Source: ISS
Africa needs more than just the silencing of guns
Over the past five decades, Africa has experienced significant change
and positive transition. However, violent conflict continues to
compromise prospects for sustained human development and economic
progress. As part of its 50th Anniversary Declaration in May 2013, the
African Union (AU) set itself the goal of ending all wars in Africa by 2020 and is now working on a roadmap towards a conflict-free continent (‘silencing guns in Africa’, as the slogan goes).
Is this goal in fact attainable? Ending wars is imperative, as
violent conflict is the biggest impediment to a more prosperous Africa.
But what would the concrete benefits look like over time; and would the
absence of war by 2020 really boost Africa’s economic and human
development and yield immediate dividends? By generating momentum for
this kind of discussion in the context of the post-2015 development agenda, the AU’s aggressive target is noteworthy.
Beyond the laudable aspiration, however, both the target and the timeframe will prove exceptionally challenging. Using the International Futures (IFs) model,
an integrated global forecasting system, some interesting insights and
scenarios emerge. The model reveals that even if Africa successfully
eliminates large-scale inter- and intrastate wars by 2020 – and this
remains a huge if – it may not prove to be the panacea that many expect.
Ending war is a necessary but insufficient condition to increase
prosperity, and development is itself a lengthy, messy and potentially
even disruptive process.
If Africa becomes free of wars by 2020, its gross domestic product
(GDP) would have increased by a cumulative US$780,2 billion in 2030
(based on constant 2005 US dollars at market exchange rate). This is
like adding the current Nigerian and the Egyptian economies. By 2030, an
African economy boosted by a ‘no war dividend’ would be worth US$34,8
trillion, which is 4% more than under the expected current trajectory.
By 2045, the ‘no war dividend’ could see Africa’s economy grow to be 10%
larger than it would have been without it.
Nevertheless, while economic growth is necessary, it does not
automatically lead to increased prosperity for most people – not to
mention shared prosperity. Changes in patterns of income (and wealth)
tend to occur at a very slow pace, and in some cases growth worsened
inequality. Similarly, the potential human development gains from the
eradication of war by 2020 in terms of income, health and education are
not spectacular.
Life expectancy for Africans would hardly increase, and education
would improve only marginally, for example. In short, Africa will need
to do much better – or, as the first president of Tanzania, Julius
Nyerere, famously put it, ‘Africa must run while others walk’.
Changes in income distribution and improving education, health and
other public goods ultimately requires greater government capacity.
Under the IFs scenario, improved governance will be a game changer.
Ending war by 2020 would lift almost 60 million Africans out of poverty
by 2045, and reduce the percentage of people living on less than US$1,25
dollar a day from roughly 17% to about 14,5%. That would still leave
some 300 million Africans living in poverty in 2045. If, in addition to
the absence of war, governance can be improved (that is, if all African
countries converged to the average level of the top 10 performing
countries in terms of government effectiveness by 2030), an additional
40 million people could escape poverty.
That would bring down the percentage of Africans living on less than
US$1,25 a day to 12,6%, which is roughly where South Africa is today.
Similarly, by 2030 the combined effect of ending war and improving
governance would boost access to electricity to 67% – compared to 57%
under the expected current trajectory – while ending wars on its own
would produce only marginal gains. Good governance also supports the
resolution of social conflict, contributing further to development
opportunities.
The greatest threat to the AU’s aspiration of eradicating war is that
policy objectives and targets are unlikely to be reached without an
adequate understanding of the current situation (that is, the baseline),
its underlying dynamics and likely future trends. Without that,
sensible planning, monitoring and evaluation become impossible.
An earlier paper by the Institute for Security Studies on the future of intrastate conflict in Africa,
which analysed trends and patterns of conflict and instability in
Africa since the end of the Cold War, concluded that violence and the
associated risk of instability are likely to persist despite a steady
decline in large-scale violence and interstate wars. This is due to the
changing nature of armed conflict in Africa and global dynamics.
The spread of transnational organised crime, including terrorism, for
example, is sometimes intertwined with political violence and local
criminal dynamics. Contemporary African conflicts are also increasingly
fragmented, fought on a smaller scale and occurring on the peripheries
of states, with more non-state actors involved. Examples include Darfur
in Sudan, the Central African Republic and northern Mali and the eastern
Democratic Republic of Congo.
Data from the Heidelberg Conflict Barometer
even suggests that there has been no clear overall decline in
intrastate violence in Africa. In fact, ending war may not be the
biggest challenge. Lower intensity conflict is becoming more prevalent
and there has been a rise in social conflict, especially anti-government
violence, since 2011, combined with a rise in the level of protests and
riots. Elections-related violence has also increased across Africa,
even as the push for democratisation and multi-party elections has
brought about significant improvement in accountability.
While higher levels of democracy are generally associated with
greater peace in the longer term, democratisation can also be a ‘shock’
for societies and could potentially trigger violence in the short and
medium term, as the violent denouement of elections in Kenya in 2007,
and the Ivory Coast in 2010 demonstrate.
Partial democracies with factionalism appear to be an exceptionally
unstable type of regime. Violence at community level due to competition
over scarce livelihood resources such as land and water also seems to be
on the rise. Other conflict drivers include rapid population growth and
urbanisation, social imbalances and exclusion, poor governance and the
location of some newly discovered natural resources along disputed
borders, such as between Tanzania and Malawi.
Given the enormity of the task involved in addressing each of these
conflict risk factors, improved understanding of the dynamics of
Africa’s current conflicts should be prioritised, as this would directly
help with setting aggressive yet more realistic targets.
Julia Schünemann, Senior Researcher and Project Leader, ISS Pretoria