Obama pledges to help double electricity in sub-Saharan Africa
President Obama is casting the $7 billion initiative as part of a new US strategy to move the region forward with development, not charity dollars.
President Obama is casting the $7 billion initiative as part of a new US strategy to move the region forward with development, not charity dollars.
President Obama is to launch a $7 billion US-funded program to double access to electricity for people in sub-Saharan Africa, the first new big-bucks initiative of his tour of the continent.聽
The Power Africa plan is expected to be announced during Mr. Obama鈥檚 visit to Cape Town later聽Sunday. It follows announcements of new US funds for food security and leadership mentoring schemes for young Africans.聽
Taken together, these all signal a shift in US policy that would leave the world鈥檚 poorest continent less 鈥渁 dependent鈥 or 鈥渁 charity case鈥 and more 鈥渁 partner,鈥 to use buzzwords that the president has repeated during his visit.聽In these times of austerity and sequestration, this new approach to foreign aid 鈥 鈥渢he least popular part of the federal budget,鈥 Obama concedes 鈥 is also cheaper and makes use of innovative joint public-private cash vehicles. 聽
This refreshed focus drew on 鈥渢he lessons of Nelson Mandela鈥檚 life,鈥 the president told reporters on Air Force One聽Friday, evoking the man Obama called 鈥渁 personal inspiration for me, and an inspiration for the world.鈥澛
Mr. Mandela began his fourth week in the hospital聽Sunday, struggling to recover from a recurrent lung infection and still in a 鈥渃ritical but stable鈥 condition.聽
His family, and South African President Jacob Zuma, say he has improved from the worst days of last week.
Mandela鈥檚 ailing health has overshadowed Obama鈥檚 visit to South Africa, but the US president has regularly spoken of links between his new thinking on how to assist Africa and the example set by the anti-apartheid icon.聽
鈥淚f we focus on what Africa as a continent can do together and what these countries can do when they鈥檙e unified, as opposed to when they鈥檙e divided by tribe or race or religion, then Africa鈥檚 rise will continue,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 one of the central lessons of what Nelson Mandela accomplished not just as president, but in the struggle to overcome apartheid and his years in prison.鈥
Help Africans help themselves
These are grand words. In reality, the message is simple: With a more hands-off approach, the US wants to help African countries help themselves, under umbrella themes of better food, better businesses, and better governments.聽
On the first leg of his trip, in Senegal last week, Obama focused on food security, dwelling on ways that small-scale farmers 鈥 鈥渆ssentially small-business people,鈥 he said 鈥 can grow more crops to earn more money.聽
There, and again in South Africa, he applauded his hosts鈥 democratically elected governments and their institutional reform agendas, and praised Mandela for stepping down after just one term.聽
In Tanzania聽Monday, at a round-table for local chief executive officers, he will talk trade, and add details of the new electricity access initiative at a visit to a power station outside Dar es Salaam.聽
Trade, not aid
Together, the aim of the 鈥渢rade, not aid鈥 mantra is a goal familiar to many back home in the United States: making individuals wealthier and businesses more profitable, in societies that respect laws and thus create confidence for new investors.聽
It鈥檚 Capitalism 101. It opens new markets for American goods, too.聽
And 鈥 unlike George W. Bush鈥檚 immensely popular but immensely expensive HIV/AIDS PEPFAR program 鈥 Obama鈥檚 aid plans come with a relatively cheap price tag for US taxpayers.聽
The president is very aware of the dilemmas he faces in winning approval back home to spend dollars overseas.聽
鈥淥ur foreign aid budget is around 1 percent of our total federal budget. It鈥檚 chronically the least popular part of our federal budget,鈥 Obama told reporters.聽鈥淲e鈥檝e got budget constraints back home, which means that we鈥檝e got to come up with new and creative ways to promote development and deliver aid. Every dollar that we鈥檙e putting in, we鈥檙e getting a huge amount of private-sector dollars.
鈥淚f we鈥檙e working smarter, the amount of good that we can bring about over the next decade is tremendous.鈥
Too focused on trade?
There have been some criticisms that Obama鈥檚 approach during his week-long African trip, which ends聽Wednesday, has been too overtly mercantile.聽
Speaking to students in Soweto聽Saturday, he drew frowns from some in the audience when he said the US would 鈥渇ar rather be selling you iPods and planes鈥 than intervening militarily to stop atrocities in Africa.聽
In fact, perhaps the area least touched on has been security.聽
This is despite US defense engagement in Africa soaring under Obama, with the new United States Africa Command, drones flying over Somalia, Ethiopia, and Mali, and American military trainers on the ground in Uganda.聽
Obama has made clear that the 鈥渟oft鈥 policies he has been trailing in Senegal and South Africa are, ultimately, designed to lift people out of the kind of poverty and oppression that breeds disenchantment and radicalizes.聽聽
鈥淯S-led military engagements in Africa [to combat terrorism] are unsustainable, Obama鈥檚 right,鈥 says Andrews Atta-Asamoah, senior researcher at South Africa鈥檚 Institute for Security Studies in Pretoria.
鈥淚n everything 鈥 military, aid spending, lectures on corruption 鈥 the US has to realize its best chance of achieving what it wants is just to support and complement Africa鈥檚 own efforts. On this trip, Obama seems to have got that.鈥