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Coby Asmah is a success in a part of the world that is hardly
ever equated with success.
The design and printing business he launched from his dining
room table 14 years ago now employs 54 people. He drives a new
gold SUV, dresses as sharply as any Madison Avenue executive and
vacations in the United States. And despite winning U.S. citizenship,
he has chosen to stay in Ghana.
Asmah belongs to an Africa all but unknown outside the continent:
one of growth and business opportunity, with a tiny but rapidly
spreading middle class.
Fifty years after Ghana became the first African country to gain
independence, Africa's economies are expanding by 5.4% a year
compared to a world average of 4.2% and are projected to hit almost
7% next year. Investments are up. Banking firm Merrill Lynch &
Co. concluded that Africa now offers investors as much potential
as Russia.
These signs of economic hope come as the world is increasingly
aware of its broader stake in Africa. Rich countries fear any
disruption in the flow of resources out of Africa, which now rivals
the Middle East in the quantity of oil it sends to the United
States.
The picture across the 48 countries of Africa south of the Sahara
is still very much a patchwork. But a year-long exploration by
The Associated Press shows that progress, while fragile, is finding
a foothold in spheres ranging from democracy to education. Perhaps
most strikingly, after few results from five decades of advice
and $568 billion in aid, today's developments in business, education,
government and other areas are being led by Africans themselves.
There is a new sense among many Africans that it is up to them
to rethink their continent and challenge the West to do the same.
The change shows up all over in newspaper editorials, in a regional
partnership for African leadership, in the revamping of the African
Union, in a newly aggressive stance for fairer terms in agricultural
trade, and in the confidence of entrepreneurs like Asmah.
"The change of thinking has been coming from Africa,"
says economist George Ayittey, a Ghanaian teaching at American
University in Washington, D.C. "Civil society in Africa is
becoming more and more empowered and emboldened, and they are
driving the agenda."
Signs of prosperity are everywhere in this country of about 23
million people, on the west coast of Africa. New roads are choked
with cars, construction cranes dominate the skyline and shops
brim with televisions, air conditioners and luxury goods. Real
estate prices in the capital, Accra, rival those of an average
American city, with a four-bedroom home in a nice area selling
for over $500,000.
Asmah's office and printing press are located in a middle-class
neighborhood of older homes converted for business.
Asmah, 42, was an artist in the Ministry of Education in 1993
when he first started selling graphic designs to friends. Soon
he was ready to give up the secure government job, which for most
of Africa's history was the hallmark of success.
He launched Type Company with money borrowed from family and
friends. Business grew almost too rapidly. Type Company had to
outsource printing to others in Ghana, and the quality fell.
So Asmah bought a state-of-the-art, custom-made printing press
and other equipment from Germany for more than $1 million. He
diversified into security printing for banks, colorful packaging
for local products and annual reports for dozens of businesses,
which, like his, are homegrown and growing.
"Once you have a solution to someone else's problem, you
have a business," says Asmah, whose polished appearance and
calm demeanor project the image he wants for his high-end designs,
despite a cluttered office full of computers and printers. "There
is a lot of opportunity, because here, there is not a lot that
is done right."
Things not done right trip up businesses like his. It took five
years to convince a bank to help him lease $10,000 worth of equipment.
Financing in Africa is hard to get, with high interest rates and
stringent requirements. Government tariffs on paper and ink also
drive up his costs, and he can't compete with preprinted imports
because they are not taxed.
But Asmah says the odds of success in Africa are greater than
anywhere else, including America.
Asmah is part of what economist Ayittey calls Africa's "cheetah
generation": young entrepreneurs who are fast, smart, adaptable
and ready to tackle Africa's problems. Eventually, and it will
take time, he predicts the cheetahs could overtake the bureaucrats
and dictators who blame Africa's problems on colonialism and don't
address them.
It is already happening in Ghana. Democracy is strong, and the
economy is growing by 6% a year. The World Bank recently praised
Ghana as one of the leading business reformers in the world. Ghana's
debt is down by more than two-thirds, and inflation is under control.
Economic stability in turn draws investment. Foreign investment
in Africa rose to a record $39 billion in 2006 from $31 billion
just a year earlier, only partly because of oil revenues.
"It's a young economy and anyone who looks into that will
see that Ghana is a safe terrain to be in," notes Asmah,
who says his business exceeds $1 million a year in revenue and
brings profits of 30%. "Returns on investment here are 20%
higher than anywhere else."
Wealth trickling down
Accra's first suburbs sprawl northward from the Atlantic Ocean,
low-slung bungalows that stretch out on generous plots surrounded
by high brick walls. Wide roads are laid out in a perfect grid.
The neighborhood is in various stages of construction, but the
shade trees around the more established homes hint at its future
charm.
Mavis Boakye, 30, shares one of the new four-bedroom, cream-colored
bungalows with her banker husband, her four-month-old son and
her mother. Every workday morning, she climbs into a taxi for
the 45-minute drive into her office in town.
Boakye is a department head at Type Company who supervises the
digital graphic design team. The daughter of a poor civil servant
laborer, she spent two years of mandatory government service producing
drawings for Ministry of Health brochures. Afterward, she went
straight to work because she could not afford university.
Now Type Company is paying $800 a month for her to go to university
part-time, and she lives a solidly middle-class life. She and
her husband watch Christian satellite television on a Sony Corp.
home theater system. They shop at a new mall. They eat pizza at
a South African fast food chain, and belong to a middle class
sometimes nicknamed "black diamonds."
"I am making three times or four times what my father was
making, and sometimes he looks at me and marvels and says, 'I
am happy you are doing well in life,"' Boayke says.
Boayke is an example of how wealth from companies is slowly trickling
down through communities, in a part of the world where each worker
supports six people on average.
In 2000, Africa's middle class of 12.7 million people made up
just 2% of the population, according to the World Bank. By 2030,
it is expected to more than triple to 43 million, or 4% of the
population.
However, Africa remains overwhelmingly poor. Ten percent of the
world's poor people now live in Africa, and that is expected to
rise to 13% in the next 25 years.
The best hope for the poor could be private enterprise, which
creates 90% of the jobs in developing countries. But business
is dragged down by a lack of education, unreliable power, bad
roads, disease and a long list of other problems.
Choking bureaucracy means that it takes 95 days to start a business
in Tanzania, 138 days in Ghana and 177 days in Chad. In Australia,
it takes one day.
Recently, African countries have begun to cut business costs
and red tape, according to the World Bank. Ghana lowered corporate
taxes and slashed paperwork at customs. Tanzania has reduced the
cost of starting a business by 40%. Kenya is simplifying its business
licenses.
Boayke has been bitten by the entrepreneurial bug herself.
"The plan is that in three years, I will start something
on my own," she says. "My husband wants me to start
now because he thinks I will make more money, but I think I need
to make more contacts before I start."
Near the port in Accra, the Ghanaian government has set up duty-free
industrial zones to spur international trade. Hand-painted logos
adorn the walls of the warehouse-style buildings, and their large
wooden doors open off the loading docks. At lunch time, women
sell hot meals of beans and rice to workers in the shade of the
eaves.
This is where Nora Bannerman's factory makes dresses and clothes
sold in American department stores and lab coats worn by pharmacists
at Walgreens and CVS in the United States.
Bannerman, who has made clothes since she was nine years old,
is an icon in Ghana. She wears designer sunglasses as she drives
through town in her cobalt-blue Mercedes Benz. She will not reveal
her age except to say she was born in the Gold Coast, Ghana's
name before independence. Her fashion design school has trained
more than 100 students, and many have since set up their own businesses.
Bannerman's story shows how globalization both helps and hurts
Africans in their desire to move ahead.
Easier trade gives Africans access to millions of people with
money to spend, and Bannerman's designs sell in the United States,
France, Germany and Switzerland. But it also brings competition,
especially from China, which plays a growing role in Africa.
China imports raw materials from all over Africa, such as Ghana's
timber and minerals. In 2005 Ghana's trade with China increased
35% to $816 million, making China its top trading partner. And
China is investing; it loaned Ghana $30 million to build a national
fiber optic network.
Yet China also floods the world with goods so cheap that Africans
can't compete. Bannerman says Chinese companies mass-produce,
without permission, her designs and traditional African fabrics
at prices below her cost of production.
"China has been going all over Africa, picking out the good
ideas," says Bannerman, sitting in her factory office. "While
we were still doing high-value, hand-woven kente cloth, China
came out with kente prints that are selling well to the United
States."
Bannerman says her American buyers constantly pressure her to
cut prices. But she won't and can't cut wages one reason is because
the U.S. African Growth and Opportunity Act requires African exporters
to meet human rights standards that do not apply to China, because
of international trade rules.
Bannerman also has to pay high taxes on all imported cloth and
thread that further raise her costs to export. And she competes
within Africa against second-hand clothes from international donors
that are not taxed.
She says all she and other African business people need to succeed
is a fair playing field. "We don't want a situation where
we are asking for aid all of the time," she says.
Africa has a long history of international trade. The 1st century
gold coins of the royal families of Axum, in present-day Ethiopia,
have been found as far away as India. Yet the continent today
accounts for only 4% of global trade.
On the roads in almost every town, small-scale entrepreneurs
balance on their heads everything from vegetables and ice cream
to DVD players and television aerials as they sell to drivers
stuck in traffic. But most of those goods come from overseas —
$273 million left the continent in 2005.
Capital inflow to some African countries, including Ghana, is
now rising. And so is hope.
This year's study by the Pew Global Attitudes Project found that
despite crushing poverty, majorities in nine out of 10 African
countries surveyed believe their lives will be better five years
from now. Surveys in 12 African countries from 1999 to 2006 by
the Afrobarometer Network, an independent research group, also
found growing optimism.
Asmah says Africans can and will work hard to succeed, and he
is trying to spread the wealth in his country.
He supports a business plan competition that gives advice to
60 promising entrepreneurs and helps them build contacts, in partnership
with business promoter TechnoServe and Google.org, the internet
company's philanthropic arm. The top 20 winners get a jump start
in their new enterprise.
The name of the competition: "Believe, Begin, Become."
Source: Associated Press
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