year. Yet, despite the growth in food aid and food imports, about 100 million Africans are malnourished and Africans on average consume fewer calories than people in other parts of the developing world (Table A-8). Famines in several African countries in the 1980s have been one of the most graphic indications of the growing inability of Africa t o feed itself. This failure of African agriculture has also choked offthecontinent's earning potential in the global economy. During the 1960s, Africa's agricultural exports grew at nearly 2 percent a year. Since then they have declined sharply--by more than 3 percent a year. As a result, Africa's share of world exports for most of its major agricultural commodities has fallen. Between 1970 and 1984, for example, 8 Africa's world market share for three main agricultural exports- coffee, cocoa, and cotton-shrank by 13,33, and 29 percent respec- tively. The implications are substantial: if Sub-Saharan countries had maintained their 1970 market share of non-oil primary exports, their export earnings would have been $9-10 billion a year higher in 1986- 87. The difference is approximately equal to the region's total debt service payments in this period. The decline in agriculture has been caused by many factors. A fundamental one has been the failure to modernize African agricul- tural practices. Farming methods, such as shifting cultivation, that served Africa well when its population was small, are proving disas- trous asthenumber of peoplegrows. Underthetraditional "slash and burn" agriculture, a farmer clears a plot of land, burns the felled trees, and cultivates the land for two or three years until the soil begins to lose its fertility and weeds proliferate. Then the farmer leaves that land to fallow and clears another plot. Bushes and trees gradually reestablish themselves on the abandoned land. In 6 to 15 years, they restore its nutrients, and the farmer can start over. The process takes about four times more land than if the farmer worked one plot, maintained its fertility, controlled its weeds and intensified its production. Moreover, with each burning, some nutrients are lost into the air or washed away, and valuable wood goes up in smoke. Now, as the population grows, farmers are forced to shorten the periods of fallow. Soil erosion increases and fuelwood becomes scarce. As a substitute, people burn animal dung and crop residues, further denying nutrients to the soil. A major result of this vicious cycle is low agricultural productivity and environmental dam- age. In addition to poor farming methods, Africa's agricultural perfor- mance has been affected by bad weather, including severe droughts in 1972-73 and 1983-84, and by poor project design and imple- mentation. Aid projects and government programs in Africa have had an appalling failure rate. One in every two World Bank agriculture projects in East Africa has failed-against one in 20 in South Asia. Projects have been over-ambitious, not sufficiently focused on farm- 9 erst real needs, constraints and capacities, and not attentive enough to the overall policy frameworks governing the agricultural sector. Clearly, the failure of African agriculture reflects the low priority accorded to farming by Africa's post-Independence policymakersand governments. Policies kept farm prices low; encouraged labor and capital to flow into cities; promoted cheap imports of foods such as wheat and rice, which have come to be preferred by urban consumers; and neglected agricultural research and investment. While Asian countries I~ke Malaysia (now a major competitor with Africa in world markets) gave priority to agriculture and allocated around 25 percent of their budgets to that sector in the 1970s, the median for Africa was 7.6 percent. Is it any wonder that Africa's share of exports in the world market has dropped by 50 percent since 1970? Population Growth As Africa's agriculture was declining, her population was grow- ing-exponentially. The situation is unique. Whereas in Asia and Latin America better health care and extension of education have been accompanied by falling population growth, in Africa generally the reverse has been true. In 1960, African population growth rates were not high in relation to those of Asia and Latin America (2.5 percent versus 2.5 percent and 2.9 percent respectively).Today, Asia's and Latin America's have fallen to 2.1 and 2.5 percent, respectively, but Africa's has risen to 3.1 percent. Sub-Saharan Africa's average total fertility rate (the average number of children born to women in their childbearing years) has remained at about 6.6 since 1965 (Table A-9); in other low-income countries it has declined from 6.3 to 4. Even if fertility fell tomorrow to twochildren per Sub-SaharanAfrican family, the region's population would continue to expand for the next 60 to 70 years. At current fertility rates, the region's population would reach 1.6 billion by2020. No region of the world has ever managed to develop satisfactorily with this rate of population growth. Nearly 50 percent of Africa's population is below the age of 15. Each year Africa's school-age population increases by 5 million. 'There is a corresponding increase in the number of minds to be trained, mouths to be fed, health services to be provided--all just to maintain theexisting and alreadydisgracefullylow levelsof education, nutrition and health. Nearly half of those who will enter the labor force in the next three decades are already born. Even under the best-case scenario, about 350 million new workers will be looking for jobs between now and the year 2020. This exceptionaldemographicsurge will be accompanied by massive pressures for migration-both national and regional-creating social and political tension. Most of the migrants are likely to settle in the expanding urban centers, creating megacities. By 2020 there will probably be 30 African cities with more than a million inhabitants. Several, including Lagos, can be expected to exceed 10 million- requiring vast sums to provide even the most basic infrastructure. Yet, many Africans remain to be persuaded of the imperative of smaller families. They see land as abundant and labor as scarce. It is an increasingly false perception. As Sub-Saharan Africa's population has grown, the amount of arable land available per person has declined: from an average of 0.5 hectares in 1965 to 0.3 hectares in 1987. In some countries, the pressure of population on arable agricultural land and other natural resources is already intense-for example, in much of the Sahel, Burundi, western Cameroon, Kenya and Rwanda (Table A-5). Other countries will soon face similar situations. In Nigeria, for example, at the present rate of population growth, arable land per capita will decline to 0.19 hectares from the current level of 0.3 hectares by theyear 2000. This would bring arable land scarcity to about the same level as that of Rwanda and Somalia (0.2 hectares) today. It is true that many areas are still substantially underpopulated. Some could support larger numbers. Where possible, governments should encourage people to move to areas of high agricultural and economic potential. However, the paceof population growth is going 11 to make it difficult to finance and adequately support such programs. This underlines the fundamental point: the urgency of curbing Africa's population explosion is not due to the present size of the population, but rather to the accelerated and increasingly unmanageable rateof increase. In short, population growth is running ahead of economic growth and swamping Africa's development effort. An African child is seen as blessing itsfamily's past as well as future. Heor sheisonetwig on thevast African treeof life. In African societies, as in many others, children remain the surest and strongest source of prestige. Moreover, in poor, primarily agricultural African societies, there are economic incentives to have children. They provide farm labor, and supporttheir parents in old age. And especiallywheninfant mortality rates have been traditionally very high, there is an incentive to have many children to ensure that some survive. Even given these cultural and economic considerations-and we are talking here about the most private and personal decision made by human beings-the demographic choice facing Africa can no longer bedeferred. Africa has to decide whether to fill its lands quickly with many ill-fed, unhealthy, uneducated, unemployed people; or to space its children so that they and the societyas a whole have a better chance of a much better life. The choice has to be made now because exceptionally high population growth is already compromising eco- nomic growth and family welfareand is jeopardizing Africa's future development. No other continent's destiny has been so shaped by population growth as has Africa's in the late twentieth century. The demographic consequences of procrastination and delay are inexorable. For example, as is illustrated in the table below, if Nigeria were to begin to introduce now those policies which would permit it to achieve replacement level fertility by the year 201 0 (instead of the year 2040, as is projected in Table A-1 3), its population would level off at about 324 million instead of 622 million. Similarly, were Ghana 12 and Kenya to reach replacement level fertility in 201 0, thesepopulations would ultimately stabilize at 40 million and 72 million respectively, instead of 67 and 113 million as projected in Table A-I 3. Table 1. Population Size ScenariosJ (population in million9 Ultimate popula- Ultimate popula- Difference due Population tion size i f NRR= 1 tion size i f NRR= 1 to delay in in 1990 in 2010 in year ~ndicated reaching NRR= 1 Popu- Year Popu- Percent of 1990 C0~ntfy Population Populatton lation NRR= 1 lation populatron Nigeria 117 324 622 2040 298 255 Kenya 24 72 113 2035 41 171 Ghana 15 40 67 2035 27 180 Note: NRR 1 s Net Reproduction Rate. a. Effect on ultimate population size of reaching NRR= 1 In Years 2010, 2040, and 2035 respectively. Source: World Bank estimates. Environmental Degradation One of the most serious long-term threats posed by Sub-Saharan Africa's extraordinarily rapid population growth rate is to the region's environment. Like the population explosion, which was largely ignored until it began to translate into food shortages, the threats to Africa's environment tended to pass unnoticed until they began to affect agricultural yields. Except where degradation has been dra- matic-as in the enormous gully erosions of Ethiopia's highlands- losses of soil and tree cover are often imperceptible. And when they are perceived, stopping the drain of natural resources may be as complicated as the African environment itself, entailing long years of investment. So much damage has been done that reversing the process will be impossible in many areas. Theenvironment consists of intricate ecological systems. Trees and grass, for example, not only provide fuel and fodder, but also build soil fertility, prevent erosion, provide water catchment, ameliorate climate changes, and provide wildlife habitats. These systems are the very underpinnings for human welfare and survival. The data on Africa's environment are scarce and unreliable. Even so, some disturbing trends may be discerned. Trees are being cut down 30 times as fast as they are being replaced (Table A-14); as many as 80 million Africans have serious difficulty finding fuelwood (their main source of energy); in countries like Ethiopia, topsoil losses of as much as 290 tons per hectare per year have been reported; and many of Africa's unique plant and animal species have been or are being driven to extinction. The most pressing problem is the high rate of loss of vegetative cover (resulting from a combination of deforestation, overgrazing, and slash and burn cultivation), loss of soil fertility and soil erosion. In 1980, there were a total of approximately 660 million hectares of forest and woodland in Sub-Saharan Africa. Approximately 3.2 million hectares of this were lost each year of the 1980s, and the rate is believed to be accelerating. On the other hand, reforestation amounted to only 90 thousand hectares per year during the 1980s (Table A-1 4). Soil erosion and reduction of soil fertility are even more widespread. The United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) estimates that about 80 percent of Sub-Saharan Africa's drylands and rangelands-about 1500 million hectares-are desertified (meaning extreme loss of vegetative cover). In many places, environmental damage has already reached crisis point. In the Sahel, for example, expanding populations and acceler- ated deforestation have triggered a cascading decline in biological and economic productivity and have created what is now the world's largest area threatened by desertification. Hardship is widespread as people seek refuge in the cities. The Sahel's urban populations have quadrupled in the past 20 years. Pollution in these areas and their growing demand for raw materials (such as fuelwood), in turn, accelerate deforestation and environmental degradation. And so the vicious cycle spins on. The Sahelian example highlights what is happening, in varying degrees, throughout Sub-Saharan Africa: forests are being cut down, 14 croplands turned into deserts, species of flora and fauna lost, and water and air polluted. What must be emphasized is that these are losses not just to the present generation, but to future generations as we1I. The Vicious Cycle It must also be recognized that this environmental degradation does not occur in isolation. Its causes and consequences are broad and deep, and it is inextricably linked to Africa's growth and devel- opment. The land, in a fundamental sense, is Africa's basic capital- its patrimony. If thiscapital isconsumed or destroyed through overuse and misuse, it will have the same effect as a company carelessly depleting its financial assets: in the end, Africa too will be out of business. In a speech to the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) in 1985, former PresidentJulius Nyerere of Tanzania made the following point: "Until the last few years, Africa regarded environmental concern as an American and European matter. Indeed, there was a tendency to believe that talk of the environment was part of a conspiracy to prevent modern development on our continent. Now we have reached the stage of recognizing that environ- mental concern and development have to be linked together if the latter is to be real and permanent." He was absolutely right to stress the link between the environment and economic development. Without proper care forthe environment, development is not sustainable. And the links between environment, population and agriculture are particularly critical. In many countries, rapid population growth is putting unbearable pressure on agricultural land. In many countries, traditional farming land is already overcultivated, and more fragile lands are being exploited. In many countries, poor families are cutting whateverwood they can lay their hands on for essential fuel. The result is ever- 15 widening circles of bare and infertile soil around villages, ever more time and effort required simply t o obtain fuel and raise enough crops to survive, and less time and energy for improving human welfare. When environmental abuse leads t o loss of arable land, wildlife and watersupply, theeffectsarefelt in declining incomesand a diminishing quality of life. Inevitably, the poor suffer most, especiallywomen and children. Any peasant farmer who has seen his or her crop fail because the soil has been sucked dry of basic nutrients due to overcultivation, knows that the link between environment and development is not merely theoretical. Within Sub-Saharan Africa's 21 million square kilometers, water and land resources hold much potential for agricultural growth. But this ecology is all too easily damaged. Eighty percent of the soils are fragile, 45 percent of the land is too dry t o support rainfed agriculture, and average rainfall varies from year to year by an enormous 30 to 40 percent. Without appropriate care and attention, the African envi- ronment will suffer irreversible damage. The costs will be enormous. The old Swahili proverb, "Do not borrow off the earth, for the earth will require its own back w ~ t h interest," expresses a fundamental truth. Africa's environmental degradation has already left its mark in a number of measurable ways: On wildlife and plant life: The International Union for the Conservation of Nature estimates that 63 percent of original wildlife habitat has been lost in Sub-Saharan Africa. This is directly caused by deforestation, desertification, and other hu- man activity. Several species of animal are currently in danger of extinction, including the rhinoceros and the gorilla. On fuelwood: There are severe fuelwood deficits in the savan- nah regions of West, Central, and East Africa, and the arid areas of the Sahel, southeastern and southwestern Africa. On water availability: There is less water for human consump- tion and irrigation because of reduced rainfall, more rapid water run-off, and less absorption of water into the ground. One result of this is that wells dry up and must bedug deeper as water tables drop. On livestock carrying capacity: Because there is less vegetation on which livestock can feed. On crop yields: Which decline as the result of top soil and nutrient losses on croplands. And on arable land: The FA0 estimates that without effective conservation, more than 16 percent of Africa's rainfed cropland could be lost by the year 2000. How can this potentially catastrophic situation be reversed? Only, I submit, by a combination of a reduction in population growth, improved agricultural performance and better environmental man- agement. I will now suggest some targets and action programs for each of these areas. Ill. TARGETS AND ACTION PROGRAMS Transforming Agriculture Transforming Africa's agriculture and expanding its productive capacity is a fundamental requirement. To achieve food security, food production will have to grow at about 4 percent a year-above the current 3.1 percent population growth rate. Beyond that, to raise incomes and meet Africa's import needs, the production of export crops must grow by no less than 4 percent a year. Thus, while recognizing the variability among countries, Africa must set its overall target for long-term agricultural growth no lower than 4 percent a year-twice the rateachieved in the 1980s (Table A-7). Given the past performance, this will be no easy task. How can it be achieved? 17 Productivity is the key. The scope for expanding agricultural production in Africa is great, although it varies from country to country. To meet the 4 percent output growth target will require an annual increase in labor productivity of about 1.5 percent, with the rural labor force growing at about 2.5 percent. Since the area under cultivation cannot be expanded by more than one percent a year without adverse environmental consequences (the average rate of the past two decades was 0.7 percent a year), land productivity must also r i s e b y a substantial 3 percent a year. The4 percent growth rate for African agriculture is ambitious, but not impossible. Cameroon, C6te d'lvoire, Kenya and Malawi have all achieved that much or more for extended periods. Other countries have greater land potential, such as Ethiopia, Sudan, Zaire, and Zambia, to name the largest. At the same time, it has to be ac- knowledged that a few-especially those in the Sahel-are unlikely ever to reach this target. Theoverseas markets on which much ofAfrican agriculturedepends will remain highly competitive. Long-term price trends are not projected to improve much. Nevertheless, African countries can diversify their production and seek out specialty markets-in off- season fruits and vegetables, for instance. Indeed, diversification out of the relatively few primary commodities on which Africa currently depends is essential. Some of the new biotechnologies for plant propagation and breeding hold enormous potential in this regard and may well result in dramatically different patterns of agricultural production and trade. We are living through an era of worldwide biotechnologicaldiscovery analogous to that of Columbus and Magellan. Africa cannot afford to miss these opportunities. Greater regional cooperation can also help to expand trade within Africa in agricultural products, especially food. Indeed, there is considerable scope for import substitution in agricultural products in Africa. There are widevariationsacrossthe continent, but there is surprising commonality in the kinds of policies and actions needed to stimulate growth in Africa's agricultural sector. To achieve the growth target, all African countries will need to (a) create an enabling environment; (b) harness new technologies; and (c) build capacities. (a)An enabling environment for agriculture means allowing prices to move flexibly in response to changing market conditions; it means turning over input supply, marketing, processing, and exporting largely to individual entrepreneurs and reducing administrative con- trols; it means promoting credit at realistic interest rates through homegrown financial institutions such as cooperatives and credit unions (as already exist, for example, in Cameroon and Rwanda); it means gradually reforming systems of land tenure to increase security of ownership, thereby encouraging investment in land improvements; and it means upgrading rural roads using small local contractors and local community contributions. There is much evidence that the African farmer, like farmers everywhere, will respond to incentives. In recent years, increased production of maize in Zimbabwe, coffee in Guinea, cotton in BeninandTanzania,cocoa in Ghana, and groundnuts in the Gambia can be attributed in large part to policy and, especially, price reform. (b) Harnessing technologies requires a new emphasis on agricul- tural research and technologies which are environmentally benign. This in turn calls for rehabilitating national research institutions (for example, through the Special Program of African Agricultural Re- search); expanding the role of international research centers (such as the Consultative Group for International Agricultural Research); and establishing multi-country research networks to pool research efforts on specific topics. 'The core of any new research strategy must be to coordinate and apply this research, and to make it more responsive to farmers' needs. Oneapparentlyeffective method of doing this is through the "training and visit" system whereby agricultural extension workers visit "con- tact" farmers on a regular schedule, and link the farmers with researchers capable of developing solutions to their problems. In a lg number of countries, the "training and visit" system has already led to substantially improved yields-of rice, maize and coffee in CBte d'lvoire, for example, and of cassava and maize in Nigeria. But the Green Revolution in Asia occurred largely on irrigated lands. Therefore, weshould not expecta Green Revolution-typebreakthrough in Africa-because of the limited land presently under irrigation and the limitation on its expansion in the future. Irrigation should be expanded to the extent feasible, but improving the productivity of African agriculturewill require manyseparateeffortsfocused primarily on rainfed conditions. The key is to adapt new technologies (rainfed and irrigated) which offer a reliable return. Farmers at the margin will invest scarce cash and labor only in sure-fire success. The new breed of cassava-developed by the International Institute for Tropical Agriculture (IITA) in Ibadan-is an excellent example of a low-cost technology that doubles yields at little additional cost. It has been spreading spontaneously among Nigerian farmers. (c) Building capacities is an imperative that runs through all levels of African agriculture: to produce better trained researchers, exten- sion agents and farmers, and to strengthen rural institutions such as farmers' associations, cooperatives, and women's groups. Since about 80 percent ofthe food grown in Africa is grown bywomen, they must be accorded priority in any program to modernize agriculture. Women are the prime actors in the agricultural sector. Indeed, the African woman's triple burden-childbearing and rearing, farm pro- duction and household management (including the responsibility for food, fuel and water supply)--is a central aspect of the nexus between population, agriculture and the environment. Improving the condi- tion of women-by increasing their access to education, as well as to credit and agricultural training and extension services-would un- doubtedly have a major and positive impact on African develop- ment. There has been a great deal of discussion about promoting the role of women in Africa. But, to be frank, there is as yet little evidence of change in their role or status. A far more comprehensive and 20 sustained approach is needed. Can the modernization of Africa's agriculture be achieved in an environmentally sustainable manner? I believe it can. There are numerous simple technologies available to African farmers which would permit expanding crop yields while maintaining soil fertility, without shifting cultivation from one area to another. These tech- nologies include terracing, alley cropping, agroforestry, water- spreading, use of surface mulches and appropriate fertilizers, and integrated livestockand crop management. Most of thesetechnologies fit perfectly the objectives of a sustainable agriculture in Africa: they increase the productivity of the land, require considerable labor, and need littlecapital. Water harvesting in Burkina Faso is but oneexample of a simple but highly successful new technique introduced at the community level. Paul Harrison, in his book The Greening of Africa, cites example after example of environmentally benign agricultural technologies that can be applied at the local level and often at relatively low cost. That they have not been introduced on a wide scale is largely due to the lack of incentive or profitability for the farmer in introducing a "modern" or "sustainable" technology. Moreover, where uncultivated land was available for clearing, it was usually cheaper and more profitable for the farmer to open up new land rather than use more labor or relatively more costly agricultural methods. The risk to the farmer of innovation and of intensive cultivation has been a major cause of the widespread failure of agricultural development in Af- rica-and a major cause of environmental degradation. 'this leads back, of course, to the question of incentives and policy frameworks. PG_cy..rmust.permjJ. farrner~. to make a profit. . from . . sustainable -. .. .- . . agric-ultural methods and, conversely, to lose money if environmentally destructive methods are used. Government assis- tance in tree-planting, in soil conservation and in encouraging the right kinds of fertilizers, for example, could help =eat1 to intensify African agriculture without damaging the environmen6frica today uses only a small fraction of the amount of fert~lizersof other developing countries operating under comparable conditions. What would be the cost of a sustainable agriculture for Africa? There is already considerable public investment in agriculture, equal to about $2.4 billion per annum, of which 40 percent is aid-financed. About $2.5 billion in investment in agriculture is also made each year by private and community investors. Only a portion of this total investment, however, goes to the types of sustainable agricultural practices mentioned previously. If a further portion were redirected to them, the total amounts going to agriculture to meet the target growth rates would not need to increase by more than 3-4 percent a year. Productivity gains to labor and land would permit the African population to both feed itself and increase income, without greatly increasing farmed area. This would allow the current vicious cycle of agricultural stagnation and environmental degradation to be turned into a virtuous one of growth and conservation. Moreover, improved agriculturalincomes (especiallyin conjunction with improved education and health care) should help further encourage smaller families-thus helping to reduce the pressure on the environment, allowing for some much-needed healing to take place. This, in turn, should stimulate agricultural productivity. The realization of this virtuous cycle will be enormously difficult, requiring radical changes in government policy in favor of sustainable agricultural practices, and a renewed commitment by the interna- tional community. But of greatest importance will be the collabora- tion of millions of African farmers acting individually and in their own self-interestto modernize and sustain the region's agricultural devel- opment. Slowing Population Growth The positiveimpact of modernizing African agriculture is likelyto be nullified if population growth continuesto be high. Aminimum target would be for Africa to follow the rates of fertility decline already achieved by other developing countries. This would result in reducing 22 the average population growth rate to 2.2 percent a year within the next 30 years. Even under this scenario, the Sub-Saharan population would be over 1.2 billion by 2020 and would not level off below 3 billion (Table A-12). Moreover, the target of 2.2 percent is highly ambitious in the African context-requiring a reduction in the total fertility rate from about 6.7 children perwoman to 3.6 by 2025. How can this be achieved? First, I believe that there must be a broad, comprehensive approach to this issue. Professor Ali Mazrui has emphasized that improvements in well-being and health are essential to achieving lower birth rates. "Death is a more regular visitor than the doctor to most African homes," he has said. Fears about survival continueto shape decisions about bearing children. After all, health in Africa is still wretched in comparison with the Western countries. It is also worse on average than in most parts of the developing world. Reducing the death rate in Africa must, therefore, be a major part of a program to reduce the birth rate. Better family planning can actually serve as a cornerstone for improved health careand reduced infant and maternal mortality rates. Despite overall decreasing mortality rates, almost a third of all mater- nal deaths in the world still occur on the African continent. The risk faced by an African woman of death related to pregnancy during her lifetime is about one in 21, compared with one in 600 in Bangladesh and one in 15,000 for a woman in Sweden. Internationalresearch has shown that the risks of death to both mother and infant are much higher when the mother is under 20 or over 35, when births areclosely spaced, or when the mother has already had manychildren. Thus, the same fertility trends that cause Africa's rapid population growth also contribute to its tragic death toll among mothers and infants. Most African governments now officially endorse child spacing and family planning. But there is an urgent need to match expressions of general commitment with specific technical, financial and political support. In general, existing programs in Africa are woefully weak (Table A-1 1). Yet, there is strong evidence that when family planning services are made widely available, and especially when they are 23 backed by mass media campaigns and community-based education programs, contraceptive use becomes high. Zimbabwe, for example, has been developing family planning services since its Independence. These now include outreach workers, who, traveling by bicycle, distribute contraceptives in rural areas and provide education and counseling. Family planning is included in maternal and child health care. The contraceptive prevalence rate in Zimbabwe has risen from 5 percent in thelate 1960sto an estimated 43 percent in 1988. The fertility rate has dropped from over 7 to 5.3 overthe past 10 years. In Botswana, government clinics provide integrated maternal and child health and family planning services. About 80 percent of the population lives within 15 kilometers of a health facility. The rate of contraceptive use doubled from 16 to 33 percent between 1984 and 1988, and fertility dropped from 6.5 to 5.1. Mauritius has reduced its total fertility rate from over 6 in the 1950s to 2.2 in 1986 and below replacement level today. It has done so through combined family planning, health education, increased primary education, and through sustained improve- ment in living standards. Even in Kenya, which continues to haveoneof the highestfertility rates in the world, there are signs of progress. The latest World Bank estimates are that fertility has declined from an average of 7.7 children per woman in 1984 to 6.7 in 1989. A major contributing factor has been increased use of fam~ly planning. Twenty-eight percent of married women in Kenya are currently estimated to be using a contraceptive method, compared with 17 percent in 1986. These "success stories" in population reduction stand in stark contrastto most African countries where, on average, an estimated 1 1 percent of couples use contraceptive methods (both modern and 24 traditional)-compared with over 80 percent in China and 40 percent in India (Table A-1 2). To reach thefertilityratetarget of3.6 bytheyear 2025, nearly 50 percent of African married women would need to be using effective contraception. Achieving this target will require an intensive effort by African countries and greater, more enlightened support from the international community. What would this entail? First, population programs must go beyond family planning and include efforts to create the underlying conditions for fertility decline. This means expanding basic education, especially for girls-which will help increase the age of marriage, a key determinant of fertility. It also means increasing the economic independence of women; providing financial incentives (taxes and allowances) that favor smaller families; and, as I said earlier, reducing present rates of child mortality so that people may not feel the need to haveso manychildren. It means raising incomes, especially in rural areas, and searching for ways in which African cultural traditions can be mobilized to encourage lower fertility. Second, family planning services will have to be expanded-and extended to men, who are often ignored in these programs. Program management should also be strengthened by establish- ing monitorable targets for each country-including indicators of the availability of services, contraceptive prevalence rates and fertility rates. Third, educating the public about the implications of family size is crucial. Political leaders and communities must be sensitized to the economic and environmental consequences of rapid population growth. Popular demand for family planning and contraception should be encouraged by government sponsor- ship of widespread education and information programs, in- cluding publicity campaigns. Governments should also use community leaders, teachers, agricultural extension agents, non- governmental organizations (NGOs) and the mass media in this important undertaking. In Nigeria, with the launching of the Population Policy, such campaigns are just beginning. Fourth, the role of NGOs should be greatly strengthened, given their proven effectiveness in dealing with population issues all over theworld. A useful step in this direction might befor donors to establish an NGO Population Fund that would allow NGOs to carry out their programs on a sustainable basis. Fifth, population issues should be elevated and integrated into the country policy and planning process-by governments and donors. Where fertility rates are high and are projected to remain high, interdisciplinary teams of African nationals (anthropolo- gists, sociologists, political scientists, economists, demographers and health workers) should be organized to determine what actions should be taken to bring them down. If this agenda is vigorously pursued, a population growth rate of 2.2 percent a year can be achieved by 2020. The record in Asia and Latin America clearly shows how effective family planning programs can be. 'theworld Bankestimatesthatabout40 percent of thedecline in fertility throughout the world between 1965 and 1975 can be traced to the expansion of such programs. Direct government and donor intervention has changed demographic history in other devel- oping regions. The same can happen in Sub-Saharan Africa. What would it cost? Present aid levels for family planning in Sub- Saharan Africa are about $100 million per year. To meet the targets indicated previously, aid would need to be increased to $650 million per annum by the year 2000. As for the costs to individual countries, based on recent experience in Zimbabwe and Botswana, annual allocations of no more than 0.6 to 0.8 percent of GNP would allow countries to put in place substantial family planning programs. Not only are these costs modest, they would be more than offset by the savings in education and health budgets and food imports that lower fertility would bring. One imponderable in this whole scenario is the AIDS pandemic. The World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that more than a 26 million Africansare infected bythe HIVvirus. It hasalready spread with frightening speed through the Central African countries of Zaire, Burundi, Rwanda, Uganda, Tanzania and Zambia. In its epicenter, an estimated 15 to 25 percent of adults are affected. How will AlDS affect Africa's population growth rate? We do not know for sure at this point. We know that at least 50,000 Africans have died of the disease since it emerged in the late 1970s. WHO estimates that an additional 1.5 million people may perish in the next decade. In five to ten years, when those now infected have gone through the incubation period, we will know more about how bad it is likely to be. Hopefully, we will also know more about possibilities for a cure. There is a need for much more research and analysis on the exact impact of AIDS. At the moment, however, there appears to be scant evidence that Sub-Saharan Africa's population growth rate will fall significantly as a direct result of the disease. Moreover, it will not hit all countries in the same way. The costs of treating AlDS cases will be high, of course, as will be the impact on a critical group of productive people aged between 20 and 40. However, it would be wrong at present to view AIDS as some macabre Malthusian solution to Africa's population problems. The message remains clear: unless effective population planning measures are taken, and taken now, overall population growth rates in Africa will remain unsustainably high. Protecting the Environment Reducing the population growth rate and increasing the produc- tivity and sustainability of agriculture will be the two most effective means of helping to protect Africa'senvironment. But these measures alone will not be sufficient. A specific and extensive affirmative environmental action program will also be required. The main causes of Africa's environmental problems are complex and interconnected. There are no panaceas. As President Nyerere said, "conservation" was long resented in Africa as a colonial imposi- tion on rural people. Indeed, it was used as a springboard for 27 nationalist opposition during the pre-Independence period. Over the last decade, attitudes toward environmental protection have been changing in Africa-as well as in the rest of the world. The time has come for these changing attitudes t o be backed by action programs and resources. Even if there are no panaceas, even if our knowledge is incomplete, we must at least strive t o address the problem. First, natural resource management must be seen from both a "production" and a "protection" perspective. It is not enough t o arguethat land, water and other natural resourcesshould beconserved for their own intrinsic value or beauty. As they are being protected, ways must be found t o make them productive. The essence of sustainability is this combination of productivity and protection. Ultimately, planting the trees and protecting the vegetation, ter- racing the fields, and applying mulch t o worn-out soils will have t o be done by Africa's farmers-and they will make that effort only when they see a clear advantage in it for themselves. The single most important advantagewill be increased production. As I have indicated previously, natural resource use can be greatly enhanced and pro- tected through the implementation of sustainable land, water and livestock technologies-such as agroforestry techniques and high- yielding crops and fertilizers. This leads us back t o the policy dimension. The basic link between economic policy management at the national level and sound natural resource use at the local level should be clearly understood. African farmers are excellent economists. If they are given the right prices for using environmentally sustainable crops and technologies, they will not only make the right economic decisions, they will make the right decisions on natural resource management as well. Widespread tree-planting, for example, will only occur when wood prices are made attractive to growers. Right now, in many countries, 28 the price of wood is far below the economic cost of producing it. Pricing wood fuels realistically would encourage conservation and, in the process, stimulate the demand for other appropriately priced alternative energy supplies. As a general rule, areas under trees in Africa should expand at the rate of at least one percent per annum in order to maintain wood and building supplies and to replenish the natural resource base. Wilderness areas should also be preserved at around their current level of 2 5 percent of total land area (Table 1 5). Thesetargets represent a major undertaking. Deforestation iscurrently taking placeat a rateof about -0.5 percent perannum; and morethan two-thirds of Africa's wilderness areas are already estimated to have been destroyed. As a matter of policy, every country should put in place its own environmental action program--backed with sufficient staff, institu- tional and financial resources, and political support. These programs would include setting targets as well as designing the criteria for specific environmental actions-biological importance, level of deg- radation, productive- potential, population pressures, and so on. As with population planning, governments should use every available method of communication-public and private-to emphasize the importance of these programs. Strictures on environmental management, however, cannot be imposed from on high, particularly in the rural areas. Top-down programs will fall apart as soon as the government jeep breaks down. This means that the local people must understand, and be fully involved in, the design and implementation of environmental policies and programs. In turn, those policies must take account of local traditions, cultures and needs. This requires a major educational effort. And again, sincewomen arethe principal players in smallholder farms in Africa-and thus make many of the decisions regarding natural resource use-they must be specifically targeted and assisted as a part of this process. Earlier approaches to enviro~mentalmanagement in Africa were based on environmental impact assessments of individual projects and on investment in programs such as pollution abatement, affores- 29 tation, or water management. These are useful, but inadequate. The project-by-project approach tends to address the symptoms, rather than the root causes, of environmental problems. Future strategies should look beyond projects to the broader policy issues and explicitly recognize intersectoral links and intergenerational concerns. To this end, a growing number of African countries have prepared national environmental action plans which describe how population growth, land tenure, livestock management, and other agricultural methods need to change to attain sustainable growth. Since many of the environmental issues facing these different countries are similar, increased regional cooperation and coordina- tion-in terms of sharing experience, technologies and institutional mechanisms---could greatly facllitate natural resource management on the continent. Some environmental issues demand a regional approach. Pest control, wildlife protection, watershed and river basin management, joint crop forecasting and livestock disease control are all issues that can only be adequately addressed on a regional basis. The success of the Onchocerciasis Control Program in Africa-set up in 1974 to eradicate river blindness-demonstrates the potential of regional cooperation in tackling a common problem. Enormous leaps have been made in weather and other environ- mental forecasting. Through satellite photography and agrometeorology, the probability of drought, levels of rainfall, and harvest yields can be predicted with a reasonable degree of accuracy. The key is for African governments to get together to acquire this technology and share its benefits. Donors, of course, have a role to play in helping to preserve Africa's patrimony. First, the industrial countries can help by halting at once their own negative interventions-such as trying to dump their toxic wastes in Africa. It is not enough for the industrial countries simply to warn Africa and other developing countries about the dangers posed by environmental destruction. They need to help Africa in overcoming the financial and technical constraints. Africa's environ- 30 ment cannot be saved on the cheap. Concessional aid is essential, particularly when trade-offs have t o be made between urgent short- term needs and longer run sustainability objectives. The concept of the global village is now a reality. Desertification and deforestation in Africa are increasingly of worldwideconcern, just as the heavy pollution coming from industrial countries is of concern to Africa. The global impact of environmental trends in Sub-Saharan Africa can beexpected t o command increasing attention in thefuture, as environmental issues become increasingly prominent in world affairs. Sub-Saharan Africa is endowed with an abundance of wild plants and animals. It is home to an estimated 300,000 species out of a global total of 5 million. The Tai Forest of C6te d'lvoire, the Montane forests of East Africa, and a small slice of Madagascar are among the most biologically diverse areas of the world. More than 6,000 flowering plants, 106 different birds, and half the world's chameleon species are found only on the island of Madagascar. The disappearance of Africa's natural treasures has implications beyond the extinction of species. It means the loss of genetic material for future development of crops, medicines and industrial products- which, of course, has implications beyond Africa. This threat presents an opportunity t o mobilize international resources to help save Africa's environment. Saving Africa's environment, however, should not be presented simply as a matter of donors giving aid to African recipients. We are talking about the "global commons" here and of the benefits that will accrue to all of us-industrial and developing countries alike-by preserving Africa's patrimony. The issue, there- fore, is not so much one of aid, but of cost-sharing. And since the industrial countries have greater ab~lityto pay, they should shoulder the larger part of the burden-at least until most African countries can get back on the path of sustained economic growth. Donors currently provide about $500 million a year to Africa for environmental activities. By any stretch of the imagination, this is totally inadequate. In Madagascar alone, the World Bank has put the 31 cost of continued environmental degradation at between $ 1 80 and $300 million a year. The cumulative loss to Nigeria of continued water contamination, deforestation and soil erosion is much higher. As I have said, these costs need to be shared between African countries and donors-and the current level of resource transfer from donors is simply not up to the task. I suggest that external environmental assistance to Africa be doubled immediately and continue to increase on an annual basis in line with the vast need. In addition, these resource transfers could be used much more effectively. The ongoing preparation of tropical forestry action plans by donors, for example, could be expanded to help prepare com- prehensive environmental programs. This effort would be greatly assisted through satellite mapping of Africa's physical resource base. An initial experimental phase of mapping focused on major problem areas-perhaps in Nigeria-should be started promptly. Also, in order to carry out critical research, an InternationalTropical Forest Research Institute is needed in Africa, as part of the Consultative Group for International Agricultural Research (CGIAR) system. This would be a center for state-of-the-art research on forest, wildlife, and forest agriculture systems. It would probably cost about $20 mtllion over a five-year period. There are some early encouraging signs that the donor community is willing to help respond to Africa's environmental crisis. In the two African countries-Madagascar and Mauritius-which havedesigned environmental "investment plans" to support their national environ- mental "action plans," donors have oversubscribed both programs. The costs of these action programs are substantial. But the interna- tional community appears at last to have realized that the costs of inaction may be even greater. We must remember that these costs are not always immediately apparent; some costs take years or decades to appear. Moreover, traditional measures of economic well-being, such as per capita GNP, fail to capture them. Indeed, I would argue that measurement of 32 national-income accounts should begin to include a calculation of natural resource depletion-because of the fundamental link be- tween environment and development. This point was implicit in the 1987 report of the World Commission on Environment and Development, entitled OurCommon Future. That report focused on the importance of "sustainable development," which it defined as "development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations t o meet their own needs." Thepanel'schairman, Mrs. Gro Harlem Brundtland, then Prime Minister of Norway, said during one of the Commission's hearings that "Until recently, conservation of the environment was perceived as something external t o the development process." She added, however, that "Environmental protection and development, far from being in conflict, are in fact closely interdependent, locally, nationally, regionally and globally." Soils, water, forests, the gene pool and other natural resources are economic assets in that they can generate a flow of future i n c o m e for Africa and the rest of the world. Trading a decline in that long-term source of wealth for a temporary economic gain is a bargain likely t o lead to bankruptcy. The choice that has t o be made concerning Africa's environment does not lie in the future: it is here and now. And it is our ch~ldrenand grandchildren who will have t o live with the consequences. IV. A STRATEGY FOR SUSTAINABLE A N D EQUITABLE G R O W H A Long Road The road to sustainable growth is a long one. Many African countries made a dash for "modernization" in the 1960s. But the strategies were, at worst, misconceived; at best, not based on sustainable targets and objectives. The failure was not Africa's alone, but alsothat of the international donor communitywhich did not fully understand the problems, focus on the priorities, or help design projects and programs consonant with Africa's agroclimatic condi- 33 tions or its social, cultural and political context Are Africa's problems intractable? They certainly have not been handled successfully-by myself and others-in the past 30 years. But surelywe will not accept that they cannot be solved in the future? The action required must start within Africa. In that respect, in the past five yearsorso, there has been one great sea change forthe better: African governments and institutions are coming to the realization that the primary responsibility for Africa's future rests in its own hands. I certainly subscr~beto that view. But I would add that Africa also needs sustained and increased external support-more than is now in prospect-if it is to overcome itsdevelopmentcrisis. In addition, Africansand donors must constantly bear in mind that this is a long-term endeavor. There are no shortcuts to success. A Strategic Agenda As I indicated earlier, to register even a modest improvement in the quality of life, the Sub-Saharan economies must raise their average annual rates of economic growth to at least 4-5 percent per annum. Allow meto outlined strategicagenda-drawn in part from the World Bank's recently published long-term perspective study (Sub-Saharan Africa: From Crisis to Sustainable Growth)-designed to achieve this. Let us assume-because it is a sine qua non-that the linkage of weak agricultural production, rapid population growth and environ- mental degradation will be addressed through the kinds of parallel action programs that I havealready suggested in order to achieve the target of 4 percent annual growth in agriculture. That target is of particular importance because it implies rising productivity of land and labor which is essential if sustainable farming practices are to be adopted. This high rate of agricultural growth is also important l because it w ~ ldrive the rest of the economy. Industry could then be expected to grow in the near to medium term by4-5 percent a year- 34 gradually rising to 7-8 percent---consistent with experience in other developing regions. What else is required? Continued Adjustment First, the process of economic policy reform and adjustment must continue. In everything from exchange rate management through to investment in education and agriculture, the lessons of failed or inadequate policies in Africa stand out. One of the most telling indications of poor policy frameworks has been Africa's declining competitiveness in world markets. Certa~nly, the external environment has not been kind to Africa with the fall in commodity prices, oil shocks, high interest ratesand so on. But a hostileexternal environment is not the main reason for Africa's poor economic performance. 'The region's disappointing GDP growth has been more the result of the low level and efficiency of investment than anything else. Gross investment levels in Africa have declined from over 20 percent of GDP in the 1 970s to around 1 5 percent today (compared to 22 percent in India and 38 percent in China in 1987). Even more disturbing, the incremental output generated by this investment has dropped dramatically from 31 percent of investment in the 1960s to 2.5 percent in the 1980s. This contrasts sharply with the experience of South Asia, the only other region with a comparable income level. At the heart of the matter here are higher costs for almost everything-higher investment costs, higher labor costs and higher utilityand transport costs-50 to 100 percent higher on average than comparable costs in South Asia. This is partly because of Africa's particular circumstances-difficult topography, widely dispersed settlements and fragile soils. But more importantly, the explanation lies in poor public resource management, inefficient bureaucracies, overvalued currencies and inappropriate policy incentives. Together, these have weighed down the efforts of entrepreneurs and private operators in Africa by adding greatly to the cost of doing business and reducing profitability. In short, Africa is simply not competitive. Moreover, thegoing will onlyget tougher. The world is in the midst 35 of a new technological a g e d r i v e n by rapid advances in information systems, in the biological sciences, and in materials research. High- speed, low-cost information processing and communications are transforming the way the world does business. Good market intelli- gence, flexible production structures, adaptable pricing mechanisms and a fast response to new opportunities are what give firms and farmers an edge. Africa is going to have to adjust in order to improve the efficiency of investment and hold its o w n in the world. As I stated previously, the latter part of the 1980s has seen a beginning of that process. About 30 Sub-Saharan countries have adopted economic reforms and some fragile but positive results are emerging. The major overhaul of Nigeria's exchange rate and trading system since 1986, for example, has helped reverse the previous downward trend in GDP. Ghana's strong performance--a GDP growth rate of about 6 percent a year over the past six years--also testifies to thevalue of the reforms that began in 1983. And the nine membercountriesof theSouthern African Development Coordinating Conference (SADCC)-benefitting from reforms as well as good weather-recently achieved the first positive growth in per capita income for that subreg~on in a decade. I emphas~ze again that these are only preliminary results from the first steps down a very long road. The adjustment process must not only continue, but cont~nuet o evolve. Economic reform must be better phased and implemented. Policy change must be more responsive t o long-term development priorities and t o the needs of vulnerable groups affected by transitional costs. The international effort now under way t o track and target these objectives-the Social Dimensions of Adjustment project-is a useful starting point for this process. But adjustment must also be more adequately funded by donors as i t moves nations away from the centralized, bureaucratic, slow-moving patterns of the past onto faster and firmer paths of growth. The adjustment process can be improved, but it cannot be avoided. There is n o alternative. People-Sensitive Development Within theadjustment programs, a high priority must be placed on investment in people as both the means and ends of long-term development. The quality of human resource development programs in Africa needs to be improved but, there is noescaplng it, the quantity of resources being applied must also increase. A realistic goal would be to double expenditures for human resource development from present levels to reach 8-10 percent of Sub-Saharan Africa's GDP within the next decade. The three-part aim of such investments would be to ensure food security, primary education and health care for all Africans within the next generation: by the year 2020 at the latest. Any future development strategy for Africa must be "people-sensitive" and include a new commitment to develop thecontinent'sgreatest source of potential: its men, women- especially its women-and its children. Africa's Entrepreneurs Constraints and excessive controls on the growth and development of Africa's entrepreneurs and business people also need to be relaxed. Privatesmall-and medium-scale enterprises, especially in the informal sector, can bea potent stimulusforgrowth in Sub-SaharanAfrica. The creativity of small, local enterpr~ses and organizations working at the grassroots must be encouraged and promoted. Foreign direct in- vestment can also be an important source of both capital and know- how, as other regions have learned to their great benefit. Much more should be done to create an enabling environment that can foster private sector dynamism in Africa and make it a strong ally in the long- term develo~ment effort. Regional Integration Even with a dynamic private sector, it must be acknowledged that some African countries are too small to achieve economies of scale and make it on their own in the global marketplace-especially a market- place becoming increasingly dominated by "blocs" of countries from Western Europe or North America. African countries need to coop- erate much more with each other, and even integrate economically, in order to survive and prosper. African leaders have long recognized the need for closer regional ties. Yet little has been done, in practical terms, to move from words to deeds. lntraregional trade, for example, has hardly grown in 20 years and remains at a dismally low 5 percent of all African trade. Expanded intraregional trade would help overcome feast and famine surges and shortages in food supplies. It would also give industries that have been too long protected in markets that are too small, more space in which to find their competitive bearing. Cooperation could also enhance efficiency in high-level manpowertraining and technology research. The benefits of regional cooperation, of expanded trade and markets, and of shared resources, are real. But they require more than lip service. Economic policies and tariffs need to be harmonized; political and bureaucraticobstacles to the movement of capital, labor and goods across Africa need to be removed. All this will require more political will and more decisive action than African governments have shown in the Dast. Building African Capacities A single concept cuts across all the items on Africa's strategic development agenda: the imperative of building local African capaci- ties. Whether in agriculture, industry, education or natural resource management, Africa lacks the necessary skills and well-managed public and private institutions for long-term, sustainable growth. Despite some $4 billion spent on technical assistance every year, and despite the presence of nearly 700,000 foreign "experts" in Sub- Saharan Africa-more than at Independence-the record clearly 38 shows a crippling shortfall in indigenous African capacities. That deficit must be overcome The challenge to help build long-term African capacity is an acid test for both African governments and the donor community. Tradi- tional technical assistance approaches should be radically reappraised and reoriented toward strengthening African institutions. The objec- tive must be to transfer skills and achieve self-sustaining improvements in African capacities. Capacity building is a priority to be included in every development activity in Africa. It should be a major focus for the 1990s and into the 21st century. Again, however, progress will take time. A determined and sustained effort over several decades is required. The Question of Governance Capacity building is a crucial element of improved administrative and political structures in Africa-better governance. This is a highly sensitive issue. Outsiders should not attempt to impose on African countries any particular political system. That can only be their decision. However, there is a palpable popular demand for more accountable systemsof governance. Donors too want to see a polit~cal environment which encourages effective resource allocation- rather than a system which allows for wasteful spending and widespread corruption. Unless there is better governance, there will be political unrest and a further draining away of international goodwill toward Africa-which is essential if donor support for Africa isto be mobilized and retained. Outlays that do not go for development are not just wasted; they deprive needy sectors and programs of vital support. One area where potential savings are great is in military spending, which, in the mid- 1980s, consumed more than twice Africa's average expenditures on education. The military-socialimbalance is further reflected in the fact that annual public expenditures on health have, according to the Economic Commission for Africa, accounted for less than a third of military outlays. Imagine what it would mean to social welfare in Africa, with all its positive multiplier effects, if real savings could be 39 realized in defense spend~ng and in other non-productive expendi- tures? Imaginealso what it might mean in terms of freeing up African governments' budgetary resources to tackle the problems of agricul- ture, population and environment that I have already emphasized? The price tag for non-productive expenditures and for poor gover- nance in Africa has become increasingly visible and can no longer be ignored. Adeep political malaisestymiesaction in manycountries; the citizenry sees theeliteas self-serving and clinging to political power for their own gain. Only six out of more than 150 national leaders in post- colonial Africa have voluntarily handed over power. Chairman Obasanjo, of course, was one of these exceptional leaders. Others have preferred to use the tired justification that more political freedom would intensify tribal rivalries. I would argue that, if anything, the mismanagement and failure of the old political order has exacerbated internal divisions. African governments must improve upon their past record and rally their people for development. Regardless of whether African countries decide to choose one- party or multiparty systems, some basicfoundation stones are required by all societies in order to offer people participation in the life of a nation and galvanize them for the development effort. These foun- dations include a free press, open debate, meritocracy in the civil service, an independent judiciary, institutional pluralism and other means of popular participation. Political leaders must become far morewilling tosubjectthemselves to public scrutiny, without accusing critics of disloyalty or subversion. The w~ndsof change are again beginning to blow through Africa. And the peoples of Africa are growing increasingly impatient with the old ways. Through its recent economic changes, Africa has started down the path of economlc reform. Some basic political reforms are now required. Both are needed for development. Donors' Responsibility 40 Chairman Obasanjo recently remarked at the Africa Leadership Forum in Paris that African leaders "have squandered 30 years"; he emphasized that "unless Africa takesthe lead in helping itself, nobody will rush to our help." But he also questioned Western action that only compounds Africa's economic and political marginalization. In the next few years, Europe is projected to provide to Poles and Hungarians on a per capita basis far more than to Africans. Central Americans and Israelis will receive far more financial assistance per capita from the United States than will Africans. In this politicized lottery that passes for the development assistance process, Africans could end up being penalized for the expansion of the frontiers of freedom elsewhere. That would be an obscene response to the African crisis. Just as Africa's leaders must live up to their development respon- sibilities, so too must donors. To help achieve the 4-5 percent GDP growth target, total investment in Sub-Saharan Africa will need to rise from 15 percent of GDPat present to 25 percent by theyear 2000 (this implies an increase in the domestic savings rate from 12 percent today to 18 percent in ten years' time). Net transfers (including all forms of financing) would need to be about 9 percent of GDP by theyear 2000. This means that official development assistanceto Sub-SaharanAfrica would have to increase at the real annual rate of at least 4 percent a year for the next decade. Fifteen billion dollars in gross ODAflows this year would rise to 822 billion per annum by the year 2000. Table 2. ODA Requirements for Sub-Saharan Africa o f dollars) (b~llfons Annual average Average Projected 1981-85 1986 88 (1990 US dollars) (current (current US dollars) US d o l l a d 1990 2000 Net transfers 5 9 12 19 (percentage of GDPl (3) (7) (8) (9) Debt service payments 9 9 9 9 Other flows' 6 6 6 6 Gross ODA 8 12 15 22 a Th~s lncludes gross nonconcessional borrowings, net d~rect prlvate Investment, net fore~gn prlvate transfers and changes In reserves Source The World Bank Sub-Saharan Afr~ca From Cra~s t o Susta~nabieGrowth 41 As part of the financial assistance program, donors need to put in place debt-relief mechanisms that would prevent the region's debt- service payments from exceeding current levels: about 89 billion a year. At a minimum, this means an extension of the "Toronto terms"-reduced interest rates, extended maturities and outright debt cancellation-for the poorest countries to the highly indebted middle-income African countries, like Nigeria and CBte d'lvoire. Donors need to get realisticabout Africa's debt because it is impeding the entire development effort. Donors could also be a lot more imaginative about methods for overcoming the debt hurdle. Providing the resources that Africa needs to overcome its develop- ment problems IS a huge challenge to the donor community--but it is also a huge opportunity. I mentioned at the outset that the outlook was bleak and that there was, at present, little sign of adverse trends being reversed. If, however, the required levels of ass~stance can be provided, and used to back effective actions, then I believe that Africa's downward spiral can be turned around. This is a vision worthy of the cost: a vision of self-reliant economies and healthy and skilled peoples; of countries with well-maintained, functioning infrastructure and dynamic business centers; of food security for all and substantially increased life expectancy; and of an Africa that not only holds its own in the world, but that makes an important and positive contribution. V. CONCLUSION: A GLOBAL COALITION FOR AFRICA The greatest r~sk to Africa's future is that there will be a loss of hope. However bleak the deteriorating situation may appear, it is largely of human origin and can yield to human remedy. How African leaders and the rest of the international community respond to the challenge will reveal much about the human prospect over the remainderof this century and the beginning of the next one. I urge every African country to begin immediately to design a new national development plan and program. These plans would take a 42 long-term view (20 or 25 years) and incorporate the strategic agenda previously outlined as well as monitorable targets, actions and dead- lines for progress. I have already referred to some of the most critical indicators: the population growth rate; the infant mortality rate; the agricultural growth rate; the contraceptive prevalence rate; rates of deforestation and reforestation. Other key indicators would include the primary school enrollment rate (especially of girls), immunization rates and life expectancy.* At the international level, I urge African leaders to support the early establishment of a "global coalition for Afr~ca,"as I suggested two yearsago and aswas proposed recently by theworld Bank in thestudy I referred to (Sub-SaharanAfrica: From Cr~sis to Sustainable Growth). This global coalition would essentially be a forum in which African leaders would meet regcllarlywith their partners in thedonor community to identify joint strategies and initiatives that would provide broad guidance for the design of individual country programs and regional actions-and thus materially advance Africa's development. Thecoalition could give particular attention to reaching consensus on theactions needed to tackle the development priorities that I have discussed. The coalition would track trends in these key areas as well as mobilize actions to improve them. It would provide a mechanism for regularly monitoring and evaluating progress, and for determining where gains were being made and where deterioration was occurring. The coalition could also provide impetus for channeling aid to these priority programs. The program that I have outlined for Africa is a radical one. But can we doubt that radical action is required to resolve the African cris~s? Africa's future, and the future of the Afr~can child born today, is at stake. Acceptance of the program, and establishment of a global coalition to foster it and monitor it, would bea concrete demonstration of a shared determination to make that future more secure. Africa needs the help and attention of all of us. And it needsit now. *A table of preliminary ~nd~cative targets is attached in the Annex Annex Sub-Saharan Africa: Food Consumption, Agriculture, Population, and the Environment A Comparison of Present levels a n d Prel~rn~nary Targets lnd~cat~v e - -- - --- - -- --- ---- -- - ----- -- - - - - ---- - - - - Annual agricultural Per cap~ta prodrlction Annual population calorie growth rates growth rare3 consurnptton (percent) ipercenti per day Target Target Target Country 1980-88 1990-2020 1980-88 2020 1988 2010 -- - ---- --- - - -- - - - - - - -- - - - - - -- -- ------- - -- - - --- Sub-Saharan Africa 1.&I 4.0 3.2 2.2 2,095 2,400 ~~ - -.- .. Sahelian countries Burkina Faso 64 40 2.6 2.3 2,139 2.400 Chad 26 3.0 24 22 1.717 2,200 Ma11 03 2.0 2.4 2.7 2,073 2.300 Maur~tan~a 1.5 20 2.6 26 2.322 2,400 Niger 2.8 30 3.5 3.1 2,432 2,450 -..-. ~ ~ .. ~ ~ ~ -. . Coastal West Africa Ben~n 4.2 40 3.2 1.9 2,184 2.400 Cape Verde NA 3.0 22 1.6 2.717 2,800 Cote d'lvoire ;6 40 4.0 2.7 2,562 2.700 Gambia 7.1 4.5 3.3 2.4 2.517 2,700 Ghana 0.5 4.5 3.4 1.9 1,759 2.400 Guinea NA 50 24 2.4 1,776 2,400 Guinea-Btssau 57 5.0 1.7 1.9 2.186 2.400 Liber~a 12 4.0 3.2 1.8 2,381 2,500 N~ger~a 10 40 33 2.1 2,149 2.400 Senegal 3.2 40 30 25 2,350 2,500 Sterra-Leone 16 4.0 2.4 2.4 1,854 2,400 Togo 42 30 3.5 2.1 2.207 2.400 . - - - - - - ~ ~~~ ~ ~ -.-. . - - - - - - - - -- - - Central Africa forest zone Angold NA 40 2.5 25 1.880 2,400 Cameroon 24 4.5 3.2 2.4 2.028 2,400 Central Afrlcan Rep 26 4.5 2.7 13 1.949 2.400 Congo 2.0 4.5 3.5 27 2,619 2,700 Equatorial Guinea NA 4.0 1.9 1.6 NA 2.400 Gabon NA 40 3.9 25 2,521 2,600 Za~re 32 5.0 3.1 20 2,163 2,400 ------- -- Northern Sudanian Djibout~ NA 30 30 2.1 NA 2,400 Ethiopia 1.1 30 29 3.0 1,749 2,200 Somalia 3.9 30 30 25 2.138 2,400 Sudan 2.7 40 31 ; .8 2.208 2.400 --------------------- -.-- - - - - - ~~ Comparison lnd~a 2.3 NA 2.2 2,238 China 6.8 1.3 2.630 - ~ - ~ ~ . ~-~ ~ N o t e Parentheses tnd~cate negatlve rates, NA indicates not available Pro!ect~ons methodology on the page 46 is d i s c u s ~ d 44 a Defined as percent w~thout access to enough food for an act~ve and healthy life. b. A negatlve number means deforestat~on.The rate 18 measured a5 the percent of total forested ared nhich is reforested (deforested) per year Sources Tables 1 to 22. - --- --- -- ----- ----- --- --- - ----- - Percent of Reforestat~on populat~on rates per Percent of Wfiderness food year ' total land area to rnsecure " (percent) under crops total area - ----- ---- ----- --- --- ---- -- Minimum Target Target target Present 1980/81 2020 19805 7990-2020 1987 2020 Oh -- --- --- - - - --- -- - - - - - - - - -- - -- - - - - --- - - - - . 25 10 -0.5 1.O 6.6 8.9 ~~ ~ - - - - - - - - - - - ~ Annex (continued) Sub-Saharan Africa: Food Consumption, Agriculture, Population, and the Environment Annual aqrrcultural Per capita productron Annual populatron ralorie growth rates qrowth rates consumption (percent) (percent) per day ------ ~ .---- ~ ~ .- - - - - - - - Target Target Target Count9 1980 88 1990-2020 980-88 2020 1388 2010 - - -- - - - East Africa Mountain and temperate zones Burundt 3 1 30 Kenya 33 40 Lesotho 18 30 Madagasrar 22 40 Malawt 27 40 Rwaldd 03 30 Swaz~land 39 40 Tanzan~a 40 4 0 Uganda -0 3 4 5 Zambla 4 1 5Q Zlrnbdbwe 25 4 5 Other South East Africa Botswana 59 20 34 14 2.201 2,400 Cornoros NA 30 36 23 2 109 2 300 Mozatr~blque 08 40 27 2 3 1 595 2 200 Maur~t~us 4 0 50 10 05 2 748 2,900 Projection Methodology 1 . The target agricultural growth rates reflect what 18 arhievable in the long term from an agro- tl~rnattcperspective The targets ~rnply good agricultural policy and investment of !he type descr~bed in the text 2 The target populatton growth rates were establ~shed as d~scusscdIn Table 13 They reflect the projected oiltcorne In each country of the ach~evernentof a reduct~onIn the total fert~llty rate by almost 50 percent by 2020 25 3 . Minimum target ralorte corisumption was arbltrartly set to equal the present avcrage in all the world's low Income countries. 4 The target percentdqe of the populat~onwhtch 18 food Insecure IS based on a subjeit~ve judgement about the poss~btl~tyof reduc~ngfood insec~rltytn each rountry given the present growth rate and the ava~lable numbers involved the target agr~cuitural new land for cultt~atton 5 The reforestation target for each country was set at the target rate for Suh Saharan Afrlca as a whole Only where therc are large areas under iorest tn Centrdl Afrtca, was the target rate reduced Percent of Reforestation population rates per Percent o f Wilderneu food year total land area to ~nsecure" lpercen t) under crops total area - - -- -- -- - M~nirnurn Min,rnurn Target Target target Present target 1980/81 2020 1980s 1990-2020 7987 2020 O/ o Yo - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - 6.The target percentage of land under crops was determined o n the basis of ava~lable w~lderness, forest and other uncultivated land for cult~vation, glven the constraint Imposed by the need to expand forests by 1 0% per year, to reduce wtlderness land by the minimum poss~ble,and a judgement about the agro~climatic possibilit~esfor agricultural intensiftcation A much country with much w i l d e r n ~ s ~ , land available to re-forest, and difficult agr~cultural conditions (Ethiopia for example) will have to expand cultivated area. Rwanda on the other hand has v~rtually no wilderness and limited forest It cannot afford t o expand cultivated area at all. 7 The mlnlnum target wtlderness area was arr~ved at as that remalnlng after the maxlrnum allowable Increase In cropped area was taken out The object~ve was to rnaintatn as much w~lderness area as poss~ble of expandtng crop area with a best effort at subject to the real~t~es agr~culturallntenstf~cat~on only, reflecting the magnitude of the effort required In each Note' The targets are ind~cative country. Table A-1 . Sub-Saharan Africa: Basic Indicators -- Pr~rnary school Popula- Area GNPper enrollment Adult bon (thous. capita Life (percentage ill~teracy (rnillions) sq, krn) (US$) expectancy o f age goup) (age 15+) - - -- Country M i d ~ l 9 8 8 1980s 1988 1965 1988 1965 1987 1985 Sub-SaharanAfrica 464.1 22,240 330 43 51 44 68 53 -- - Low-income economies 408.9 18,370 269 42 50 38 64 54 ~- Benin 4.4 113 390 42 51 34 63 74 Burk~na Faso 85 274 210 38 47 12 32 87 Burund~ 5.1 28 240 44 49 26 67 66 Central African Rep. 2.9 623 380 40 50 56 66 60 Chad 5.4 1,284 160 46 46 34 51 75 Comoros 04 2 440 46 56 24 80 75 Equator~al Guinea 0.4 28 410 38 46 65 108 63 Ethiopia 47.4 1,222 120 43 47 11 37 38 Gambia, The 0.8 11 200 34 44 21 75 75 Ghana 14 0 239 400 48 54 69 71 47 Guinea 54 246 430 35 43 31 30 72 Guinea-B~ssau 0.9 36 190 35 40 26 6 0 69 Kenya 22.4 580 370 48 59 54 96 41 Lesotho 1.7 30 420 48 56 94113 26 Liberia 2.4 111 410 44 50 41 35 65 Madagascar 10.9 587 190 43 50 65121 33 Malaw1 80 118 170 39 47 4 4 66 59 Mali 8.0 1.240 230 38 47 24 23 83 Mauritania 1.9 1.026 480 37 46 13 52 83 Mozamb~que 14.9 802 100 38 48 37 68 62 N~ger 7.3 1,267 300 37 45 11 29 86 Nigeria 110.1 924 290 42 51 32 77 58 Rwanda 6.7 26 320 49 49 53 67 53 Sao Tome and Pr~nc~pe 0.1 1 490 65 . . 43 Sierra Leone 3.9 72 240 33 42 29 58 71 Somalia 5.9 638 170 38 47 10 15 88 Sddan 23.8 2,506 480 40 50 29 49 88 Tanzania 24 7 945 160 43 53 32 66 69 Togo 34 57 370 42 53 55 101 59 Uganda 16.2 236 280 45 48 67 70 43 Za~re 33.4 2,345 170 43 52 70 76 39 Zambia 76 753 290 44 53 53 97 24 .- Middle-income economies 55.2 3,870 783 47 54 81 97 48 Angola 94 1.247 290 35 45 39 93 59 Botswana 12 582 1.016 48 67 65 114 29 Cameroon 11.2 475 1,010 46 56 94109 44 Cape Verde 0.4 4 680 54 65 94 106 53 CBte d'lvoire 11.2 322 770 42 53 60 70 57 Congo, People's Rep 21 342 910 49 53 114 .. 37 Dj~bouti 04 23 930 38 48 . . 37 Gabon 1.1 268 2.970 42 53 134 126 38 Maurit~us 11 2 1.800 61 67 101 106 17 Senegal 70 197 650 41 48 40 60 72 Seychelles 0.1 0 3.790 66 70 40 55 72 Swaziland 07 17 810 43 56 74 110 32 Zimbabwe 93 391 650 48 63 110136 26 49 lnd~a 815.6 3.288 340 45 58 74 9 6 57 Ch~na 1.088.4 9,561 330 53 70 89 132 31 Source: World Bank Table A-4. Sub-Saharan Africa: Land Use Land use as a percentage o f total land Cropland Pasture Country 1965 1980 7987 1965 1980 1987 Sub-Saharan Africa 6 7 7 27 27 27 Low-income economies 6 7 7 26 26 26 Bentn 13 16 17 4 4 4 Burk~na Faso 8 10 11 37 37 37 Burund~ 39 51 52 24 35 36 Central Afrtcan Rep 3 3 3 5 5 5 Comoros 38 41 44 7 7 7 Chad 2 3 3 36 36 36 Equatorla1 Gulnea 8 8 8 4 4 4 Ethiopia 11 13 13 42 41 41 Gamb~aThe 13 16 17 9 9 9 Ghana 11 12 12 16 '5 15 Gulnea 6 6 6 12 12 12 Guinea-B~ssau 9 10 12 38 38 38 Kenya 3 4 4 7 7 7 Lesotho 12 10 11 73 66 66 L~ber~a 4 4 4 2 2 2 Madagascar 4 5 5 58 58 58 Malawi L1 25 25 20 20 20 Malt 1 2 2 25 25 25 Maur~tania 0 0 0 38 38 38 Mozarnbtque 3 4 4 56 56 56 N~ger 2 3 3 8 8 7 N~gerla 32 33 34 21 23 23 Rwanda 26 41 45 34 19 16 Sao Tome and Prtnc~pe 35 38 39 1 1 1 S~erraLeone 20 25 25 31 31 31 Sornal~a 1 1 1 46 46 46 (udan 5 5 5 24 24 24 Tanzanta 4 6 6 40 40 40 Togo 20 26 26 4 4 4 Uganda 24 28 34 25 25 25 Zaire 3 3 3 4 4 4 Zarnbta 7 7 7 47 47 47 Middle-income economies 7 7 29 29 29 - Angola 3 3 3 23 23 23 Botswana 2 2 2 74 78 78 Cameroon 12 15 15 19 18 18 Cape Verde 10 10 10 6 6 6 Congo. People's Rep 2 2 2 29 29 29 C6te d'lvotre 8 10 11 9 9 9 Djtbouti 9 9 9 Gabon 1 2 2 20 18 18 Maur~tius 51 58 58 4 4 4 Senegal 23 27 27 30 30 30 Seychelles 19 19 22 Swaz~land 8 11 10 78 64 68 Z~mbabwe 5 7 7 13 13 13 52 lnd~a 55 57 5 4 Ch~na 11 11 31 31 - - - a Refers only to areas larger than 4 000 square kilometers Wilderness area e defined as land lefl In Itr natural rtate wlthou any transformation by human actton These areas may parlly Include forests pastures and other lands as class~f~ed oy FA0 -- Land use as a percentage o f t o t a l l a n d -- Wffderness area Forest Other Total l a n d as % o f t o t a l p~ - - area (000 h a i l a n d area " 1965 1980 1987 1965 1980 1987 1987 1985 - --- -- --- - - - - ------ -- -- --- - -------- ---- --- -- -- --- 33 31 30 34 35 36 2,158,466 28 -- -- 31 29 28 37 38 39 1,776,293 28 -- ------ --- - - - ----- - --------- 44 36 33 39 44 47 1 1,062 15 30 26 25 26 27 27 27,380 3 2 2 3 35 11 10 2.565 0 58 58 58 34 34 34 62,298 39 16 16 16 39 37 34 223 12 11 10 50 51 51 125.920 52 46 46 46 42 42 42 2.805 0 27 26 25 20 21 22 110,100 22 30 22 17 48 54 57 1,000 0 43 38 36 31 35 37 23,002 0 49 43 41 33 38 41 24,586 0 39 38 38 13 13 12 2,812 0 8 7 6 82 83 83 56.697 25 15 24 24 3.035 80 22 22 22 72 72 72 9,632 17 31 27 25 7 9 11 58,154 2 54 54 46 5 2 9 9,408 10 8 7 7 66 67 67 122.019 49 15 15 15 47 47 47 102.522 74 22 20 19 18 20 21 78,409 9 3 2 2 87 87 88 126,670 53 23 18 16 24 26 27 91.077 2 23 21 20 17 20 19 2,495 0 64 61 60 96 30 30 29 19 15 15 7,162 0 16 15 14 37 38 38 62.734 24 24 21 20 47 51 51 237.600 40 51 49 48 5 6 7 88.604 10 45 31 25 31 39 45 5,439 0 32 30 29 19 16 13 19.955 4 80 78 77 13 15 16 226,760 6 42 40 39 4 6 6 74,072 24 45 41 40 21 23 24 382,173 26 ~ 44 43 43 30 31 31 124,670 26 2 2 2 23 18 18 56.673 63 59 55 53 10 12 14 46,540 3 0 0 0 84 84 84 403 0 64 63 62 5 6 7 34.150 42 60 31 20 22 50 59 31.800 16 0 0 0 91 91 91 2,318 0 78 78 78 2 2 2 25.767 35 34 31 31 12 7 7 185 35 31 31 12 72 12 19.253 11 19 19 19 63 63 59 27 8 6 6 6 19 16 1,720 0 52 52 52 30 29 29 38,667 0 -- -- 20 22 20 17 297,319 1 53 12 14 46 44 932,641 20 Institute tot Environment and Developm~nr Source FAO, and the World Resource lnstltute and 'nterrat~onal i ~ collaborat~on n UN Ervlronment Programme). World Rexourcer. 1988-89.1988, w~th Table A-5. Sub-Saharan Africa: Per Capita Arable Land and Fuelwood Supply Per captta Fuelwood supply de- arable land area mand balance (mill~on (hectares! cubic meters) " .-- Country 1965 1980 1987 2000b 1980 2000 Sub-SaharanAfrica 0.5 0.4 0.3 0.22 Low-income economies -~ ~ Benin 0.6 0.5 0.4 0.30 17.6 8.9 Burk~na Faso 0.5 0.4 0.4 0.25 -2.6 -11.2 Burundi 0.3 0.3 0.3 0.18 -3.2 -7.0 Central African ilep. 1.0 0.9 07 0.48 111.5 105.6 Comoros 04 0.3 0.2 0.15 Chad 09 0.7 0.6 0.51 -1 2 -9.8 Equatorial Guinea 0.8 0.7 0.6 0.51 4.6 40 Eth~op~a 0.5 0.4 0.3 0.20 4.4 -30 8 Gamb~a. The 0.3 0.2 0.2 0.1 5 -0 6 -1 5 Ghana 0.3 0.3 02 0.14 29.3 13.8 Gulnea 0.4 0.3 02 0 20 38.6 29.6 Gu~nea-B~ssau 0.5 0.4 0.4 0.28 4.8 1.1 Kenya 0.2 0.1 0.1 007 -4 5 -58.4 Lesotho 04 02 0.2 015 L~beria 0.3 02 0.2 0.12 111 1.9 Madagascar 0.4 0.3 0.3 0 20 5.2 -4 4 Malawi 0.5 0.4 0.3 0.19 3.1 -'31 Mali 04 03 0.3 0.21 0.4 5.0 Mauritania 0.2 0.1 01 0.00 3.8 3.8 Mozambique 03 0.3 0.2 0.15 16.8 0.3 Niger 06 0.6 05 0.36 -0.9 -5.5 N~geria 0.5 0.4 0.3 0.19 57.5 -89.6 Rwanda 0.2 0.2 02 0.1 1 -5 5 -16.0 Sdo Tome and Princ~pe 0.5 0.4 0.3 0.23 Slerra Leone 0.6 0.5 0.5 0 33 5.0 -1.5 Sornal~a 0.3 0.2 0.2 0.07 11.1 6.5 Sudan 0.9 07 0.5 0 36 6.1 -39.5 Tanzanta 03 0.3 0.2 0.14 -5.1 74.0 Togo 07 0.6 0.4 0.28 10.3 13.1 Uganda 0.6 04 0.4 0.28 -18.7 -57 3 Zaire 0.3 0.2 02 0.14 388.2 3279 Zarnb~a 1.3 09 0.7 0.45 15.2 5.4 - - Middle-income economies - Angola 0.6 05 0.4 0.28 Botswana 19 15 12 0.70 256 239 Cameroon O 1. 0.8 0.6 0.43 72 6 59.6 Cape Verde 02 0.1 0.1 0.08 Congo. People's Rep. 0.6 0.4 0.3 0.22 46.4 43.2 CBte d'lvoire 06 0.4 0.3 0.20 43.9 14 4 Dj~boutl Gabon 0.4 0.6 04 0.35 42.8 40.9 Maurit~us 0.1 01 01 0.09 Senegal 11 09 0.8 0.51 0.3 -4.4 Seychelles 01 01 0.1 0.08 Swaziland 04 0.3 0.2 0.16 -0.5 -1.3 Z~mbabwe 0.5 0.4 0.3 0.21 2.8 -12.2 -- 54 India 0.3 02 0.16 Ch~na 0.6 . 0.4 0.32 a Fuelwood supply-demand balance def~ned as Increase In srock of 'uelwoad In the year rnlnus total ut~llzat~on oc fuelwood In that year b 1987 arable land areas have beendtvtded by the prolected populations of theyear Table A-6. Sub-Saharan Africa: Population and Food Security, 1990-2020 Scenarios 1990 2000 2010 2020 -- Case l Populat~on (m~li~onsof persons, w~th at current levels) fertll~ty 532 740 1,080 1,620 Food productlon (rntrne, at current trend growth rate of 2 percent a year) 90 110 135 165 Food requlrement (rntme, for un~versal food security by 20201 105 170 270 445 Food gap (mtme) 15 60 135 200" - Case II Populatton (as n Case 1 ) 532 740 1,080 1,620 Food product~on (mtme, at 4 percent annual growth) 90 135 200 300 Food requ~rement (as In Case I) 105 170 270 445 Food gap (as In Case I) 15 35 70 145 -- Case Ill Population (mill~ons total of persons, w ~ t h rate decl~ning fert~lity by 25 percent by 2020) 532 730 1,020 1425 Food product~on (mtme, at 2 percent annual growth) 90 1 10 135 165 Food requirement (rntrne) 105 165 250 390 Food yap (mtme) 15 55 115 225 Case lV Populat~on (mllllons of persons, wlth total rate decl~n~ny fert~llty by 50 percent to 3 4 by 2027) 532 719 958 1,233 Food production (rntme, at 4 percent annual growth) 90 135 200 300 Food requirement (mtrne) 105 160 235 335 Food gap (mtrne) 15 25 35 35 Note mtme 1 s mllllons of tons of mace equ~valent a Th~sIS about equal to U 5 cereal product~onIn 1989 Source World Bank Table A-7. Sub-Saharan Africa: Performance of Agricultural Sect01 - - -- Agrfculture's Agricultural GDP, percentage Percentage average annual share m o f ~rrrgated growth (percent) GDP land " - - Country 1965-73 1973-80 1980-88 1988 1984-86 Sub-Saharan Africa 2.2 -0.3 1.8 34 Low-income economies 2.2 0.0 1.5 38 Benin 3.4 4.2 40 0 Burk~na Faso 13 6.4 39 0 Burundi 4.7 1.6 3.1 56 5 Central African Rep 2.1 1.8 2.6 44 Comoros 36 0 Chad 05 26 47 0 Equatorial Gu~nea Ethiop~a 2.1 0.6 -1.1 42 1 Gamb~a, The 4.5 0.9 7.1 35 7 Ghana 4.5 0.0 0.5 49 0 Gu~nea 2.5 30 4 Gu~nea-Bissau -3.4 5.7 61 Kenya 6.2 3.7 3.3 31 2 Lesotho I 1 1 .8 21 Liberia 65 4.0 1.2 37 1 Madagascar -0.4 2.2 41 27 Malawi 48 2.7 37 1 Mall 0.9 7.1 0.3 49 9 Mauritan~a -2 1 -0.3 1.5 38 6 Mozambique -0.8 62 3 N~ger -2.9 1.4 2.8 36 1 Nigeria 2.8 -1.4 10 34 3 Rwanda 8.7 0.3 38 0 Sao Tome and Princ~pe 72 -7 3 30 Sierra Leone 1.5 3.9 1.6 45 2 Somalia . 10.9 3.9 65 17 Sudan 03 3.4 2.7 33 15 Tanzan~a 3.1 0.2 4.0 66 2 Togo 2.6 1.9 4.2 34 0 Uganda 3.6 -2.3 0.3 72 0 Zaire 0.9 3.2 31 0 Zamb~a 2.0 1.6 4.1 14 0 -- Middle-income economies 2.2 -1.7 2.7 27 Angola 0.2 -9.7 46 Botswana 12.4 0.6 -5.9 3 0 Cameroon 4.6 4.5 2.4 26 0 Cape Verde 19 5 Congo, People's Rep. 4.1 21 2.0 15 1 Cbie d'lvoire 4.9 33 16 36 1 Dj~bouti Gabon 11 Mauritius -6.0 4.0 13 16 Senegal 0.2 0.4 3.2 22 3 Seychelles -2 9 6 56 Swaziland 8.0 3.5 3.9 24 34 Z~mbabwe -0.3 2.5 11 6 ~- lnd~a 3.3 1.8 2.3 32 26 Ch~na 2.8 5.8 6.8 32 44 --- ~ ~~ p~ Crop yrelds -- Cereals Roots and tubers .- - Fertilizer Percentage change Percentage change consumptfon kglha compared t o kglha compared t o f 100 glha) " - -- 1 98 7/88 7 984-86 1964-66 1984-86 1964-66 -- - -- - 85 77 49 825 54 8.241 34 57 690 33 6,568 96 20 1.101 12 7.538 -3 4 513 -3 1 3,882 10 1,116 -1 5 3.259 -4 17 531 -13 5,182 14 2.395 -33 39 1,081 39 2,827 7 1,207 15 3.000 -32 38 969 7 8,641 5 6 728 -1 0 7,089 5 848 19 6.1 54 0 42 1 1.61 1 31 8.929 21 125 683 -1 2 15,000 3 94 1,302 107 4.01 4 -3 21 1,731 1 5,926 -7 203 1,162 24 4,231 -13 59 807 3 9.240 12 55 43 1 20 1,903 -24 21 660 -29 5,783 20 8 366 -30 8,877 10 94 1,121 67 1 1,260 43 20 1.289 2 7,780 42 22 1.431 8 3,425 -6 40 725 47 10,792 8 40 508 -2 7 3,408 -1 92 1,109 41 11,075 109 76 865 83 10,498 -12 2 949 5 6.432 64 15 851 24 7.016 4 183 1.747 106 3,687 13 123 - - 29 46 1 -47 14.088 22 7 178 52 5,385 35 71 93 5 18 2,455 10 551 -1 1 3.007 -27 25 62 2 -43 6.457 31 90 981 23 6.282 70 46 1,481 -6 6.393 0 3,075 3,200 59 25,939 108 40 709 24 4,232 2 1.528 225 1,815 -53 505 1,460 63 4.907 22 51 7 1,590 76 14,268 61 2.361 3.891 122 15.614 81 Table A-8. Sub-Saharan Africa: Food Security Population facing Percentage o f Per capita daily calor~e food insecurity populat~on facing supply (calorres) (millions) f o o d insecurity ----- - ---- Country 1980181 1980/8 1 1965 1988 Sub-Saharan Africa 98 28 2,092 2.095 Low-income economies 95 30 2,079 2.076 Ben~n 1 18 2,009 2,184 Faso Burk~na 2 32 2,009 2.139 Burundi 1 26 2,391 2.343 Central Afrlcan Rep. 1 29 2.135 1,949 Comoros 2,296 2.109 Chad 2 54 2.399 1.717 Equatorial Guinea Ethiopia 15 46 1,824 1.749 Gambia, The 0 19 2.194 2.51 7 Ghana 4 36 1.950 1,759 Guinea 1.923 1.776 Gulnea-Bissau 1.91 0 2.186 Kenya 6 37 2.289 2,060 Lesotho 2.065 2,303 Liberia 1 30 2,154 2,381 Madagascar 1 13 2.462 2.440 Malawi 1 24 2,244 2.310 Mali 3 35 1,858 2.073 Maur~tanla 0 25 2.064 2,322 Mozambique 6 49 1,979 1,595 Niger 2 28 1,994 2,432 Nlgeria 14 17 2,185 2,149 Rwanda 1 24 1,665 1.830 Sao Tome and Prlnclpe 2.186 2,338 Sierra Leone 1 23 1,837 1.854 Somalia 2 50 2.167 2,138 Sudan 3 18 1,938 2.208 Tanzania 7 35 1,832 2,192 Togo 1 29 2.378 2.207 Uganda 6 46 2,360 2,344 Zaire 12 42 2,187 2.163 Lambla 3 48 -- Middle-income economies 3 12 2.176 2,234 - - Angola 1.897 1,880 Botswana 2.019 2,201 Cameroon 1 9 2,079 2.028 Cape Verde 1.766 2,717 Congo. People's Rep. 0 27 2,259 2,619 CBte d'lvo~re 1 8 2.359 2,562 Djibouti Gabon 0 7 1,881 2.52 1 Maur~tus 0 9 2.271 2.748 Senegal 1 21 2,479 2,350 Seychelles 1.735 2.219 Swaziland 2,100 2.578 Z~mbabwe 2.105 2,132 lndla 2.111 2.238 58 Ch~na 1.926 2,630 - - Note Food securlty ir det~ned the as access to enough food for an actwe and healthy Ihfe. In measurlny th~s, minimum daily calor~e requirement to meet thc energy needs of an average healthy person, as calculated by the World Health Organizat~on for edch country. IS taken Into account ______- Calone s u p p l y as p e r c e n t a g e Average a n n u a l cereal rm I n d e x of p e r c a p ~ t a food o f rnrnlmurn r e q u r r e m e n t "ports thousands o f tons) 17 979-8 1= 100) product~on 7 988 1974 1988 1964 66 1987-89 90 4,024 8.218 - - PAP- 89 2.913 5,904 - -- - 95 7 121 94 110 90 99 128 113 114 101 7 15 100 92 86 7 40 94 83 90 12 32 114 72 37 61 124 99 2 10 75 118 1.157 111 88 106 15 62 152 101 76 177 228 120 118 77 63 222 106 91 95 22 53 140 134 89 15 86 119 10' 10' 48 107 120 79 103 42 103 95 95 107 114 217 105 93 100 17 44 87 84 88 281 109 100 95 101 115 219 143 87 68 62 527 132 84 103 155 151 105 85 91 389 333 125 96 79 3 11 78 76 4 15 81 26 114 99 89 93 42 236 144 98 94 125 702 89 88 94 431 120 87 88 96 6 110 118 88 101 36 28 11 0 82 97 343 41 5 110 94 93 128 98 94 -- 96 1,111 2,314 80 149 313 127 84 95 21 150 134 70 87 8' 282 89 96 116 40 52 163 118 34 113 110 94 111 172 494 73 97 12 51 108 24 59 110 79 121 160 177 111 104 99 341 461 156 113 6 8 11 1 15 61 68 97 89 56 93 96 90 - . -- 101 5.261 2.985 94 113 11 1 6,033 15,517 81 128 -- 59 a Ll~n~mu dally m calor~e requ~rernentshave been calculated by the WHO for each countly. Per caplta supply data of 1988 have been d ~ i ~ d e d a y calor~e byd the requ!,ement. Source World Bank, The Challenge o f Hunger in Xfrrcd - A Call to Amon. September 1988, and FA0 Table A-9. Sub-Saharan Africa: Population Growth and Fertility Rates Populatlon growth rate Total fertility (percent) rate Country 1965-73 1973-80 1980-88 1965 1988 -- Sub-Saharan Africa 2.6 2.8 3.2 6.6 6.7 -. Low-income economies 2.6 2.7 3.2 6.6 6.7 -- - Ben~n 2.7 2.7 3.2 6.8 6.4 Burkina Faso 1.9 2.3 2.6 6.4 6.5 Burundl 17 2.0 2.8 6.4 68 Central Afr~canRep 1.5 2.2 2.7 4.5 5.7 Comoros 23 2.2 36 7.0 7.0 Chad 1.9 2 1 2.4 60 5.9 Equatorial Gulnea 17 1.7 1.9 50 55 Ethiopia 2.6 2.8 2.9 5.8 7.5 Gambia. The 2.8 3.4 3.3 6.5 6.5 Ghana 23 1.8 3.4 6.8 6.3 Guinea 1.8 2.0 2.4 5.9 6.5 Guinea-Btssau 1.1 5.2 1.7 5.9 6.0 Kenya 3.4 3.8 3.8 8.0 6.9 Lesotbo 2.1 2.5 2.7 5.8 5.7 L~beria 2.9 3. I 3.2 6.4 6.4 Madagascar 2.3 2.7 2.8 6.6 60 Malawi 2.8 3.0 3.4 7.8 76 Ma11 2.1 2.2 24 65 70 Mauritania 2.2 2.5 26 6.5 6.5 Mozambique 2.3 2.6 2.7 6.8 6.3 Niger 23 2.9 35 6.8 7.1 Nigeria 25 2.5 33 6.9 6.6 Rwanda 31 3.4 33 7.5 8.0 S ~ Tome O and Prlnc~pe 2.3 1.8 3.0 5.3 S~erraLeone 1.9 2.1 2.4 6.4 6.5 Somalia 2.6 2.6 3.0 6.7 6.8 Sudan 2.5 3.1 3 1 6.7 6.4 Tanzania 3.2 3.3 35 6.6 6.7 Togo 3.8 2.5 3 5 6.5 6.7 Uganda 34 26 3.2 6.9 7.3 Za~re 2.3 33 3.1 6.0 6.0 Zambia 3.0 31 3.7 6.6 6.7 Middle-incomeeconomies 2.8 3.3 3.3 6.5 6.4 Angola Botswana Cameroon Cape Verde Congo, People's Rep CBte d'lvolre Dj~bout~ Gabon Maurttlus Senegal Seychelles Swaz~land Z~mbabwe Source. World Bank Table A-1 0. Sub-Saharan Africa: Birth. Death, and Mortality Rates Child mortalrty Crude blah Crude death Infant mortahty (under age 5 ) rate per 1,000 rate per 1.000 per 1,000 per 1,000 population populatron bve blahs hve b~rths - - - - Country 1965 1987 1965 1987 1965 1987 1965 1987 Sub-Saharan Africa 48 47 23 16 160 114 261 173 Low-income economies 49 48 23 16 165 116 269 174 Ben~n Burk~na Faso Burundi Central Afrlcan Rep Comoros Chad Equatorla1 Gulnea Eth~opia Gamb~a. The Ghana Guinea Gu~nea-81ssau Kenya Lesotho L~ber~a Madagascar Malawi Mall Maur~tan~a Mozamb~que N~ger N~ger~a Rwanda Sao Tome and Princ~pe S~erraLeone Somalia Sudan Tanzan~a Togo Uganda Za~re Zamb~a Middle-incomeeconomies -- Angola Botswana Cameroon Cape Verde Congo, People's Rep. CBte d'lvoire Djibouti Gabon Mauritius Senegal Seychelles Swaziland Zimbabwe India 45 32 21 11 151 99 239 128 China 38 21 10 7 90 32 113 40 Sources World Bank: UNICEF Table A-1 1. Family Planning Program Effort Scores for 100 Countries, 1982 Country Score Country Score -- Strong Peru 26.3 China 101.1 'Liberia 25.9 Korea. Rep. 94 8 Taiwan 94.3 Very weak or none Singapore 93.4 Nicaragua 23 8 Indonesia 89 9 Ghana 21.3 Colombia 85.3 ' Uganda 20 5 Hong Kong 82.8 Yemen. Dem 20.3 * Mauritius 82.0 ' Mozambique 19.7 Sri Lanka 80.4 * S~erraLeone 19.3 Mexlco 79 9 Jordan 19.0 ' Zamb~a Moderate * Congo, People's Rep India * Lesotho El Salvador * Togo Tha~land * Gu~nea-B~ssau Tunisia * Zaire Bangladesh ' N~gerla Dominlcan Republ~c * Bentn Jama~ca * Malr Phllipp~nes Afghanistan Vietnam Iran Malaysia Syria Panama * Burund~ FIJI * Central African Republ~c Korea Democrat~cPeoples Rep ' Somal~a Cuba * Madagascar Tr~nidadflobago * Cameroon Weak Paraguay Yemen Chlle Brazil Sudan Pakistan Boliv~a ' Chad Egypt Ethlopla Nepal Morocco ' Malaw1 Halt1 CBte d'lvoire Ecuador Kuwa~t Costa R~ca * N~ger Lebanon ' Guinea Venezuela Burk~na Faso Turkey Myanmar Guatemala * Maur~tan~a Iraq Western Samoa Kenya Oman * Z~mbabwe Un~ted Arab Emirates * Botswana Saudi Arabla Guyana * Equatorla1Gulnea ' Gamb~a.The Libya Cyprus Kampuchea Honduras Laos Alqerla Mongolia ~abua New Gulnea 29.7 ' Rwanda 27 6 Mean for all countries 69.7 Senegal 27.2 Tanzan~a 26.8 Maximum possible score 120.0 - ~ ' Sub-Saharan African countries Nore Scores ind~cate ~nclud~ng the strength of government efforts to reduce fertil~ly officlalpolrlrs, budgets. of birth control methods The maximum possible score IS 120. wrvlces and ava~labiliry Source Robert J Lapham and W. Parker Mauld~n "C0ntracep:ive Prevalence. The Influence of Organized Fam~lvPlann~na Proarams." 5tud1es,n Fam~ivPlannino, Vol. 16. No. 3 (1985) Table A-1 2. Sub-Saharan Africa: Contraceptive Prevalence Rates for Achieving Population Projections in Table A-13 - -- Projected contraceptive prevalence rates (percent) - -- Country 7990 2020 CBte d'lvoire 7.8 41 7 Cameroon 7.9 42.4 Guinea 7.4 48 7 Ethlopia 4.6 27.6 Sudan 10 6 47.8 Kenya 28.3 63.6 Uganda 72 40.1 Somalia 5.7 33.4 Zaire 5.3 41.4 Madagascar 6.7 49.2 Rwanda 13.5 39.7 Burundi 11.2 46 9 Nigerta 9.2 495 Ghana 16.8 53.8 Burkina Faso 7.0 36.2 Mali 7.0 29.6 Senegal 14.2 42.0 Niger 5.0 24.1 Chad 6.1 35.2 Tanzania 11.9 47.6 Mozamb~que 46 36.4 Angola 4.0 30.9 Z~mbabwe 45 8 72.8 Malawi 4.9 30.7 Zamb~a 8.2 41.7 - - All Sub-Saharan African countries - 10.8 45.3 -- India 38.5 64.2 Ch~na 81.6 85.0 - .- - Note. The contraceptive prevalence rates (CPR) for 1990 and 2020 are projections They were derived by applytng the Bongaarts model t o ava~lable country-specific information Including data on CPR, contraceptive mix and proport~on marrled, with assumptions o n likely changes. (For countries without such information, proxy data from countries with a simtlar socio-cultural background were utilized.) The projections refer t o the percentage of married women aged 14-49 using contraception (both modern and traditional). For lndta and China they refer t o married women aged 15-44. Source: World Bank. Table A-1 3. Sub-Saharan Africa: Population Estimates and Projections Based on Targeted Decline of 50 Percent in Total Fertility Rate by 2025-30 -- Populat~on s~ze fmillions) H y p o t h e t i c a l size of stationary p o p u l a t ~ o n Country 7980 1990 2020 (millions) Sub-Saharan Africa 380.1 532.0 1,233.2 3,108 Angola 7.1 10.0 23.9 69 Ben~n 3.4 4.7 10.3 21 Botswana 13 2.3 4 Burund~ 4.1 55 13.0 33 Burkina Faxl 6.1 9.0 20.6 52 Cameroon 8.4 11 9 29.6 75 Cape Verde 0.4 08 1 Rep. Central Afr~can 23 3.0 6.2 13 Chad 4.5 5.7 12.2 30 Comoros 0.5 1.2 3 Congo. People's Rep. 1.6 23 59 17 Cbte d'lvoire 83 12.2 32 9 95 Djibout~ 0.4 1.O 2 Equatorial Gu~nea 0.4 0.7 1 Ethiopia 31 1 50.5 134.5 474 Gabon 1.1 26 7 Gambia. The 09 2.0 5 Ghana 11.7 14 9 32.4 67 Guinea 5.4 5.7 12.3 34 Guinea-Basau 1.O 1.9 4 Kenya 15.9 24.1 56 4 113 Lesotho 13 1.8 3.4 6 L~ber~a 1.9 2.5 54 11 Madagaxar 8.7 11.5 22.7 42 Malaw~ 61 85 22.9 79 Mali 7.0 85 20.8 63 Mauritan~a 1.5 20 4.7 14 Maurltlus 11 13 2 Mozarnb~que 121 15.8 36 9 93 Nam~b~a 13 29 6 Niger 5.3 7.7 20.8 83 Nigeria 84.7 1172 271.7 622 Reunion 0.6 08 1 Rwanda 5.2 7 1 20.0 71 sao Tom6 and Pr~nc~pe 01 02 Senegal 57 7.4 18.1 48 Seychelles 01 01 S~erraLeone 35 4.1 9.1 25 Somalia 3.9 63 14 9 41 South Africa 29.3 35.9 61 6 96 Sudan 187 25.1 52.3 108 Swaz~land 0.8 18 4 Tanzania 18 7 26.6 66.2 160 Togo 25 36 8.5 19 Uganda 12.6 17.4 M.8 129 Zaire 28.3 35.6 79.0 175 Zamb~a 5.8 81 21 2 57 Z~mbabwe 7.4 9.8 18.4 29 lnd~a 673.2 849.7 1,286 8 1.870 Chlna 976.7 1.122.0 1.5124 1.839 less than 1 mdllon Note. The prolectlons are the most recent estimates of the demographic future of each country, based on ~nformat~o n other countries that have undergone the transitton from high to low fenillty. (For from methodolog~cal deta~lson fertility monality and migration assumptions. see R A Bulatao eta1 , Afnca Regron Po~ulatIoo Projecf~ons, 1989-90 Edition, WPS 330, World Bank ) l attamed a Projection assumes that a 50 percent decline i n the total fertility rate from the 1985 level w ~ lbe 64 during 2025-30. These projenlons assume that the pace of decline In the future will be s~gnificantly higher than has h~therto been observed. Annual populatron growth (percent) rate Total fert111ty Assumed year of reachrng net repro- - 1990-95 2020-25 1990-95 2020 25 duct~on rate of one - - " 3.02 2.24 6 24 3.60 2 85 2 54 6 56 4 34 2050 2 92 1 85 5 99 3 00 2035 2 79 137 4 33 2 07 201 5 3 05 2 39 6 80 3 74 2045 2 82 2 33 6 50 3 95 2045 3 06 2 43 6 24 3 67 2045 2 85 161 4 66 2 17 2025 2 56 181 5 54 3 10 2035 2 56 2 16 6 03 3 75 2045 3 40 2 33 6 49 3 43 2040 3 21 2 72 6 40 4 17 2050 3 69 2 65 7 01 4 17 2050 3 20 2 11 6 60 3 54 2040 2 24 1 63 5 50 3 01 2035 3 17 2 98 7 50 4 95 2055 264 2 46 5 71 4 08 2045 2 90 2 40 6 50 4 46 2050 2 98 186 5 89 2 92 2035 2 50 2 36 6 50 4 46 2050 2 06 1 94 6 00 3 96 2045 3 40 185 6 32 2 58 2035 2 59 1 54 5 29 2 52 2030 2 76 182 5 99 2 98 2035 2 60 1 52 5 59 2 69 2030 3 49 2 94 7 60 5 05 2055 2 88 2 73 7 06 4 62 2050 2 64 2 57 6 50 4 46 2050 0 81 0 45 175 2 01 2030 3 06 2 33 6 52 3 90 2045 2 94 1 70 5 58 2 59 2030 3 14 3 07 7 19 5 32 2060 3 06 2 09 6 25 3 30 2040 1 50 0 82 2 16 2 05 1995 3 85 3 03 8 00 4 94 2055 2 50 1 36 4 74 2 17 2025 3 13 2 48 6 50 3 95 2045 1 06 0 96 2 83 2 09 2005 2 51 2 38 6 50 4 46 2050 2 96 2 47 6 77 4 22 2050 2 33 116 4 08 2 08 2020 2 74 1 82 6 01 3 13 2035 3 15 197 5 99 2 97 2035 3 31 2 33 6 40 3 56 2040 3 23 2 12 6 29 3 23 2040 3 49 2 65 7 30 4 24 2050 2 91 197 5 80 3 18 2040 3 47 2 56 6 46 3 84 2045 2 88 137 4 55 2 07 201 5 1 82 0 97 3 74 2 15 2015 1 37 0 70 2 28 2 08 2000 b Even when the net re~roducilon r women ~n or rare reachesone the age structure 18 such that the n u r n b ~ of r yet to eiter, t h e ~ chlldbeartng years glves rlse t o total binhr exceed~ngthe total number of deaths The l populat~ontherefore w ~ l Increase for a funher cons~derable pertod before reaching 11shypothetical staltonary level All counlrles are projected to reach stationary oopulat~on near the m d of the 22nd century Source World Bank Table A-14. Sub-Saharan Africa: Environmental Indicators Fuelwood and charcoal Deforestabon, 1980s Reforesra- Annual Forest and bon. 1980s production Percentage woodland. 1980s Thousand (thousand (thousand ~ncrease (thousand Percenr hecfares hectares cub~c meters) wnce hecfares) per year per year per year) 1984-86 1974-76 - Sub-Saharan Africa 658,314 0.5 3.259 91 369,531 NA -- Low-income economies 485.080 0.5 2,368 72 333,361 MA -- --- - --- --- Ben~n 3.867 1.7 67 0 4,181 33 Burktna Faso 4.735 1.7 80 2 6,452 25 Burund~ 41 2.7 1 1 3,593 26 Central African Rep. 35,890 02 55 2.925 32 Cornoros 0 0 Chad 13,500 0.6 80 0 3.063 25 Equatorial Gu~nea . 0.2 3 447 16 Ethiopta 27,150 0.3 88 6 36.132 27 Gambia, The 215 2.4 5 0 829 9 Ghana 8.693 0.8 72 3 8.219 38 Gu~nea 10,650 0.8 86 0 3.647 25 Gu~nea-B~ssau 2.105 2.7 57 0 422 7 Kenya 2.360 1.7 39 0 30.874 50 Lesotho 0 525 28 Liberta 2,040 2.3 46 1 3.913 43 Madagascar 13.200 1.2 156 12 6.083 32 Malawi 4,271 35 150 6 6.21 1 34 Mali 7,250 05 36 0 4.599 29 Mauritania 554 2.4 13 0 7 40 Mozambique 15,435 08 120 1 14,203 54 N~ger 2.550 2.6 67 2 3.680 31 Niger~a 14,750 27 400 14 87,656 41 Rwanda 230 2.3 5 2 5.535 12 Sao Tome and Principe Sierra Leone 2.055 0.3 6 0 7.635 18 Somalia 9,050 0.1 13 1 4,358 43 Sudan 47.650 0.2 104 11 17,690 35 Tanzanta 42,040 03 130 7 21.604 41 Togo 1.684 07 12 0 603 31 Uganda 6,015 0.8 50 0 10,868 38 Za~re 177.590 0.2 347 0 27,989 34 Zambia 29.510 0.3 80 3 9,418 29 ~ Middle-income economies 173,234 0.5 891 19 36.1 70 NA -- - - - - --- --- -- - - -- - - Angola 53,600 0.2 84 0 3,903 34 Botswana 32,560 0.1 20 1.107 46 Cameroon 25,620 0.4 110 1 9,134 30 Cape Verde 0 Congo, People's Rep. . 0.1 22 2 1.585 29 Cbte d'lvoire 9,834 5.2 510 3 7.970 45 Dj~bouti Gabon Maur~ttus 0 1 14 -36 Senegal 11,045 05 50 2 3,505 33 Seychelles Swaztland 74 0 5 560 20 Ztmbabwe 19,820 04 80 5 5,867 41 66 Note Refers only t o areas larger than 4.000 square ktlorneters NA tndtcates not ava~lable Source World Bank Sub-Saharan Africa From Cris~s to Susfa~nableGrowth 1989 Table A-15. Sub-Saharan Africa: Environmental Indicators (continued) -- Coastline areas roundwood lndustr~al and resource1 average annual produH,on average annual (thousand cub~c meted W~lderness marrne catch asa Percentage percentage Percentage change of total Length of 1983-85 Increase since land area coastl~ne (thousand srnce Country 1984-86 1974 76 1985 fkm) metnc fond 1974 76 -- Sub-Saharan Africa 40.126 NA NA 25,006 1,198 NA Low-income economies Berm Burklna Faso Burund~ Central African Rep Comoros Chad Equator~al Gulnea Eth~op~a Gamb~a, The Ghana Gulnea Guinea-Blssau Kenya Lesotho L~berla Madagascar Malaw1 Mall Maur~tan~a Mozamb~que N~ger N~ger~a Rwanda Sao Tome and Prlnc~pe Slerra Leone Sornalla Sudan Tarzan~a Togo Uganda Zalre Zamb~a Middle-income economies 13.696 NA NA 6,049 507 NA Angola 997 8 26 1.600 78 62 Botswana 73 49 63 Cameroon 2,702 71 3 402 32 14 Cape Verde 0 965 11 248 Congo, People's Rep 849 49 42 169 20 22 Cote d'lvo~re 4.030 -19 16 515 67 2 Dj~bout~ 0 314 0 32 Gabon 1.484 -6 35 885 49 838 Maur~t~us 5 -72 NM 177 11 55 Senegal 546 37 11 531 235 30 Seychelles 49 1 4 11 Swaz~land 1.663 10 0 Z~rnbabwe 1,347 55 0 67 Note NM nd~cates not meaningful. NA lndlcates not ava~lable Faharan Afrrra Frnm fr,crc to Tr,ctmnahle Grnwth 19R9 h , r r e Wnrlri Rank S t ~ h Table A-1 6. Sub-Saharan Africa: Wildlife Habitat Loss in Afrotropical Nations, 1986 Onginal wildlife habrtat (square Amount remainrng Loss Country kilometers) (square kilometers) (percent) -- Angola 1.246.7 760.9 39 Benin 1158 46.3 60 Botswana 585.4 257.6 56 Burkina Faso 273.8 54.8 80 Burundi 25.7 3.6 86 Cameroon 469.4 192.4 59 Central African Rep O 62 3 . 274.1 56 Chad 720 8 173.0 76 Congo 342.0 174.4 49 Cote d'lvoire 318.0 66.8 79 Dj~boutl 21.8 11.1 49 Equatorial Gulnea 76.0 12.8 51 Eth~op~a 1.101.0 30.3 70 Gabon 267.0 173.6 35 Gambia, The 11.3 1.2 89 Ghana 230.0 46 0 80 Guinea 245.9 73.8 70 Gu~nea-Blssau 36.1 8.0 78 Kenya 569.5 296.1 48 Lesotho 30.4 9.8 68 L~ber~a 111.4 14.4 87 Madagascar 595.2 148.9 75 Malawi 94.1 40 4 57 Mali 754.1 158.3 79 Mauritania 388.6 73.9 81 Mozambique 783.2 36.8 57 Niger 566.6 127.9 77 Nigeria 91 9.8 230.0 75 Rwanda 25.1 3.2 87 Senegal 196.2 35.3 82 Sierra Leone 71 7 10.8 85 Somalia 637.7 376.2 41 Sudan 1,703 0 511.0 70 Swaziland 17.4 77 56 Tanzania 886.2 505 1 43 Togo 56.0 19.0 66 Uganda 193.7 42 7 78 Za~re 2.335.9 1,051.1 55 Zambia 752.6 534.3 29 Z~mbabwe 390.2 171.7 56 -- Total 18,737.4 6.765.3 64 Namibia 823.2 444.5 46 South Africa 1.236.5 531 7 57 Note- Habitat is a place or type of slte where a plant or animal naturally or normally llves and grows. The Afrotropical realm IS defined as all the continent south of the Sahara Desert, includ~ng the island of Madagascar. Therefore, data for Mauritania. Mali. Niger. Chad, and Sudan cover only part of those countries. Comoros, Seychelles. 820 Tome and Princ~pe. Mauritius, Rodrigues. Reunion, and the extreme southeastern corner of Egypt are not included. Source World Resource lnst~tute and International lnstltute for Env~ronment and Development (in collaboration w11h UN Envlronment Programme), World Resources 7988-89, 1988. 68 Table A-17. Sub-Saharan Africa: Current Account Balances Current account annual average Share o f GNP irnillions o f US$) (percent) - . - Country 1970-72 1979-81 1986-88 1970-72 1979-81 1986-88 ---- - - Sub-Saharan Africa -1,259 -7,531 -6,671 -2.8 -4.0 -4.8 - - - Low-income economies -981 -4,650 -4,132 -2.6 -3.0 -4.2 - -- --- Benin -4.7 -1 76 -94 -1.5 -16.4 -6.2 Burkina Faso 4.7 -49 -61 1.4 3 -3.3 Burund~ -3.7 -77 -66 1.5 -8.6 -5.9 Central African Rep. -6.7 -21 -74 -3.7 -2.7 -7.3 Comoros Chad 17 11 -40 0.5 1.8 -5.0 Equatorial Guinea -2 -1.8 Eth~opia -23.0 -135 -170 -1.3 -3.3 -3 2 Gambia, The -0.2 -51 11 -0.4 -23.9 59 Ghana -35.3 -90 -91 -1.4 -2.1 -1 8 Gu~nea .. -59 -103 -3.8 -4.7 Gu~nea-Bissau -2 1 -14.6 Kenya -76 3 -648 329 -4.3 -10 0 -4.2 Lesotho 14.3 -17 -52 13.1 -2.4 -7 6 L~beria -10.7 46 -24 -2 5 4.2 2.2 Madagascar 6.0 -468 -132 05 -15.9 -6 6 Malawi -39.0 -226 -86 -1 1.2 -21.1 -6.9 Ma11 -7.3 126 -126 -1.8 -8.4 -7.4 Maur~tania -5.3 -126 -1 16 -2.3 -23.9 -14.2 Mozarnb~que -367 401 -15.9 -27.1 Niger 9.3 -199 -87 1.3 -8.8 -4.1 Nigeria -372.0 165 -239 -2.5 0.2 -1.0 Rwanda 0.5 -23 -107 0.3 -1.5 -5.1 Sio Tome and Pr~nc~pe -3 1 6 - 1 1.8 -54.7 S~erraLeone -15.0 -150 9 -3 6 -15.3 -0.2 Somal~a -4.0 -142 -92 -1.1 -15.8 9.9 Sudan -44.3 -612 -420 -2.0 -8.0 -5.4 Tanzania -67.3 -316 -232 -4.8 -6.4 -6.7 Togo -4.7 1 17 -75 -1.4 -12.5 -6.7 Uganda -16.7 -4 -1 10 -0.8 -0.2 -2.7 Zaire -165.0 -250 -580 -4.1 -2.8 -10.7 Zambia -1 16.3 -41 1 -205 -7.0 -10.9 -1 1.6 -- - Middle-incomeeconomies -278 -2,881 -2,539 -4.2 -9.3 -6.5 - - Angola Botswana -47.0 -94 465 -46.1 -10.2 38.4 Cameroon -55.3 -318 -884 -4.5 -4.6 -7.5 Cape Verde -35 -10 .. 293 -3.9 Congo, People's Rep -68 7 -242 -252 -20.5 -1 5.0 -14.2 C6te d'lvoire -80.3 -1,540 -867 -5.2 -17.7 -9.7 Dj~bouri Gabon 3.7 345 707 1.1 10.3 -22.4 Maur~t~us 63 -140 41 22 -12.2 2.9 Senegal -10 3 -371 -310 -1.3 -14.3 -7 7 Seychelles 3 3 -16 -26 -1 1.9 -1 1.3 -1 1 .O Swaziland . -1 19 47 . -23.7 8 1 Zimbabwe -23.3 -349 37 -1.4 -6.2 -0.7 - - lnd~a -353.3 -1,897 -6.187 -0.6 -1.2 -2.6 Ch~na 112.3 898 -4,135 -01 0.3 -1.4 69 Source. World Bank, World Debt T a b b 1989-90. Table A-18. Sub-Saharan Africa: External Public Debt and Debt Service Ratios -- Total debt (US$millionJ Percentage o f GNP Country 1970 1980 1988 1970 1980 1988 Sub-Saharan Africa 5,678 56,201 139,624 13.8 28.2 99.5 -- --- - Low-income economies 4,606 41,592 105,466 16.7 26.4 120.1 -- - 8en1n 41 421 1,055 15.1 36.8 64.5 Burk~na Faso 21 334 866 6.6 23.2 42.5 Burundi 7 166 793 3.1 18.2 74.0 Central Afr~canRep 24 195 673 13 5 24.4 61.4 Comoros 1 44 199 4.7 36.4 96 6 Chad 33 218 346 9.9 30.0 38.3 Equatorial Guinea 5 75 200 75 . 141.5 Eth~opia 169 804 2,978 95 19.5 54.0 Gamb~a, The 5 137 327 9.5 57.0 172.1 Ghana 497 1,314 3.099 22.9 29.7 61.9 Guinea 312 1,143 2,563 47.1 70.1 105.0 Gu~nea-Bissau 0 132 423 .. 126.3 299.7 Kenya 406 3,512 5,888 26.3 51.2 71.3 Lesotho 8 71 281 7.8 11.0 38.1 Llberia 158 686 1.632 39.3 62.9 .. Madagascar 89 1.257 3,602 10.4 39.1 209 2 Malawi 122 821 1,349 43.2 71.4 97.2 Mali 238 733 2,067 71.4 44.7 108.1 Mauritan~a 27 845 2.076 13.9 125.7 223.5 Mozambique . 4,406 436.0 N~ger 32 863 1,742 5.0 34.5 74.6 Niger~a 567 8,855 30,718 4.3 8.9 107.1 Rwanda 2 190 632 0.9 16.3 28.3 Sao Tome and Principe 24 99 .. 51.2 Slerra Leone 59 427 727 14.3 40.3 66 0 Somalia 77 664 2,035 24.4 99.0 214.8 Sudan 298 5.218 11.853 14 8 78.0 i34.3 Tanzan~a 265 2,572 4,729 20.7 50 2 164.6 Togo 40 1,041 1.210 16.0 93.8 93.1 Uganda 138 733 1.925 7.3 42.5 43.1 Zaire 31 1 4.831 8,475 9.1 48.2 142.6 Zambia 654 3,266 6.498 37.5 90.9 180.8 Middle-incomeeconomies 1,071 14,607 34,130 18.4 43.8 81.1 - - - - --- Angola Botswana 17 156 499 21.1 18.5 41.5 Cameroon 140 2,513 4.229 12.6 36.8 33.7 Cape Verde 22 133 .. 16.8 38.6 Congo. People's Rep. 124 1,686 4,763 46.5 109.6 238.3 Cote d'lvoire 267 5.801 14.125 19.5 58 3 161.8 Dj~bouti 3 26 157 Gabon 91 1,550 2,663 28.8 40.8 82.1 Maurit~us 32 468 861 14.3 41 6 45.1 Senegal 131 1,309 3,617 15.5 45 6 76.6 Seychelles 0 84 159 0.0 59.2 56.9 Swaziland 37 206 265 33.3 38.5 43.0 Zimbabwe 229 786 2.659 15.5 14.9 43.5 .------------- - --- ---- -- 70 India 7,937 20,561 57,513 :5.1 11.9 22.3 Chlna . 4,503 42,015 1.6 11.3 - Note Includes short-term debt, except for 1970 Source World Bank, lVorld Debt Tables 1989-90 -- -- -- ----- - -------- - --- -- - - - - - - Total debt Debt servrce payments as per caprta a percentage of export5 'US$) -- o f goods and serv~ces - -- -- ---- -- - -- 1988 1970 1980 1988 - 300 6.3 11 0 27.7 - --- ---- ------------- 258 7.9 9.2 27 9 -- -- 237 24 58 23 9 10' 43 59 10 4 154 24 94 47 8 241 52 49 12 8 450 26 29 4 64 42 84 40 504 '9 4 35 0 65 11 4 76 39 2 398 06 62 17 1 22 1 55 12 5 62 8 386 23 6 450 32 9 256 9 1 22 1 37 8 168 13 15 32 680 8 1 88 36 320 38 17 3 53 7 165 78 27 7 45 3 259 13 5 1 20 1 1,089 34 17 3 25 8 294 31 6 249 40 21 7 49 8 2 79 7 1 4 1 29 3 95 13 4 1 12 7 839 50 19 7 185 10 7 23 1 28 8 346 2 1 49 68 499 10 5 25 4 15 7 191 63 23 3 24 6 360 31 104 26 8 119 29 13 3 47 2 252 44 22 5 15 9 868 72 25 3 14 2 - -- - - - - -- - - --- - -- - - - --- - - -- - - - ---- - 745 4.7 16 8 27 5 ---- -- - ---- - -- -- ------- -- ---- -- - 429 11 19 40 377 4 1 15 2 30 9 378 34 7 2 268 11 4 12 4 79 3 1219 75 28 4 39 9 480 2 473 57 18 2 89 822 32 9 1 14 3 506 40 24 3 30 2 2 338 00 36 2 76 360 40 74 287 23 38 32 4 --- -- --- pp -- 71 23 0 92 29 2 39 46 10 6 Table A-1 9. Sub-Saharan Africa: Amortization Payments (US$ rnillfons) - - ArnorTfzation (after rescheduling) County 1980 1982 1984 1986 1987 1988 Sub-Saharan Africa 2,998 3.399 5,235 5,828 4,764 5,085 ~p Low-incomeeconomies 1.758 2,144 3,777 3.580 2,563 2,821 -- Benin 6 9 22 36 19 13 Burkina Faso 11 8 13 22 17 25 Burundi 4 3 14 19 25 22 Central Afr~canRep. 7 3 16 15 15 15 Comoros 0 0 1 1 0 0 Chad 5 1 7 4 3 5 Equatorial Guinea 2 3 7 4 6 6 Ethiop~a 17 36 79 145 148 177 Gambia, The 0 11 6 21 17 14 Ghana 100 45 75 123 305 418 Gu~nea 78 59 88 61 110 118 Gu~nea-Bissau 3 2 4 8 4 4 Kenya 216 277 377 465 460 382 Lesotho 3 5 17 10 10 17 Liberia 18 19 32 13 5 9 Madagascar 33 39 36 99 88 126 Malawi 34 44 60 96 71 65 Mali 9 4 15 39 42 56 Maur~tania 26 20 30 60 78 87 Mozamb~que 66 18 12 Niger 57 158 48 69 81 90 Nigeria 241 833 2.217 1.225 430 573 Rwanda 3 3 6 13 14 12 530 Tome and Pr~nc~pe 1 2 2 I 2 1 S~erra Leone 49 14 23 35 5 6 Somal~a 11 10 7 39 28 2 Sudan 130 131 75 148 39 44 Tanzania 88 57 63 66 54 56 Togo 27 20 46 91 49 50 Uganda 33 47 97 119 88 103 Zaire 277 85 166 245 255 19B Zambia 269 196 128 222 77 115 Middleincome economies 1,240 1,255 1.458 2,248 2,201 2.264 Angola Botswana 6 4 16 18 38 39 Caweroon 131 199 200 433 406 384 Cape Verde 0 0 2 2 4 4 Congo, People's Rep 55 123 217 213 106 190 CBte d'lvoire 558 608 499 899 926 823 Djibout~ 2 2 3 4 9 10 Gabon 286 193 201 103 17 31 Mauritius 19 39 86 84 80 146 Senegal 135 28 50 146 180 196 Seychelles 0 0 3 7 5 8 Swaz~land 8 12 10 23 35 25 Zimbabwe 40 47 171 316 395 408 -- lnd~a 764 932 1,225 2.581 3.125 3.327 Ch~na 613 1.302 1.287 1.910 1,995 2,180 72 Note Excludes short-term debt. Source. World Bank. World Debt Tables 1989-90. Table A-20. Sub-Saharan Africa: Debt, Amortization, and Interest Payments (US$ millions) Comrnerc,al Prlvate Debt and debt World bonds and Other non- semtce payments Bank Bi- other private mulri- guaran- Sub-Saharan Africa IMF Group lateral guaranteed lateral teed Total -- Debt outstanding and disbursed as of 12/31/88 Low ~ncome 5,689 Other 1,250 Total 6,939 Amortization 1988 Low income 832 414 512 578 287 198 2,821 Other 383 241 180 660 124 676 2,264 Total 1.215 655 692 1,238 41 1 874 5,085 India 1.210 384 574 705 13 440 3,326 Ch~na 83 39 437 1.619 2 0 2,180 Interest payments 1988 Low lncome 181 478 793 874 176 99 2.601 Other 86 300 207 207 93 329 1,222 Total 267 778 1,000 1,081 269 428 3.823 lnd~a 233 572 321 1,510 9 142 2,787 China 51 141 278 1,172 2 0 1.644 -- Note Excludes short-term debt a lnclud~ng - short-term debt, this would be US8139 6 b ~ l l ~ o n as shown In Table 17 Source World Bank. World Debt Tables 1989-90 Table A-21. Sub-Saharan Africa: Net Financial Transfers, 1980-1988 (US$ rnrll~ons) 1980 1982 -- To Low-income Africa IMF 601 294 World Bank Group 375 634 Other mult~laterals 553 442 Ellateral loans 1.269 1,747 Commerc~albanks 754 395 Other prlvate loans 1,046 1.816 ODA grants a 2.553 2.505 ODA tech cooper grants 1.599 1.585 Total 8.750 9.418 5.420 8.158 9,764 9.994 To other countries IMF World Bank Group Other rnultilaterals Bilateral loans Commercial banks Other prlvate loans ODA grants " ODA tech cooper. grants Total To Sub-Saharan Africa IMF World Bank Group Other multilaterals Ellateral loans Commercial banks Other prlvate loans ODA grants ' ODA tech. cooper. grants Total D~rectInvestment VDAC) Total India IMF Worlo Bank Group Other rnult~laterals Ellateral loans Commercial banks Other prlvate loans ODA grants ' ODA tech cooper grants Total D~rect~nvestrnent(DAC) Total China IMF World Bank Group Other multilaterals Bilateral loans Commerc~al banks Other pr~vate loans ODA grants ' ODA tech, cooper. grants Total 1,664 86 673 5,211 5.467 5.678 Direct investment (DAO 24 42 66 202 1,271 -33 Total 1,688 128 739 5 413 6,738 5,645 Note Excludes short-term loans a Technical cooperation grants are not ~ncluded b Not separately ava~lablefor low-~ncorneand other countries Source World Bank, World Debt Tables 1989-90, and OECD, Geographfcal D~stnbut~on of Flows to Developing Countnes. 1990 F~nancfal Table A-22. Sub-Saharan Africa: Gross Disbursements of Official Development Assistance, 1988 Ratro o f Per capita d~sbursements Drsbursements disbursements to GNP Country (US$ mikons) (US$) (percent) Sub-Saharan Africa 14.071.1 30 9.2 Low-income economies 11,545.6 28 11.3 Benin 166.8 38 10.9 Burkina Faso 31 1.4 37 15.9 Burundi 194.6 38 16.2 Central African Rep. 199.0 69 18 4 Comoros 51.5 10 25.8 Chad 265.9 665 31.3 Equator~al Gulnea 43.8 110 31.3 Ethiopia 986.5 21 17.1 Gambia. The 92.4 116 51.3 Ghana 506.9 36 9.0 Guinea 272.4 50 11.8 Gu~nea-B~ssau 99.8 111 68.8 Kenya 865.6 39 10.4 Lesotho 110.2 65 16.0 Liber~a 70.7 29 67 Madagascar 329.2 30 15.8 Malaw~ 376.7 47 28.5 Mali 443 0 55 24.6 Maur~tan~a 230.1 121 25.3 Mozamb~que 922.8 62 59.5 Niger 385.4 53 17.6 Nigeria 126.7 1 0.4 Rwanda 260.0 39 12.6 SBo Tome and Principe 24.0 240 75.0 Sierra Leone 103.8 27 11.2 Somalia 445.1 75 45.9 Sudan 948.0 40 11.7 Tanzanla 997 5 40 26 4 Togo 224.1 66 18.1 Uganda 377.3 23 8.4 Za~re 608.0 18 10.6 Zambia 506.4 67 23.4 Middle-income economies 2,525.5 46 5.0 Angola 163.0 17 1.6 Botswana 159. I 133 13.4 Cameroon 312.6 28 2.8 Cape Verde 88 0 220 51.8 Congo, People's Rep. 90.7 43 4.7 CBte d'lvoire 474.6 42 5.5 Djibouti 101.4 2 54 26.0 Gabon 112.6 102 3.5 Maurit~us 70.7 64 3.7 Senegal 599.0 86 13 3 Seychelles 21 2 21 2 8.2 Swaziland 47.9 68 8.3 Zimbabwe 284.7 31 4.7 o f Financial Flows to Develop~ng Source: World Bank; and OECD, Geographical D~str~bution Countnes. 1990. Table A-23. Sub-Saharan Africa: OECD Official Development Assistance, 1988 - - - - Sub-Saharan Gross Africa Rat10o f ODA d15bursements share ~n to Sub-Saharan to Sub-Saharan Africa total ODA Afr~cato GNP OECD country (US$m~lbonsi (percent) (percent i -- Australia 41 8 6.7 0.02 Austria 38.8 19.2 0.03 Belgtum 288.0 65.2 0 20 Canada 439.4 26.3 0.10 Denmark 290.0 58.6 0.31 Finland 208.9 54.7 0.23 France 2,788.0 47.9 0.31 Germany. Fed Rep. 999.8 25.9 0.09 Ireland 15.1 68.9 0.06 Italy 1,383.8 56 4 0.18 Japan 986 2 12.9 0.04 Netherlands 575.5 34.3 0.27 New Zealand 0.8 0.9 Norway 312.5 54.3 0.37 Sweden 476 4 45.0 0.30 Switzerland 161.8 36.1 0.09 United K~ngdom 650.0 41 .? 0.09 United States 822.0 11 .O 0.02 Total 10.478.8 28.7 0.08 N o t e Bilateral official development assistance; excludes contr~but~ons through mult~lateral institut~ons. Sources: OECD, Geographical Distribut~on o f FinancialFlows, 1990; and World Bank.