Photo: VOA
THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
For Immediate Release                                                                         September 21, 2016
REMARKS BY PRESIDENT OBAMA AT U.S.-AFRICA BUSINESS FORUM 
Plaza Hotel
New York, New York   
11:26 A.M. EDT
PRESIDENT OBAMA:  Well, good morning, everybody!  
Let me begin by thanking Mayor Bloomberg — not just for the introduction
 but for the incredible work that Bloomberg Philanthropies is doing, not
 just in helping this event but for all the work that you’re doing in 
promoting entrepreneurship and development throughout Africa. 
And I’d also like to thank our co-host, and a tremendous champion of 
investment and engagement in Africa — my great friend, Commerce 
Secretary Penny Pritzker.
I also want to welcome our partners from across Africa, including the
 many heads of state and government leaders who are with us.  And I want
 to acknowledge Senator Chris Coons and leaders from across my 
administration, who share a profound commitment to expanding opportunity
 and deepening relationships between our countries. 
Most importantly, I want to thank all of you — the business leaders, 
entrepreneurs, on both sides of the Atlantic, who are working very hard 
every single day to create jobs and to grow economies and to lift up our
 people.
Now, I gave a long speech yesterday.  Some of you had to sit through 
it.  I’m going to try to be a little more concise today.  I’m here 
because, as the world gathers in New York City, we’re reminded that on 
so many key challenges that we face — our security, our prosperity, 
climate change, the struggle for human rights and human dignity, the 
reduction of conflict — Africa is essential to our progress.  Africa’s 
rise is not just important to Africa, it’s important to the entire 
world.
Yes, too many people across the continent still face conflict and 
hunger and disease.  And, yes, recent years have brought some stiff 
economic headwinds.  And we have to be relentless in our efforts to end 
conflicts, and improve security and promote justice.  At the same time, 
the broader trajectory of Africa is unmistakable.  Thanks to many of 
you, Africa is on the move — home to some of the fastest-growing 
economies in the world and a middle class projected to grow to more than
 a billion customers.  An Africa of telecom companies and clean-tech 
startups and Silicon savannahs, all powered by the youngest population 
anywhere on the planet.  
As President, I’ve worked to transform our relationship with Africa 
so that we’re working together, as equal partners.  I’m proud to be the 
first American President to visit sub-Saharan Africa four times; the 
first to visit Ethiopia and speak before the African Union; the first to
 visit Kenya — which I think was obligatory.  I would have been in 
trouble if I hadn’t done that. (Laughter.)  I believe I’m also the first
 American President to dance the Lipala in Nairobi — or to try to dance 
the Lipala.  
And wherever I’ve gone, from Senegal to South Africa, Africans insist
 they do not just want aid, they want trade.  They want partners, not 
patrons.  They want to do business and grow businesses, and create value
 and companies that will last and that will help to build a great future
 for the continent.  And the United States is determined to be that 
partner — for the long term — to accelerate the next era of African 
growth for all Africans.  
And that’s why, over the past eight years, we’ve dramatically 
expanded our economic engagement.  With your support, we renewed the 
African Growth and Opportunity Act for another decade, giving African 
nations unprecedented access to American markets.  We launched Trade 
Africa, so that African countries can sell goods and services more 
easily across borders — both within Africa and with the United States.  
We created Doing Business in Africa campaign to help American businesses
 — including small businesses — pursue opportunities across Africa. And 
under Penny’s leadership, nearly 300 American companies have taken trade
 missions to Africa, with more than 8,000 African buyers attending U.S. 
trade shows.  
If you are an African entrepreneur or an American entrepreneur 
looking for more support, more capital, more technical assistance, there
 has never been a better time to partner with the United States.  
Commitments from the Export-Import Bank and the U.S. Trade and 
Development Agency have doubled.  OPIC investments have tripled.  Nearly
 70 percent of Millennium Challenge Corporation compacts are now with 
African countries.  And we’ve opened up and expanded new trade and 
investment offices, from Ghana to Mozambique.  Through our landmark 
Power Africa initiative, the United States is mobilizing more than 130 
public and private sector partners — and over $52 billion — to double 
electricity access across sub-Saharan Africa.  
Meanwhile, our Global Entrepreneurship Summits in Morocco and Kenya 
and our Young African Leaders Initiative are giving nearly 300,000 
talented, striving young Africans the tools and networks to become the 
entrepreneurs and business leaders of the future.  We’ve got some of 
those outstanding young people here today.  And two years ago, I 
welcomed many of you to our first ever U.S.-Africa Business Forum, where
 we announced billions of dollars in new trade and investment between 
our countries.
And you can see the results.  American investment in Africa is up 70 
percent.  U.S. exports to Africa have surged.  Iconic companies — FedEx,
 Kellogg’s, Google — are growing their presence on the continent.  You 
can hail an Uber in Lagos or Kampala.  In the two years since our last 
forum, American and African companies have concluded deals worth nearly 
$15 billion, which will support African development across the board, 
from manufacturing to health care to renewable energy.  Microsoft and 
Mawingu Networks are partnering to provide low-cost broadband to rural 
Kenyans.  Procter & Gamble is expanding a plant in South Africa.  
MasterCard will work with Ethiopian banks so that more Ethiopians can 
send home remittances.  
These are all serious commitments.  New relationships are being 
forged, and I’m pleased that, altogether, the deals and commitments 
being announced at this forum add up to more than $9 billion in trade 
and investment with Africa.
So we are making progress, but we’re just scratching the surface.  We
 have so much more work that can be done and will be done.  The fact is 
that, despite significant growth in much of the continent, Africa’s 
entire GDP is still only about the GDP of France.  Only a fraction of 
American exports — about 2 percent — go to Africa.  So there’s still so 
much untapped potential. And I may only be in this office for a few more
 months, but let me suggest a few areas where we need to focus in the 
years ahead.  
We have to keep increasing the trade that creates broad-based growth.
  In East Africa alone, our new trade hubs have supported 29,000 jobs 
and helped increase exports to the United States by over a third.  So we
 need to keep working to integrate African economies, diversify African 
exports, and bring down barriers at the borders.  Since we’re 
approaching two decades since AGOA was first passed, we’re releasing a 
report today exploring the future beyond AGOA, with trade agreements 
that are even more enduring and reciprocal.  
We also have to keep making it easier to do business in Africa.  We 
know progress is possible.  A decade ago, if you wanted to start a 
business in Kenya, it took, on average, 54 days.  Today, it takes less 
than half that.  And governments that make additional reforms and cut 
red tape will have a partner in the United States.  
At our last forum, I announced the creation of our Presidential 
Advisory Council to guide our work together.  And today, I’m pleased to 
welcome the newest members of our expanded council, so that more 
industries and insights can shape their recommendations.  Feel free to 
find them later, bend their ear. Don’t be shy.  They are excited about 
their work and excited to hear from you. 
We also need to invest more in the infrastructure that is the 
foundation of future prosperity.  And, as I indicated earlier, we’re 
especially focused on increasing access to electricity for the 
two-thirds of sub-Saharan Africans who lack it.  Three years after 
launching Power Africa, we’re seeing real progress — solar power and 
natural gas in Nigeria; off-grid energy in Tanzania; people in rural 
Rwanda gaining electricity.  This means that students can study at night
 and businesses can stay open.  And we are not going to let up.  
Partners like the World Bank and the African Development Bank are 
mobilizing billions.  
Last month, the government of Japan made a major commitment to 
support this work.  And together with GE, today we’re launching a 
public-private partnership to support energy enterprises managed by 
women in Africa.  So we’re on our way, and by 2030, I believe we can 
bring electricity to more than 60 million African homes and businesses. 
 And that will be transformative.  
But even if we do the infrastructure, even if we’re passing more 
business-friendly laws, even if we’re increasing trade, I think all of 
you know that we’re also going to have to keep promoting the good 
governance that allows for good business.  Graft, cronyism, corruption —
 it stifles growth, scares off investment.  A business should begin with
 a handshake and not a shakedown.  (Applause.)  So through our efforts 
like our Open Government Partnership, and our Partnership on Illicit 
Finance, we’re going to keep working to encourage transparency, stamp 
out corruption and uphold the rule of law.  That’s what’s going to 
ultimately attract trade and investment and opportunity.  
The truth is, is that those governments that are above-board and 
transparent, people want to do business there.  People don’t want to do 
business in places where the rules are constantly changing depending on 
who’s up, who’s down, whose cousin is who. It creates the kinds of risks
 that scare investors away.
And finally, we need to invest more in Africa’s most precious 
resource, and that is its people, especially young people.  Men and 
women; boys and girls.  I’ve had the opportunity to meet the next 
generation of leaders and entrepreneurs — in Soweto and Dar es Salaam 
and Dakar.  I’ve welcomed many of them to the White House.  They are 
spectacular.  They are itching to make a difference.  Their passion is 
inspiring.  Their talent is unmatched.  They are hungry for knowledge 
and information, and are willing to take risks.  And many of them, 
because they’ve come from tough circumstances, by definition they’re 
entrepreneurial.  They’ve had to make a way out of no way, and are 
resilient and resourceful.  
So we got to continue to empower these aspiring leaders — give them 
the tools, the training and the support so that a few years from now, 
they can be sitting in this room.  Because if Africa’s young people 
flourish, if they are getting education, if they are getting 
opportunity, I’m absolutely convinced that Africa will flourish as well.
  
And they are the future leaders that inspire me.  I think of the 
Rwandan entrepreneur I met earlier this year at one of our 
entrepreneurship summits.  His company is turning biomass into energy.  
He started his business when he was 19 years old.  And a lot of folks 
didn’t get what he was doing or why.  He made an interesting comment 
that sometimes in traditional cultures, in African cultures, the working
 assumption is, is that young people don’t know anything.  And since we 
were in Silicon Valley when he was telling this story, I wanted to point
 out that folks in Africa may want to rethink that — because if you’re 
over 30 there, you’re basically over the hill.  (Laughter.)  
But he kept at it.  As he told me, “No matter what you’re trying to 
do,” you need the “motive in your mind that you want to help your 
society move forward.”  He was doing well, but he was also trying to do 
good.  
And that’s what this is all about.  That’s the work that we’ve got to
 carry on.  This is a U.S.-Africa business forum.  This is not charity. 
 All of you should be wanting to make money, and create great products 
and great services, and be profitable, and do right by your investors.  
But the good news is, in Africa, right now, if you are doing well, you 
can also be doing a lot of good.  And if we keep that in mind, if we do 
more to buy from each other and sell from each other, if we do more to 
bring down barriers to doing business, if we do more to strengthen 
infrastructure and innovation and governance, I know we’re going to be 
able to move our societies and economies forward.  And that will be good
 not just for Africa, but it will be good for the United States and good
 for the world.
We want Africa as a booming, growing, thriving market, where we can 
do business, where you’ve got a young population that is surging.  And 
although this will be the last time I participate in the U.S-Africa 
Business Forum as President, I think you should anticipate that I will 
be continuing to work with all of you in the years to come, and I know 
that Penny has done a great job in working to institutionalize these 
efforts.  And when we’ve got great partners like Mike Bloomberg and the 
Bloomberg Foundation involved in this, I have no doubt that this is just
 going to keep on growing, and we’re going to look back and say, we were
 on to something.  
Thank you so much, everybody.  Appreciate it.  Keep up the great work.  (Applause.)  
END
11:42 A.M. EDT
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