Financial deals herald Somalia’s epic rise from the ashes of war

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Somalia’s economy and society are rising, like the proverbial Sphinx, from the ashes of civil war.

Mogadishu’s post-conflict economic recovery reflects a savoury mélange of government reforms, investments by Somalia’s new business elite, remittances by the diaspora and new groundswells of international goodwill and financial flows.

A new deal for Somalia is in the offing. On September 27, 2018 the European Union (EU) approved a 100 million euros ($116 million) in budget support to the Somali Government to be disbursed until 2021, for the first time in 27 years.

The World Bank approved $80 million in grants to fund public finance reforms on September 26, 2018.

Earlier, on September 6, 2018, the Bank also unveiled the flagship infrastructure project, The Somali Urban Resilience Project (SURP), worth US$9 million, a test case for municipal infrastructure delivery.

CHINA

And in January 2018, the German Government allocated 23.4 million Euros to support the rehabilitation of urban infrastructure as part of a Multi Partner Fund.

On the sidelines of the recently concluded China-Africa Summit in Beijing on September 3-4, Somalia signed to China’s multibillion dollar Belt and Road Initiative (BRI).

But Mogadishu’s road to recovery is steep. With a population of 15,181,925 (2018 estimates), and an income per capita of $226 by 2002 (compared to $515 in Sub-Saharan Africa), UNDP’s 2001 Human Development Index ranked Somalia 161 out of 163 countries, one of the poorest countries in the world.

Long before the civil war started in 1991, recurrent humanitarian disasters, a predatory Somali state and the effects of a drawn out popular struggle against Mohamed Siad Barre’s dictatorial regime (1969-1991) pushed the Somali economy to the ropes.

In the ensuing civil war, Somalia became a haven of terrorist fighters, which ruined the economy, pushed entrepreneurs to exile and forced external financiers to cut ties with a thriving but criminal informal war economy, which financed warlords and extremists.

As such, the EU and World Bank disbursements are the latest show of confidence in the government’s reforms and recovery plan.

REFORMS

But the future of Somalia is in the hands of the Somalis. In February last year, the Somali people elected a reformist government with a convincing reform agenda, anchored upon a strong partnership in Villa Somalia between President Mohamed Abdullahi Farmajo and Prime Minister Hassan Ali Khayre.

Reforms are paying off. In the first quarter of 2018, the government raised $42.5 million domestically, the highest ever in a single quarter.

Domestic revenue might go well over $200 million by the end of the year.

The World Bank has projected that Somalia’s economy will grow at an average of between 3.5 and 4.5 percent annually in 2019-2022. Somalia is firmly on the path to debt relief.

Second, a degree of stability in recent years has drawn investment from local Somalis and those living abroad.

Somalia’s diaspora is a veritable source of skills, leadership and remittances to rebuild the country.

MOBILE MONEY

From “the world’s most dangerous city”, Mogadishu is experiencing an economic boom.

Returning diaspora Somalis and newly wealthy businessmen are capitalising on the relative peace in the city to build new housing estates.

In early 2015, Salaam Somali Bank financed a $20 million project to build 500 homes outside Mogadishu to house 500 families.

However, Somalia’s growth is also largely IT-led. Over 70 percent of adult Somalis are using mobile money services.

Somalia’s vibrant mobile money market is recording approximately 155 million transactions worth $2.7 billion per month.

Somalia’s power elite is anchoring economic recovery on far-reaching political reforms to deepen its democracy, build institutions and stabilise the polity ahead of the watershed 2020 election.

ELECTIONS

The swearing-in of a new Speaker of the House of the People, Mohamed Abdirahman, on May 10, 2018 paved the way for Parliament to deliver a legal framework for multiparty elections and complete the review of the Provisional Federal Constitution.

Parties have reached agreement on an electoral model based on a proportional representation, a closed party list system and on ownership, administration and sharing of revenues from petroleum and minerals.

Women’s representation jumped from 14 percent to 25 percent in the last parliamentary elections.

Regionally, Somalia’s power elite has seized the wind of change now washing over the Horn of Africa to pioneer a new diplomacy that ensures the country is at peace with itself and its neighbours.

However, a multi-pronged geo-political rivalry in the Gulf region is having ripples in Mogadishu.

Facing the future, the Government must redouble efforts to slay the dragon of corruption to secure progress.

FAMINE

Constructive talks are needed to ease tension between the Federal Government and the Federal States.

There is need to step up support for peace diplomacy (mainly by IGAD) to reduce the risk of conflicts between federal states (Puntland and Somaliland) and intra-state leadership tussles (Galmudug).

Amisom and the UN need to secure the November 17, 2018 state presidential election in the South-West state, which is fuelling intense political rivalry.

Famine was averted in 2017, but the government and its partners need to put measures in place to reduce Somalia’s continued vulnerability to drought, floods and other natural calamities.

Cutting off the means of survival, including sanctions to supporters, could weaken al-Qaida-affiliated Al-Shabaab extremist group as a threat to the progress made.

Amisom is on course in the crucial agendum of transferring responsibilities to the Somali military by 2020.

But it deserves predictable funding and a clear drawdown horizon. As the UN has rightly cautioned, premature departure could be disastrous.

Prof Kagwanja is a former Government adviser and currently Chief Executive of Africa Policy Institute
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Hore ha loo socdo :nvjpqts:

Key thing is getting that debt written off so our country can borrow money on the international markets. This is a start, but crucial nevertheless.

If us Somali's get our shit together we should immediatly dig for the fkin oil
get that sh*t out of the ground by any means necessary, this brokeness gotta end
 

DR OSMAN

AF NAAREED
VIP
True but it’s better than nothing, in order to regain the trust of the international community, we have to show we can be responsible :)

That starts with actually proving the Somali government can manage the current revenue they have(port/airport/road taxes) and prove it was allocated and implemented correctly towards your government policies, that's where Somalis fail as it all goes through hundreds of pockets from minister down to vice minister. Nothing can be demonstrated as proof to the western world and they end up 'declining' you as a 'risk' and a not a stable partner to work with. You will forever be relegated to 'NGOS' and charities who have limited funds.
 

SilentE1001

Reformation of Somaliland
VIP
Hore ha loo socdo :nvjpqts:

Key thing is getting that debt written off so our country can borrow money on the international markets. This is a start, but crucial nevertheless.

If us Somali's get our shit together we should immediatly dig for the fkin oil
get that sh*t out of the ground by any means necessary, this brokeness gotta end

So you want debt to be written off too only get more debt. Live within your means of you want to money you gotta make money not borrow that's the key to success

The problem with Somalia is that it's built top down with donor funds assigning leaders before creating a system.

Somaliland took 6 years to make to have systems in place and everything. From clan conferences and reconciliation to the civil war in 96 followed by further reconciliation. And for a long time after only running the country on 1-3 mil and still managed to reclaim since territory. The bottom up approache but like with Any young democracy is hard with challenges all across with people ting to take advantage and trying to destroy
 

DR OSMAN

AF NAAREED
VIP
So you want debt to be written off too only get more debt. Live within your means of you want to money you gotta make money not borrow that's the key to success

The problem with Somalia is that it's built top down with donor funds assigning leaders before creating a system.

Somaliland took 6 years to make to have systems in place and everything. From clan conferences and reconciliation to the civil war in 96 followed by further reconciliation. And for a long time after only running the country on 1-3 mil and still managed to reclaim since territory. The bottom up approache but like with Any young democracy is hard with challenges all across with people ting to take advantage and trying to destroy

The rate at Somaliland development over 30 years is pretty poor considering Mogadishu only got peace in 2012 and is past it in terms of development. Somaliland is isolated and will forever crawl in terms of development because all it will have access to is 'charities' who have small funds and can't do big projects like roads, airports, and the like?
 

DR OSMAN

AF NAAREED
VIP
So you want debt to be written off too only get more debt. Live within your means of you want to money you gotta make money not borrow that's the key to success

The problem with Somalia is that it's built top down with donor funds assigning leaders before creating a system.

Somaliland took 6 years to make to have systems in place and everything. From clan conferences and reconciliation to the civil war in 96 followed by further reconciliation. And for a long time after only running the country on 1-3 mil and still managed to reclaim since territory. The bottom up approache but like with Any young democracy is hard with challenges all across with people ting to take advantage and trying to destroy

Debt isn't a bad thing as people say as long as you invest it in the right area and you can service your loan back while also generating economic growth from the investment. It's not all that hard. For example taking a debt from a bank to buy a house is a good thing, it's going towards an asset that will grow in value as long as you have a job and can service your loan, that is a positive debt not a negative debt.

Somalia needs to do the same with getting loans but setting up financial frameworks to ensure their loans will be serviced and paid off while the asset they develop must guarantee 'financial return' at the end of it in terms of growing the nation economic capacity such as businesses opening up and hiring people because you invested into building in a road. You collect taxes from the new businesses and through that you allocate a small amount towards servicing your loan while keeping the rest to maintain the nation.

The real problem isn't taking a loan, every nation has to take loans but what the problem is, the loans Somalia take never enter productive assets and goes into corrupt pockets who then either build homes or buy personal businesses for themselves locally or overseas and the person loaning u the money has now just lost his loan to corruption and the loan won't be serviced as agreed upon between lender and borrower, if the bank keeps losing their money to corruption like that, the international monetary bank will eventually go bankrupt.
 
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SilentE1001

Reformation of Somaliland
VIP
Debt isn't a bad thing as people say as long as you invest it in the right area and you can service your loan back while also generating economic growth from the investment. It's not all that hard. For example taking a debt from a bank to buy a house is a good thing, it's going towards an asset that will grow in value as long as you have a job and can service your loan, that is a positive debt not a negative debt.

Somalia needs to do the same with getting loans but setting up financial frameworks to ensure their loans will be serviced and paid off while the asset they develop must guarantee 'financial return' at the end of it in terms of growing the nation economic capacity such as businesses opening up and hiring people because you invested into building in a road. You collect taxes from the new businesses and through that you allocate a small amount towards servicing your loan while keeping the rest to maintain the nation.

The real problem isn't taking a loan, every nation has to take loans but what the problem is, the loans Somalia take never enter productive assets and goes into corrupt pockets who then either build homes or buy personal businesses for themselves locally or overseas and the person loaning u the money has now just lost his loan to corruption and the loan won't be serviced as agreed upon between lender and borrower, if the bank keeps losing their money to corruption like that, the international monetary bank will eventually go bankrupt.

Thanks for the insight...

But wouldn't Somalia be much better to grow without any loans just grow the economy with the private sector through taxes which should be spent on infrastructure. The country will grow much slower but be debt free
 
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