July 8, 2013
Washington, DC
Rep. Karen Bass , D-Calif., is ranking member of the House
Subcommittee on Africa, Global Health, Global Human Rights and
International Organizations.
In a recent Capitol Hill policy discussion on U.S.-Africa trade, an
African ambassador passionately proclaimed that the best thing the
United States can do for Africa is to remove the negative stereotype
that if one nation has a problem then the continent as a whole is
damned.
The point is hard to argue with when all we hear about is Africa’s
epidemic diseases, famines and despotic leaders. Too often, Africa’s
trade and investment potential for American business is overshadowed by a
false notion that the continent is a tinderbox, ready to ignite at any
moment.
President Barack Obama’s recent visit to South Africa, Senegal and
Tanzania underscores that the time has finally come to dramatically
reframe how we think about and how we engage with Africa’s 54 nations.
We as Americans must lose our tunnel vision and learn to see Africa as a
continent of immense opportunity.
The data speaks for itself.
For more than a decade now, the world’s fastest-growing economies have
been in Africa. Countries including Nigeria, Angola, Ethiopia and
Mozambique have annual gross domestic product growth of 8 percent to 11
percent. With more than a billion people living on the continent and
rapidly expanding middle-class and youth populations, opportunities
abound to leverage new consumers and engage new leaders to connect with
each other and global markets.
In 2012 alone, we saw the transition of power in several African
nations to illustrate that peaceful changes in leadership are the norm
rather than the exception. In Ethiopia, Malawi and Ghana, three African
leaders died in office, and their successors transitioned in without
military intervention or major protest.
Frankly, the United States can’t afford to cede Africa’s economic
momentum to foreign competitors such as Brazil, Russia, India and China,
known as the BRIC nations. While we as a nation continue to tinker with
our Africa policies, China’s trade with the continent continues to
expand. Last year alone, China’s trade with Africa totaled some $200
billion; we lagged behind at $95 billion.
These numbers are particularly troubling when we consider the reservoir
of good will the United States enjoys on the continent, spanning both
Democratic and Republican administrations.
One of President Bill Clinton’s signature accomplishments was signing
into law the African Growth and Opportunities Act, which eliminates
trade tariffs for African goods exported to the United States. And no
one can forget the success of President George W. Bush’s efforts to
address the HIV and AIDS crisis through the President’s Emergency Plan
for AIDS Relief.
Obama has similarly contributed to these legacies with efforts such
as the Global Health Initiative, Feed the Future and the Young African
Leaders Initiative. Despite being bogged down with a global recession
and wars winding down in Afghanistan and Iraq, Obama has focused his
policy on some of Africa’s most enduring and persistent challenges that
have kept Africa from reaching its full potential.
During Obama’s first term, he also launched the Doing Business in
Africa program to promote U.S. trade with the continent and announced
the first-ever trade mission to Zambia, doubling bilateral trade between
the two nations.
The affinity Africans have for the United States, which was
significantly strengthened by Obama’s 2008 election, must be leveraged
to ensure America holds its seat at the table and doesn’t lose ground to
economic competitors.
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