Growing Capacity

来源 :CHINAFRICA | 被引量 : 0次 | 上传用户:tszhzhc159
下载到本地 , 更方便阅读
声明 : 本文档内容版权归属内容提供方 , 如果您对本文有版权争议 , 可与客服联系进行内容授权或下架
论文部分内容阅读
  CHINA has always attached great importance to stable and friendly relations with Africa. Their bilateral agricultural cooperation now stands at a new starting point.
  On his visit to Africa in 2013, President Xi Jinping put forth the principles of sincerity, real results, affinity and good faith to guide China-Africa relations. China will continue to uphold the guidelines of its Africa policy and work toward win-win cooperation with African countries for common development within the framework of the Forum on China-Africa Cooperation(FOCAC).
  During his trip to the United States in September 2015, President Xi announced China would set up a 20-billion-yuan ($3.1 billion) China South-South Climate Cooperation Fund to help developing countries tackle climate change. By 2020, China will provide supports for 100 new poverty reduction projects, 100 agricultural projects, 100 trade projects, 100 projects on ecological preservation and climate change, 100 new hospitals and clinics, and 100 schools and vocational training centers in developing countries. Poverty alleviation will be a major part of China’s post-2015 agenda.
  It indicates China will continue helping Africa develop its rural areas and agriculture, eradicate poverty, and support Africa’s development.
  African countries have been paying more attention to agricultural development as the continent entered a period of fast growth with an average annual rate of 5.5 percent. Africa is the world’s second fastestgrowing economic region. Agriculture was high on the priority list of the founders of the New Partnership for Africa’s Development (NEPAD), an economic development program of the African Union (AU).
  The Comprehensive Africa Agriculture Development Program, established as part of the NEPAD in 2003, has an agricultural growth target of 6 percent and requires member countries to allocate at least 10 percent of their national budget to the agricultural sector.
  The AU’s programs in Agenda 2063, its blueprint for Africa’s development, are also very clear: to diversify economies and industrialize; have a skills and entrepreneurship revolution; unleash the creativity of youth; and transform agriculture.
  Against this background, an increasing number of African countries have stepped up investment in agriculture in terms of rural infrastructure, irrigation, introducing quality seeds, and promoting mechanized farming for agricultural diversification. They have implemented agricultural reforms, increasing food production and incomes. A series of policies has been formulated, such as tax incentives for importing agricultural equipment.   The latest report by the Standard Chartered Banksays Africa would need about $100 billion annually for infrastructure construction, but governments can provide only $53 billion. On the continent, only 33 percent of the rural population has access to paved roads, and only 5 percent of rural land comes under irrigation. Poor infrastructure hinders the continent’s trade growth.
  In 2014, China decided to provide an additional$10-billion credit line to African countries for mutually agreed-upon infrastructure projects, raising the total amount of promised credit to $30 billion. China also worked with the African Development Bank to establish a joint financing fund and build a trilateral cooperation platform for Africa’s infrastructural development, including regional aviation and high-speed railway networks.
  China will raise its direct investment in Africa to$100 billion by 2020. Infrastructure construction is one of the key areas of bilateral cooperation.
  China-Africa cooperation in infrastructure and connectivity has reduced the bottlenecks in Africa’s agricultural development. China-Africa agricultural cooperation can usher in a golden period of growth. Therefore, it is necessary to deepen bilateral agricultural cooperation and expand investment in Africa’s agricultural sector.


  Bilateral agricultural cooperation is expected to optimize the agro-industrial chain. It includes investment in agricultural production and processing, ware-housing and logistics. African countries also need to improve their soft infrastructure - policy stability, degree of market liberalization and preferential tax policies.
  China has made proactive efforts to help African countries raise their agricultural productivity. It has established agricultural technology demonstration centers and is sending agricultural experts and technicians to provide consultations. China is also training technical and managerial personnel. Though the initiative has been welcomed by African countries, how to keep the demonstration centers running smoothly after the project contracts end is a problem.
  Therefore, there should be volunteering programs run by the government or NGOs. The programs would send Chinese agricultural technicians abroad to help local farmers solve technological problems. The Chinese technicians, who would be encouraged to be based in Africa, would contribute to local agricultural development. Some agricultural projects could begin to operate in a more market-oriented way.   Sino-African agricultural cooperation should pay more attention to localization. For many years, China has assisted in the construction of local roads, water conservancy and irrigation projects and other agri- cultural infrastructure. This has played an important role in improving African agricultural production capacity.
  However, some Chinese companies have come under criticism for not better fulfilling their social responsibilities in Africa. Some Chinese agricultural enterprises follow Chinese management practices. On the other hand, most African countries fix their minimum wage and normal working hours according to their own labor laws. So, cultural differences often trigger labor disputes.
  However, with China-Africa cooperation in infrastructure and industry in full swing, Chinese agricultural enterprises are expanding their global business, and thereby accelerating their internationalization. China will further localize its agro-industrial chain in terms of personnel, raw materials, markets, and technology research and development to better help economic transformation and revitalization in Africa.
其他文献
RICE farming is in Bedari Sissou’s blood. The 22-year-old from Bodjekali Village in Malanville District, 750 km north of Benin’s administrative capital Cotonou, was born into a rice farming family. Af
期刊
Nigeria, South africa and egypt are the top three African nations with the strongest industrialization development potential, according to a new report.  The African Industrial Advance Index 2015, aim
期刊
THIS Spring Festival Lin Ziyu, a 79-year-old grandmother, was introduced to the wonders of e-transactions. For the first time in her life, she sent a hongbao, the festive red envelope containing money
期刊
CHINA’S sustained and fast economic development in the past decades has made great contributions to the progress and prosperity of the global economy, particularly to the stabilization and development
期刊
IN his book I Speak of Ghana, Nana Awere Damoah enumerates 50 things that will indicate you are in Ghana. While all of them are droll they do also contain a small kernel of hard truth.  For instance,
期刊
The sight of the mass of nile tilapia fingerlings swimming in the fish pond made He Wang beam with satisfaction. It was a moment of triumph. The 20-meterlong pond, built under her supervision, was eve
期刊
IKENNA Emewu didn’t expect he would hit the headlines in China.  The Great Hall of the People in Beijing was packed with journalists attending the press conference of the Fourth Session of the 12th Na
期刊
When Dai Wenjun accompanied his mother to South Africa, he loved the new country with its wonderful landscape and promise of adventure. Only one thing bothered him.  Even as a 16-year-old, he noticed
期刊
When Amadou Thera stepped on the stage and started live webcasting from the Kunming International Convention and Exhibition Center, he immediately caught the attention of Chinese and foreign visitors
期刊
the line from Beijing to Juba is bad. It takes several attempts to connect and even after the call goes through, the voices on the other end keep on disappearing and the tenuous link breaks.  Then Mon
期刊