AFRICAN DEVELOPMENT BANKGROUP (AFDB) · Microsoft PowerPoint - AfDB Presentation 22 Oct 2013.pptx...

Post on 17-Oct-2020

2 views 0 download

Transcript of AFRICAN DEVELOPMENT BANKGROUP (AFDB) · Microsoft PowerPoint - AfDB Presentation 22 Oct 2013.pptx...

THE CHANGING AFRICAN LANDSCAPE - WHAT HAS CHANGED IN THE LAST 25 YEARS, DEVELOPMENTS ENVISAGED FOR THE NEXT 25 YEARS

CAROLINE JEHU-APPIAH (MD, MSc, PhD)

PRINCIPAL HEALTH ECONOMIST

AFRICAN DEVELOPMENT BANK GROUP (AFDB)

1

OUTLINE

• Africa's changing economic landscape

• Africa's changing health landscape

• Africa in 50 years time-projections

• Challenges and Opportunities

• Way forward

2

CHANGING AFRICAN LANDSCAPE

2013 – 2022…

2013

2001

3

AFRICA RISING: RAPID ECONOMIC GROWTH

4

11,110,5 10,3

8,98,4 8,2

7,9 7,9 7,7 7,6

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

Ango

la

Ch

ina

Myan

ma

r

Nig

eri

a

Eth

iopia

Kazakhsta

n

Ch

ad

Mo

za

mb

iqu

e

Ca

mbo

dia

Rw

anda

Perc

ent

Annual Average GDP Growth: 2001-2011

Africa is growing rapidly at 5-8% per annum 6 out of the 10 fastest-growing economies are in SSA (Angola, Nigeria, Ethiopia, Chad, Mozambique, Rwanda)

AFRICA’S ECONOMIC GROWTH-TRENDS IN GDP

5

DECLINING INFANT MORTALITY RATE IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES(DEATHS PER 1000 BIRTHS)

6

INCREASING LIFE EXPECTANCY AT BIRTH IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES (NUMBER OF YEARS)

7

PREVALENCE OF MALNOURISHMENT IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES BY REGION(PERCENT OF POPULATION)

8

MAJOR PROGRESS ON THE MDGS IN AFRICA …AND NOT JUST IN HIGH GROWTH COUNTRIES

SOME PROJECTIONS….

10

AFRICA IN 50 YEARS: GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT (US$)

11

LIFE EXPECTANCY IN THE NEXT 50 YEARS

12

HIGHER NATIONAL INCOME IS ASSOCIATED WITH HIGHER LIFE EXPECTANCY AT BIRTH

13

Africa will have the world’s largest workforce by 2050

1 billion people today, 2.3

billion by 2050

Africa is the…

� most populous

continent after Asia

� youngest region

in the world

• And will have the

largest workforce

by 2050 surpassing

China and India -

200

400

600

800

1.000

1.200

1.400

1.600

1950

1960

1970

1980

1990

2000

2010

2020

2030

2040

2050

Mil

lio

n in

hab

itan

ts

Working age population (15-64) in the world

Africa

SE Asia

Europe

LAC

South America

North America

China

India

Source: UNSTAT. World Population Prospects 2010.

AFRICA’S DEMOGRAPHIC SHIFTS ARE AN OPPORTUNITY FOR CHANGE

15

100 80 60 40 20 0 20 40 60 80 100

0-4

5-9

10-14

15-19

20-24

25-29

30-34

35-39

40-44

45-49

50-54

55-59

60-64

65-69

70-74

75-79

80-84

85-89

90-94

95-99

100+

Female Male

2010

2060

AFRICA IN 50 YEARS: URBAN POPULATION BY REGION (AS % OF TOTAL)

16

0

50

100

150

200

2000 2010 2020 2030 2040 2050 2060

Africa Central Africa East Africa North Africa Southern Africa West Africa

17

AFRICA: UNDER AGE 5 MORTALITY PER 1000 BIRTHS BY REGION

DRIVERS OF AFRICA’S ECONOMIC TRANSFORMATION

18

… BUT CHALLENGES TO OVERCOME

• Fragility is a major concern

• Huge infrastructure gap

• Youth unemployment and underemployment high

• Low MDG indicators

• Only 4 African countries score higher than 5 (out of 10)

on TI’s Corruption Perception Index

19

20

MOST AFRICAN COUNTRIES AT THE BOTTOM OF HDI

INCOME INEQUALITY IS HIGHGINI INDEX FOR SELECTED AFRICAN COUNTRIES

21

HIGH DISEASE BURDEN….

• Africa accounts for only 12% of the world’s population, but

57% of the world’s maternal deaths, 49% of child deaths,

85% of malaria cases, 67% of people with HIV, and 26% of

underweight children

Maternal deaths,

2005

Death of children

under five, 2008

Adults and children

estimated to be living

with HIV, 2007

Underweight children

under five, 2007

Ref: Science in Action – Saving the lives of Africa’s mothers, newborns and children. ASADI 2009. Eds Kinney MV, Lawn JE, Kerber KJ

Data sources: UNAIDS 2007, UNICEF, www.childinfor.org, Lancet nutrition series, World Malaria Report 2009.

23

INCREASING URBANIZATION WILL EXPOSE AFRICANS TO HEALTH RISKS & STRAIN URBAN HEALTH INFRASTRUCTURE

HEALTH SPENDING IN SSA HAS MORE THAN DOUBLED SINCE 1995 BUT WITH HIGH LEVELS OF PRIVATE SPENDING

24

INEFFICIENCIES ABOUND…..

• Globally, between 20 and 40 percent of health system spending is wasted, with poorer countries wasting even higher proportions –WHR 2011

• For each one dollar spent on health, significant amount doesn’t reach the front line (World Bank)

• Absenteeism affects 40% of health workers (World Bank}

Country Mean

Chad 2004 95

Senegal 2003 60

Cameroon 2004 70

Rwanda 2003 40

Nonwage funds not reaching

schools and health services:

PUBLIC HEALTH SPENDING DISPROPORTIONATELY BENEFITS THE RICH

26

HIGH IMPACT INTERVENTIONS: NOT NECESSARILY WHERE THE MONEY GOES

KEY LESSONS LEARNED FROM PROGRESS TO DATE

• Increased wealth does not necessarily lead to improved health, particularly for the poorest segments of society.

• The changing environmental landscape threatens to increase poverty and health problems in Africa.

• The ICT revolution is rapidly increasing connectivity and providing opportunities to transform service delivery to improve quality, safety and efficiency

• International aid flows are likely to decline- need for greater domestic ownership

• Increased demand for good governance, accountability and results 28

OPPORTUNITIES FOR THE ‘NEW’ AFRICA AND WAY FORWARD IN THE NEXT 50 YEARS

• Health systems must evolve to meet the needs of the new Africa.

• Leverage e-Health to overcome major challenges in access, financing, human resources, and in the provision of high-quality healthcare services.

• Leverage Public–Private Partnerships

• Value for money

• Innovative financing

• Governments need to be more self-reliant with greater domestic ownership and raise resources internally

• Developing equitable and sustainable health financing systems

• South-south collaboration

29

WAY FORWARD IN THE NEXT 50 YEARS

• The post-MDGs Agenda

• Focus on equity in the use of health service and outcomes

• Greater attention to social, economic and environmental

determinants of health

• UHC

• Strategies to reduce out-of-pocket expenditure health sector

• Strategic initiatives to address the challenge of inadequate

human resources in health

• The health sector will increasingly be viewed as a productive

and job-creating sector.

30

THANK YOU FOR YOUR ATTENTION!