BCN-35,36 German business to place greater investment focus on Africa

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GERMAN-BUSINESS-INVESTMENT

German business to place greater investment focus on Africa

BERLIN, Aug. 24, 2018 (BSS/Xinhua) – German companies are planning to ramp
up their investments on the African continent during the coming years,
president of the German-African Business Association Stefan Liebing announced
on Wednesday.

“We are already witnessing a significant increase in the investment- and
trading activity with our neighboring continent,” Liebing told reporters.

According to an estimate by the association, new investments by German
companies in Africa will rise by more than 10 percent to a total of more than
one billion euros (1.15 billion U.S. dollars).

Liebing explained that at least part of the increase reflected recent
changes in the German regulatory landscape.

Back in June, the German government announced that it would ease the
conditions which must be met for domestic small- and mid-sized enterprises
(SMEs) to access export guarantees in trade with certain African countries.

Thomas Bareiss, secretary of state in the ministry for the economy, said at
the time that closer economic ties between Germany and African nations were a
key priority of Chancellor Angela Merkel’s governing cabinet.

Towards this end, Berlin has taken steps to lower the insurance excess
shouldered by these firms or the banks they work with in international trade
between Germany and African states.

The new regulations apply to countries which have joined a G20 initiative
for more international investment and were SMEs previously faced relatively
steep deductible rates of up to 5 percent.

Amongst others, German exporters operating in the African markets of Cote
D’Ivoire, Senegal, Ethiopia, Ghana and Rwanda stand to benefit from the
expansion of government guarantees.

Commenting on the development on Wednesday, Liebing expressed confidence
that the change would boost trade and capital flows between Germany and
Africa.

“It’s working. A large number of projects have been successfully realized
(as a consequence of the new policy regime),” Liebing said.

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He noted that the volume of export guarantees for Africa more than doubled
during the first six months of the year to 1.09 billion euros (1.26 billion
U.S. dollar) and had hence already surpassed the total annual level of 2017.

Liebing pointed to the opening of a Volkswagen plant in the Rwandan capital
of Kigali, as well as an ongoing cooperation between German Gauff Engineering
and a Chinese partner to build Africa’s longest suspension bridge in
Mozambique.

While Germany is still a relatively small player in Africa, China has
emerged as one of the continent’s largest trading and investment partners.

Liebing argued that German companies should seize opportunities to
cooperate with their Chinese counterparts rather than seeing them as rivals.

Liebing said that expanding African infrastructure provision was the key to
raising productivity and promoting sustainable growth and better
international cooperation. “Package solutions” offered by China in this
context offered Germans an exemplary model of how to boost economic growth in
Africa, he said.

“We should stop viewing China exclusively as a competitor. First successful
examples show how Chinese and German firms can achieve mutually-beneficial
outcomes in Africa,” Liebing told press. “The only truly-sustainable form of
developmental aid is to create local jobs”, he added.

The German-African Business Association was founded in 1934 to support
firms from Germany in their commercial involvement in African countries.
Germany’s exports to Africa currently account for around two percent of its
total volume of international trade.

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