By Global Public Square staff - CNN.com
Africa’s population challenge
It's rare enough for a U.S. president to visit Africa. This week, two of them are there – President Obama, of course, but also his predecessor, George W. Bush. The two visits are unrelated, but the focus is common: how to engage with the world's fastest growing continent.
Africa was for many decades the "dark continent," or the "hopeless continent," as The Economist once put it. More recently it has become the Great Hope of the business world. The Economist updated its take to "Africa Rising." The World Bank recently said Africa could be on the verge of a take-off the like of China's 30 years ago.
Africa's recent growth has been impressive and important. But let's step back and get some perspective before we break out the champagne.
First, the case for optimism: growth.
As populations stagnate or even decline in Europe, Japan, and China ... Africa's population of one billion is expected to more than double by 2050. More people, means more consumption, more production, more growth.
African economies grew on average around 6 percent last year: that's three times the pace of America's growth, and faster than many Asian countries. A new world is opening up to Africans as they get used to credit cards and mobile phones. And they are also becoming economically more free and more democratic.
But there are hurdles ahead.
http://globalpublicsquare.blogs.cnn....ge/?hpt=hp_bn2
Africa’s population challenge
It's rare enough for a U.S. president to visit Africa. This week, two of them are there – President Obama, of course, but also his predecessor, George W. Bush. The two visits are unrelated, but the focus is common: how to engage with the world's fastest growing continent.
Africa was for many decades the "dark continent," or the "hopeless continent," as The Economist once put it. More recently it has become the Great Hope of the business world. The Economist updated its take to "Africa Rising." The World Bank recently said Africa could be on the verge of a take-off the like of China's 30 years ago.
Africa's recent growth has been impressive and important. But let's step back and get some perspective before we break out the champagne.
First, the case for optimism: growth.
As populations stagnate or even decline in Europe, Japan, and China ... Africa's population of one billion is expected to more than double by 2050. More people, means more consumption, more production, more growth.
African economies grew on average around 6 percent last year: that's three times the pace of America's growth, and faster than many Asian countries. A new world is opening up to Africans as they get used to credit cards and mobile phones. And they are also becoming economically more free and more democratic.
But there are hurdles ahead.
http://globalpublicsquare.blogs.cnn....ge/?hpt=hp_bn2
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