African countries are holding cash reserves outside the 
continent totalling nearly $200 billion, which they fear to invest 
locally owing to rising risks.
The funds, nearly a third of the more than $500 
billion in total reserves held by the countries, have been invested 
mainly in developed economies, said the UN’s Economic Commission for 
Africa (ECA).
The UN agency said that this denied the continent’s economies much needed funds, which could be used to seal financing deficits, especially in building infrastructure.
As such, the agency is pushing for discussions 
with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) on how the forex reserve 
funds can be used to give the local currency market the necessary 
buffers and be considered as financing vehicles on the continent.
“It is troubling that, unlike other developing regions of the world, African countries hold in aggregate more deposits in the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) reporting banks than they receive in loans from them,” said Carlos Lopes, the executive secretary at the ECA, adding that the continent has put up to $500 billion in foreign reserves.
BIS is a global association of central banks which serves as a bank for members.
This trend, economists said, suggests that the bulk of revenues from exports of African oil and commodities are not intermediated by local banks. Instead, they remain in overseas banks, which recycle about 60 per cent of these deposits as cross-border loans back to African banks and the non-bank sector.
“This situation is totally unacceptable,” Dr Lopes
 told a meeting of African central bank governors in Abuja, Nigeria, on 
Thursday and added that central banks must ensure more productive use of
 Africa’s reserves.
In times of shocks and a volatile market, the 
central banks intervene using the reserves to calm the market and stem 
the volatility.
January 2014 data showed that the central banks of Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania were holding a combined $14 billion in forex reserves.
“You cannot accumulate public debt forever, hence 
the need to think outside public borrowing,” said Njuguna Ndung’u, the 
Central Bank of Kenya governor.
Prof Ndung’u added: “We need flexibility in 
seeking funds to finance infrastructure and tap into the reserves and 
repackaging available instruments to attract more monies such as 
diaspora-focused bonds and Shariah-compliant bond facilities.”
Plans for fund
The push for better use of the excess foreign reserves is expected to complement other fundraising initiatives across the continent.
The African Development Bank (AfDB) estimates that
 Africa requires at least $100 billion annually for infrastructure 
projects for the next 10 years. The bank plans to create a fund that 
could raise as much as $50 billion for infrastructure.
The Africa 50 Infrastructure Fund will tap monies from sovereign wealth funds, insurance and pension funds as well as Africans living and working in the diaspora.
“It is clear that excess foreign reserves held by 
African countries can meet the infrastructure financing needs of the 
continent,” said Cédric Mbeng Mezui, a senior economist at AfDB.
“Investing just about 30 per cent of the excess 
reserves in investment vehicles for infrastructure will go a long way in
 meeting the financing needs of infrastructure on the continent.
“Such a move would put close to $200 billion into infrastructure. We should, however, be careful.”
Some African economies, such as Ghana, are running foreign reserve deficits.
“We need to think of the optimal excess reserves which can be put into such a proposal,” said Henry Kofi Wampah, the governor of the Central Bank of Ghana.
The excess reserves can also be used to finance 
syndicated loans to ensure countries retained price and financial 
stability, he said.
Conflict and risk
Economists have warned that growing conflict in most African countries was raising the continent’s political risk, dimming hopes of such funds being repatriated to fund infrastructure.
Economists at the AfDB, ECA and the African Union 
Commission attending the Abuja meeting warned that conflicts have 
emerged as the biggest risk factor on the continent.
“Conflicts are now a major risk issue across Africa and investors are taking note,” said Dr Lopes.
The greater East African and Great Lakes regions 
are facing prospects of instability with conflicts in the Democratic 
Republic of Congo (DRC), South Sudan, Central African Republic (CAR) and
 Somalia.
The Organisation for Economic Cooperation and 
Development (OECD) considers all countries in the larger East African 
region, apart from Tanzania, as fragile states, based on a 2013 report.
Burundi, CAR, Chad, DRC and Eritrea are listed as some of Africa¹s fragile states. Others are South Sudan, Sudan, Somalia, Ethiopia, Rwanda, Uganda and Kenya.
However, Anthony Maruping, the African Union 
Commissioner for Economic Affairs, said the huge levels of reserves was 
helping to lift investor confidence in Africa.
“With reserves safely in foreign financial 
vehicles and banks, investors know they can invest in Africa since there
 is some level of financial stability,” he said. “But we need to contain
 the growing amounts of illicit outflows leaving Africa annually.”
Illicit transactions
The Global Financial Integrity, in its latest report, said countries in the East African Community (EAC) saw a combined $1.33 billion moved out of the region through illicit financial transactions over 10 years, raising questions over the efficiency of regulations meant to curb illegal capital outflows.
Ranked 66th out of 143 economies surveyed, Uganda 
leads the EAC pack with illicit financial transactions costing it at 
least $680 million. At 86th, Tanzania lost $333 million and Rwanda, 
ranked 106th, $158 million.
Kenya lost an estimated $112 million while Burundi, the EAC’s smallest economy, lost $49 million.
Kenya lost an estimated $112 million while Burundi, the EAC’s smallest economy, lost $49 million.
Central bankers at the conference said most 
African economies were battling a significant gap between the demand for
 investments and the availability of investible funds.
The situation, they said, was due, in part, to low
 levels of savings, large spreads between the lending and savings rate, 
weak financial intermediation, shallow capital markets and limited 
competition among banks.
While central banks have succeeded in ensuring price and financial stability through monetary policy interventions to tame inflation, this has not led to job creation and the infrastructure deficits continue to grow, said Sarah Alade, the acting governor, Central Bank of Nigeria.
However, the search for funds is exposing 
countries to high financial sector risks, which could destabilise the 
economies in the coming years.
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