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Published 7th October 2021

Vol 62 No 20


How shadow states threaten democracies

Copyright © Africa Confidential 2021
Copyright © Africa Confidential 2021

Two new reports investigate how political leaders are subverting constitutional rule and handing power to business cronies

Call them illiberal democracies, elective dictatorships or 'no-party' politics, the global tide of authoritarianism with constitutional characteristics has been welcomed, sometimes pioneered, by some governments in Africa.

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High expectations of HH

Hakainde Hichilema. Pic: Mike Hutchings / Reuters / Alamy
Hakainde Hichilema. Pic: Mike Hutchings / Reuters / Alamy

The new president is sending all the right signals but needs to move fast to avoid disappointing voters and investors

President Hakainde Hichilema's record of early appointments and dismissals shows he is making good on his promise of a new start for governance and the economy, Lusaka pundits...


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Pic:  Sombo Sombo / Alamy
Pic: Sombo Sombo / Alamy

Ruling party apparatchiks are luring their opponents to defect as parties choose their presidential contenders

Fear of the unknown and super-charged ambition are driving record numbers of opposition party governors and other top officials to cross over to the ruling party. Many more...



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THE INSIDE VIEW

The cost for Africa to counter the damage caused by the coronavirus pandemic, to engineer an economic bounce back and mitigate climate threats is rising, justifying the International Monetary Fund's warning of a two-speed global recovery.

The World Bank, while increasing its growth forecast for the region this year by 1% to 3.3%, reckons that African countries face a US$290 billion shortfall. Growth in those countries will lag behind other regions in part because of slow distribution ...

The cost for Africa to counter the damage caused by the coronavirus pandemic, to engineer an economic bounce back and mitigate climate threats is rising, justifying the International Monetary Fund's warning of a two-speed global recovery.

The World Bank, while increasing its growth forecast for the region this year by 1% to 3.3%, reckons that African countries face a US$290 billion shortfall. Growth in those countries will lag behind other regions in part because of slow distribution of vaccines and vulnerability to new variants. African treasuries are struggling to bridge that gap with more borrowing and raising national corporate and indirect taxes.

Something of a boost may come from of the $650bn in Special Drawing Rights, the IMF's reserve curve, of which over $30bn will be distributed across African states, according to their shareholdings in the IMF. But little progress is reported on plans for a $100bn slice of the SDRs to be transferred to African economies as part of a global recovery effort.

The Group of 20's debt service suspension initiative will probably need to be extended, the Bank says. Some African finance ministers want it also to be widened to include commercial debts, provided there will be guarantees that this won't undermine market ratings. So far, these haven't been forthcoming.

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Anti-gay bill heads to house

The opposition is manipulating religious animosity against homosexuality to steal a march on the government

A bill seeking to criminalise LGBTQ+ sexual relationships is expected to come before Ghana's parliament soon after it reconvenes on 19 October. And although it's being used as...


Rivalry holds back the region

Regional trade has largely recovered from the pandemic, but is still hampered by political battles

East Africa's economy grew the fastest of all Africa's regions before the pandemic. Growth was predicted at 5.1% for 2020 pre-Covid – largely driven by strong spending on...


Toxic relationship in the Sahel

Moscow's military support for Mali's junta is raising tensions with France, and risks opening up old wounds in the north

Russia has delivered four military helicopters to Mali's military regime, just as the country's latest public row with former colonial power France floods the Bamako and Paris media...


Regime blames MPs for killings

After police failed to trace the assassins who killed 26 people in Masaka, the government declares it was two opposition MPs

No sooner had Muhammad Ssegirinya and Allan Ssewanyana, MPs belonging to Bobi Wine's National Unity Platform (NUP), been released on bail on murder charges on 29 September than...


Mining magnates hail ruling

The High Court curbs ministerial powers to enforce black empowerment targets as companies pledge to boost investment

A landmark High Court ruling curtailing ministerial powers on mine ownership is set to end three years of policy uncertainty. Looking at growing production across the continent, South...



Pointers

Show us the money

The huge 'Pandora Papers' leak spearheaded by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists provides intriguing new details of the wealth of some of Africa's most powerful and controversial...