Mainstreaming Africa in G20 Agenda

Opinion by Opinion

India assumes the G20 presidency at a very challenging period in modern human history. Not since the end of the Cold War has the world been so fractured and polarised as a result of several simultaneous challenges. Thomas Friedman has described the current era as the ‘Age of Acceleration.’

Several global issues are cascading on the human psyche, all at the same time, creating a dilemma on how to effectively address these challenges simultaneously. These include the advent of new technologies, climate change, biodiversity loss as well as globalisation.

More recently, the impact of the Covid pandemic, as well as the Russia-Ukraine conflict, has collectively contributed to a devastating impact on the global community.

All of the above issues are receiving attention within the G20 agenda. However, the impact of these challenges is felt most among the most vulnerable countries, especially the Least Developed (LDCs) and Small Island Developing States (SIDS), as well as Africa.

In Africa, over 30 million people were pushed into extreme poverty in 2021 and about 22 million jobs were lost due to the pandemic. Furthermore, the Russia-Ukraine conflict is expected to push another 1.8 million Africans into extreme poverty in 2022, rising to over 2.3 million in 2023.

The dire plight of developing countries in containing and addressing the severe impact of the pandemic and the conflict, as well as the challenges posed by climate change, must receive priority attention in the G20 Development Agenda under India’s presidency.

India, as a developing country, must prioritise the development agenda and ensure that it assumes centre stage within the G20. The Global South will look to India to ensure that issues of development that are critical in advancing their development, including meeting the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), receive priority attention in the G20 in 2023.

Development Agenda

In 2010, the G20 leaders identified the need to establish the G20 DWG with a mandate to lead in the implementation of the group’s development agenda.

At the Seoul Summit in November 2010, G20 leaders adopted the multi-year action plan on Development and the Seoul Development Consensus for Shared Growth. These two documents guide the work of the DWG. South Africa has been serving as a permanent co-chair of the DWG since its inception. Since 2010 each successive presidency of the G20 has placed specific development issues as the core focus of the DWG during its presidency while also following up on commitments already made.

The Comprehensive Accountability Report released in 2013 for the first time served to inform on G20 commitments annually, namely, an update of the G20 Action plan and an assessment of the progress on the development commitments undertaken by G20 leaders.

AU’s Agenda 2063

How has Africa benefited from the G20’s programmes and commitments in addressing its developmental challenges?

South Africa is the only African country that is a G20 member. The Chair of the African Union (AU) and the Chair of the African Union Development Agency – New Partnership for Africa’s Development (AUDA – Nepad) both serve on the G20 as observers.

Within the G20, South Africa has consistently advocated for the advancement of the AU’s Agenda 2063. Since its inception, the DWG has become an important instrument in addressing the most critical development challenges of the global South, including Africa.

DWG programmes over the years have focused on a whole range of development issues, including human resource development, women’s economic empowerment, climate action, infrastructure, green energy, food security, industrialisation, digitalisation, trade, private investments, as well as job creation.

The 2012 progress report of the DWG notes that the G20 must serve as a relevant coordination forum for international economic cooperation.

Effective contributions by international organisations and G20 countries, supported by concerted actions of G20 members, are fundamental to supporting national efforts of developing countries in overcoming hunger and poverty and promoting sustainable development.

Following the repeated calls by South Africa as well the Chairs of the AU and the AUDA-Nepad for Africa’s development agenda to receive support from the G20, there emerged an Africa-specific program in the DWG under the Chinese and German presidencies of the G20 respectively in 2016 and 2017.

The G20 Leaders Summit in Hangzhou, China, in September 2016 launched the G20 initiative on supporting industrialisation in Africa and Least Developed Countries.

This initiative was welcomed by African countries as it addressed a critical gap in Africa’s economic regeneration. Although this was a voluntary initiative that has had a limited direct impact in addressing Africa’s industrialisation, it nonetheless brought sharp focus on the need of the global community to partner in Africa’s industrialisation.

The Hangzhou Leaders Summit notes: “We launched the G20 initiative on supporting industrialisation in Africa and LDC to strengthen their inclusive growth and development potential through voluntary actions.”

To date, not much has been achieved in advancing Africa’s industrialisation through the G20 Hangzhou commitment as it relies on voluntary actions.

An equally important initiative meant to advance Africa’s development was launched during the German presidency of the G20, namely the Compact with Africa (CwA).

The Compact was initiated to promote private investments in Africa, including in infrastructure.

The CwA’s primary objective is to increase the attractiveness of private investments through substantial improvements of the macro business and financing frameworks. It seeks to bring together reform-minded African countries, international organisations, and bilateral partners from the G20 and beyond to coordinate country-specific reform agendas, support respective policy measures and advertise investment opportunities to the private sector.

South-South Solidarity

India and Africa have a shared history spanning several centuries of robust economic, trade, cultural, and people-to-people exchanges.

In more recent times, India was one of the chief architects of the first Asia-Africa Conference held in Bandung, Indonesia, in April 1955. It was at Bandung that the foundations of South-South solidarity and cooperation were firmly laid. Since its independence in 1947, development diplomacy has become an integral part of India’s foreign policy.

Over the years, India has strengthened its historical ties with Africa through a network of bilateral, trilateral, and multilateral engagements. The India Africa Forum Summit (IAFS) is now an established and important platform for advancing India-Africa relations.

Through its bilateral engagements with Africa, including the AU Commission in Addis Ababa as well as the IAFS, India has a vibrant and multifaceted development cooperation engagement with Africa.

Prime Minister Modi’s Ten-Point Plan is aligned with the AU’s Agenda 2063. It is within this prism that one must view India’s G20 presidency and its engagement with Africa. As a trusted time-honoured partner of Africa and a fellow developing country of the Global South, there is an expectation that Africa’s development agenda will be one of the priority focus areas of India’s presidency.

This sentiment was articulated by India’s G20 Sherpa Amitabh Kant while addressing the Kigali Global Dialogue held in Rwanda in August 2022. He noted that India will embed the concerns of the developing world at the heart of the G20 Agenda. He further stated that the development concerns of Africa must form the bedrock of the G20 consensus.

He also highlighted that India and African nations collectively have the highest percentage of young populations in the world. This demographic dividend needs to be leveraged responsibly to ensure that it achieves its highest potential.

The Road Ahead

India’s presidency of the G20 will be viewed as an important opportunity to ensure that development is brought back to the centre of the G20 Agenda. Given India’s long-standing commitment to advancing the interests of the Global South in the international arena, India, as an emerging global power, is well placed in ensuring the core interests of the developing world, including Africa, mainstreamed during its presidency.

Africa will look to India to ensure that its socio-economic regeneration, as articulated in Agenda 2063, receives the attention it warrants within the G20 under India’s stewardship. India’s G20 presidency provides a strategic opportunity to re-energise and deepen the historic India- Africa partnership, underpinned by the joint desire to create a more inclusive and better world for all: One Earth, One Family, One Future.

Professor Anil Sooklal is Ambassador at Large for Asia and BRICS, Department of International Relations and Cooperation. He serves as South Africa’s BRICS Sherpa, IBSA (India, Brazil, South Africa) Sherpa and IORA (Indian Ocean Rim Association) Focal Point. He previously served as South Africa’s G20 Sherpa and as Ambassador to The European Union, Belgium and Luxembourg.

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