COTE D’LVOIRE, West Africa – Despite growing rapidly, Africa’s cities have provided improved access to services, jobs and infrastructure for millions of people in the last 30 years compared to smaller communities, a new report finds.
Africa’s Urbanisation Dynamics: The Economic Power of Africa’s Cities, launched on Tuesday, shows that urban areas in Africa have outperformed the countries in which they are located by higher margins than seen in other parts of the world.
Jointly produced by the OECD-Sahel and West Africa Club (SWAC), the African Development Bank and the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (ECA), the study covered 2600 cities across 34 countries. The Sahel and West Africa Club is an independent, international platform that promotes regional policies to improve the economic and social wellbeing of people in the Sahel and West Africa. The OECD houses its secretariat.
Dr Ibrahim Mayaki, chief executive officer of AUDA-NEPAD and SWAC’s honorary president, said: “African cities have maintained their economic performance despite growing by 500 million people over the last 30 years, providing several hundred millions with better jobs and improved access to better jobs and infrastructure, this in a context of very limited public support and investment.”
The report also finds that urbanization has driven approximately 30 percent of Africa’s per capita GDP growth in the last 20 years. This has contributed to economic transformation in urban areas, where skilled workers account for 36 percent of the workforce versus roughly 15 percent in rural – as well as access to financial services.
Larger cities positively influence small towns and rural areas in their vicinity in terms of education, infrastructure, and access to services. For example, the share of rural households that has a bank account is twice as high among rural households that live within 5 kilometres of a city as among those that live 30 kilometres from the closest city.
“Africa’s urban transition is shaping the continent at a very fast pace and this shift is not just demographic. It is an economic and social transition,” said Edlam Abera Yemeru, ECA’s Ag. director, gender, poverty and social policy division.
She added: “Africa also has a unique opportunity to get urbanisation right, as most of its urban growth has not yet taken place. Cities and urban growth need to be planned in advance, it is impossible and sometimes too expensive to undo and redo the physical form of cities once urbanisation happens.”
Yemeru also cited the strong connection between African urbanisation and its youthful population. She said that between 1980 and 2015, Africa experienced a 362 percent increase in the number of youth residing in urban areas. According to the report, children in large cities receive almost five years more education on average than children in rural areas.
“Urbanisation is one of the most important transformations the African continent will undergo this century,” said Solomon Quaynor, African Development Bank vice president for the private sector, infrastructure and industrialisation.
Vice president Quaynor reiterated Dr Mayaki’s point that evidence should lead to policies and then to funding, and urged stakeholders to pay attention to anticipated demographic, social and economic transitions that will influence and be influenced by Africa’s growing urbanization.
The African Development Bank has raised its financing for the urban sector from an average of €100 million a year in 2005-2009 to over €400 million in 2018. In 2020, it launched the Urban and Municipal Development Fund to scale up support for African urban development in line with the Sustainable Development Goals and the bank’s High-5 operational priorities.
More recently, the bank provided €22.4 million in funding for preparatory studies for the $15.6 billion Abidjan-Lagos highway corridor, a project that will link the two cities via Accra, Lomé, and Cotonou and create an axis generating nearly 75 percent of commercial activity in the West Africa region.
Cities could be even more powerful engines of growth, according to the report, which offers recommendations for policymakers to strengthen the economic potential of urban areas. National governments should anchor cities in urban planning through better coordination of national and local development policies and investing in services and infrastructure to connect cities and raise productivity.
Governments should also boost local resource mobilization and investment capacity by increasing local sources of revenue in the form of taxes, tariffs and fees and access to debt financing.
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