Publications /
Book / Report

Back
Africa Economic Symposium (AES) 2nd edition - SUMMARY REPORT
Authors
General rapporteur Larabi Jaïdi
September 2, 2024

The Africa Economic Symposium (AES) has established itself as a major annual event organized by the Policy Center for the New South, joining the ranks of other flagship conferences such as the Atlantic Dialogues and the African Peace and Security Annual Conference (APSACO). AES aspires to be a continent- wide annual gathering of prominent economists, policymakers, and academics, bringing together global and African perspectives on macroeconomic management challenges and structural transformations that shape the future of Africa’s economic development.

The 2024 edition, held under the theme “Fostering Africa’s Economic Transformation through Innovative Financing”, focused on exploring innovative financial strategies and governance reforms required to bridge the widening financial gaps amidst the continent’s growing development needs. African economies are currently navigating a complex macroeconomic environment marked by geopolitical uncertainties, eroding fiscal stability, and rising pressures for funding infrastructure development, energy transition, and technological advancement. Despite continent-wide efforts to tighten monetary policies in response to entrenched inflation, concerns about fiscal discipline and debt sustainability have intensified, particularly in light of the 2024 electoral cycle in many African countries.

Simultaneously, Africa is facing a critical financial deficit to meet its expanding development needs, ranging from increasing social demands to modernizing infrastructure and supporting technological progress. Effectively addressing these priorities requires an integrated strategy that combines resource mobilization, private investment attraction, and the establishment of robust public-private partnerships (PPPs) within a strengthened governance framework. In this context, AES 2024 sought to define a comprehensive agenda for Africa, aimed at reducing fiscal vulnerabilities while supporting long-term inclusive and sustainable growth.

In the face of unprecedented challenges, public policies must strike a delicate balance between restoring market confidence and supporting the structural transformation of African economies. Short-term budgetary adjustments must be accompanied by deep structural reforms that generate high-quality growth and reduce exposure to future shocks. This requires a strong focus on mobilizing domestic resources, curbing illicit financial flows, and improving fiscal transparency to expand the fiscal space and secure the resources needed to finance development. Moreover, the 2024 edition underscored the critical role of climate finance in Africa’s development. As a continent disproportionately affected by climate change, Africa has the opportunity to redefine its economic priorities around a green energy transition. Discussions highlighted that mobilizing climate finance and integrating green technologies into development strategies offer unique opportunities to enhance the continent’s resilience and support sustainable growth.

Technology emerged as a central lever for Africa’s economic future. Digital transformation, the adoption of new technologies, and innovation have the potential to position Africa as a key player in the global economy—provided that public policies foster a competitive and innovative environment. It is imperative for the continent to rethink its industrial policies, strengthen research and development capabilities, and align education policies with the demands of tomorrow’s labor market.

The Africa Economic Symposium 2024 provided a significant forum to examine the strategic shifts needed for Africa’s economic transformation and to outline a clear path towards inclusive and sustainable prosperity. The recommendations stemming from various thematic sessions and the presentation of the Annual Economic Report on Africa offered concrete guidance on overcoming resource mobilization challenges while strengthening institutional capacity and financial governance across the continent.

The symposium featured seven key panels and the presentation of the Annual Report on the African Economy, each addressing a core theme:

1- Monetary Policy Challenges: Is Inflation Over?

Explored the complexities of persistent inflation, high interest rates, and their impact on monetary policy in Sub-Saharan Africa.

2- Addressing Fiscal Discipline:

Discussed strategies to manage growing debt burdens, the role of international financial institutions, and the need for maintaining fiscal stability.

3- Navigating Financial Resource Limitations Amidst Growing Development Needs

Focused on overcoming financial constraints through strategic resource mobilization and leveraging Africa’s youthful demographic advantage.

4- Innovative Financing Mechanisms for Green Transition

Highlighted the need to scale up climate finance solutions and increase private sector involvement to support sustainable development in Africa.

5- The Role of Development Finance in Addressing Social Challenges

Examined how development finance can support social protection systems, formalize the informal sector, and strengthen social safety nets.

6- Unlocking Domestic Financing Potential

Emphasized the importance of enhancing tax governance, building institutional capacity, and leveraging fintech to boost domestic resource mobilization.

7- The Role of International Financing in Africa’s Development

Addressed the interplay between domestic and international financing and the need for rethinking financial models to meet Africa’s evolving needs amid global crises.

8- Report Presentation: Annual Report on the African Economy

RELATED CONTENT

  • Authors
    Natalia Cotarelli
    Thiago Cavalcante Simonato
    Vinicius Almeida Vale
    Jaqueline Coelho Visentin
    April 18, 2020
    The impact of the crisis in the Greek economy was not uniform among the regions, threatening socioeconomic cohesion. In this paper, we explore the concept of the income multiplier in a multi-regional input–output setting, in the context of the Greek recession, showing empirical evidence for the increasing magnitude of the multiplier during the recession period. The main results reveal a complex system of interregional relations on some of whose structural characteristics the cyclica ...
  • Authors
    Aleksandra Chmielewska
    April 17, 2020
    Covid-19 has already put severe pressure on the global economy. Within four months since the first cases of coronavirus were confirmed in China in December of 2019, millions of people have lost their jobs worldwide due to the crisis and the imposed lockdown to prevent the spread of the virus. The forecasts are gloomy. According to the International Monetary Fund, the pandemic will trigger negative growth in over 170 countries and might therefore bring a worse economic recession than ...
  • Authors
    April 17, 2020
    The COVID-19 pandemic threatens to wreak more havoc in developing countries than in developed countries, because of the crumbling healthcare systems and infrastructures in the former, their inadequate budgetary resources, shallow financial systems, and weak government authority and capability. This impact has not yet shown up in cross-country data, possibly reflecting extensive under-reporting and/or less testing for COVID-19 done in developing countries. Policymakers in these count ...
  • Authors
    Meriem Oudmane
    April 16, 2020
    La crise sanitaire du Covid-19 a montré plusieurs fragilités et limites du système économique mondial. En plus de son impact très négatif sur l’économie, cette crise a des impacts sociaux très inégaux et qui varient d’une couche sociale à une autre. Elle a un impact dévastateur sur les ménages pauvres qui n’ont pas suffisamment d’épargne et de ressources financières et ceux ayant des emplois vulnérables[1]. Si le télétravail est une option pour certains, ce n’est pas le cas pour plu ...
  • Authors
    Sahil S.R. Shah
    April 15, 2020
    As with the rest of the World, the impact of COVID-19 in Kenya has stretched beyond the sphere of healthcare and the spread of the actual virus, as economic development outcomes are expected to be seriously affected by the disruption caused both globally and locally. In fact, one of the working hypotheses of the impact of COVID-19 on African nations is that the substantive impact of the virus on livelihoods will occur less from health-related issues than the economic shock, disrupt ...
  • Authors
    Co-signed by
    and 50 African intellectuals
    April 13, 2020
    50 African intellectuals including Kako Nubukpo, Alioune Sall, Carlos Lopes, Cristina Duarte, Felwine Sarr, Achille Mbembe, Reckya Madougou, Souleymane Bachir Diagne, Franck Hermann Ekra and Hakim Ben Hammouda co-signed this call to mobilize the intelligence, resources and creativity of Africans to defeat the COVID-19 pandemic. Severe Acute Respiratory Ryndrome Coronavirus 2, (SARS-CoV-2), is the scientific name for the virus responsible for a highly contagious and potentially fata ...
  • Authors
    Co-signée par
    et 24 intellectuels africains
    April 13, 2020
    Vingt-cinq intellectuels africains dont Kako Nubukpo, Alioune Sall, Felwine Sarr, Achille Mbembe, Reckya Madougou, Souleymane Bachir Diagne, Franck Hermann Ekra et Hakim Ben Hammouda cosignent cet appel à la mobilisation des intelligences, des ressources et de la créativité des Africains pour vaincre la pandémie de Covid-19. Covid-19 est le nom scientifique du virus responsable d’une maladie respiratoire très contagieuse pouvant devenir mortelle. Épidémie puis reclassée pandémie pa ...
  • Authors
    Yonas Adeto
    Thomas Gomart
    Paolo Magri
    Greg Mills
    Karin Von Hippel
    Guntram Wolff
    April 9, 2020
    في وقت توجه فيه كل دول العالم تركيزها نحو الشأن الداخلي لمواجهة وباء فيروس “كورونا”، أكد العديد من الباحثين المغاربة والأجانب في الشأن الاقتصادي والسياسي على ضروة التفكير بطرق يستطيع من خلالها فاعلون خارجيون تقديم المساعدة للدول الفقيرة، “ويجب أن تتم الاستجابات في إفريقيا من خلال تنفيذ أفضل الممارسات فيما يتعلق بالتعاون الدولي”. وفي ذات السياق دعا الخبراء، وجلهم مسؤولون عن مراكز دراسات أوربية وإفريقية ذات صيت عالمي، من بينهم الخبير الاقتصادي المغربي كريم العيناوي، مدير مركز السياسا ...
  • Authors
    Yonas Adeto
    Thomas Gomart
    Paolo Magri
    Greg Mills
    Karin Von Hippel
    Guntram Wolff
    April 9, 2020
    Covid-19 should change global politics. The speed and scale of its transmission, and the severity of its impact is not, we know now, to our cost. As the virus rapidly tracks people vectors worldwide, the control of its impact is inextricably linked to the availability of resources and depth of governance. For these reasons, global leaders should focus on its impact among the most vulnerable, and in particular in Africa. Just three months ago, on 31 December 2019, Chinese authoritie ...