By Robert MacPherson
African nations are
turning to Asia for partners in development. Can Malaysia pave the way for an
ASEAN-Africa model?
With an increasingly
heavy investment footprint spanning the length and breadth of the African
continent, Malaysia is establishing itself as an important dynamic in the
emerging ASEAN-Africa nexus.
In the run-up to the
Bandung Asia-Africa Summit in April 2015, statements from Malaysian Prime
Minister Najib Razak’s office suggested a long-range view for enhancing
relationships on the continent. Driven by “commitment in strengthening
cooperation” and achieving “prosperity through South-South cooperation,”
Malaysia is expressing great enthusiasm and commitment to exploring
opportunities in Africa.
Indeed, Africa could
find itself playing a central role as part of Malaysia’s effort to develop a
latticework of political and trade relationships with developing nations. Since
the 1990s, Singapore’s northern neighbor has undertaken a sustained effort to
build partnerships across the developing world as part of its vision to achieve
greater resiliency on the global stage through political and economic
diversification. In the wake of the recent financial crisis, this aspiration
has all but certainly been renewed.
Taking note of Africa’s
burgeoning investment opportunities, which have delivered some of the highest
returns globally in recent years, Malaysia has responded with ever larger
amounts of foreign direct investment (FDI) that have blazed a trajectory of
consistent 20 percent year-on-year growth over the past decade. These FDI flows
culminated at a whopping $19.3 billion in 2011, eclipsing those of both China
and India on the continent, and following behind only the United States and
France as the third largest international investor that year.
Malaysian firms can now
be found operating in a wide range of sectors across Africa, including resource
extraction, hotel and leisure, shopping, and financial services. The diversity
of undertakings reflects Malaysia’s own recent transformation into a more
multi-sectored and dynamic economy, and it indicates the private sector’s
appetite to establish meaningful in-roads into frontier markets well-beyond the
Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN).
Malaysian company
Probase Manufacturing Sdn Bhd, for example, completed its first road
development project in Kenya this past June, which leveraged new soil
technology to cut the expected price tag of such a project by more than half,
while in the process pricking the interests of Rwanda and Swaziland to
undertake similar pilot projects worth $3 million each in their countries.
Other companies, like Pacific Inter-Link, are already long established with a
well-entrenched presence on the continent with regional offices in markets like
Ethiopia, Nigeria and Ghana, among others, that are engaged in manufacturing
and commodities trading.
Next Wave of
Opportunities
While Africa may not be
reciprocating in terms of FDI, the relationship is nonetheless a two-way street
of growing awareness and integration. Preceding the 2011 investment surge, 2010
was marked by an equally rapid increase in the number of African students
enrolling in Malaysian universities. According to official UNESCO figures,
Malaysia welcomed 120 percent more African student enrollments in 2010,
reaching 11,825 from 5,373 in the previous year.
This number has only
continued to rise thereafter. Political engagement has also been two-way, with
the Malaysian agenda driven by a robust network of diplomatic missions on the
continent that is comparatively larger than many of its ASEAN counterparts.
This current rhythm of
engagement is priming the Malaysia-Africa corridor to take advantage of the
next wave of opportunity. According to the Malaysia International Islamic
Financial Centre, there are increasingly attractive and feasible possibilities
for linking Kuala Lumpur’s bustling Islamic finance community to address
substantial investment needs for critical African infrastructure projects.
Several African nations
have already successfully turned to the global sukuk (Islamic bond) market for
funding. When considering the ongoing $31 billion per year funding gap for
infrastructure on the continent, Malaysian underwriting could play a relevant
role in advancing the continent’s broader economic development agenda. With
Africa currently accounting for less than 3 percent of global Islamic banking
assets, this is the next frontier for Islamic finance.
Similarly, the halal
industry presents Malaysia with excellent opportunities for joint-entries into
Africa with ASEAN regional partners in Singapore and Indonesia. Halal players
in food, travel, and lifestyle products should begin incorporating Africa into
their global expansion strategy, if they have not already, with a view to
tapping into the fastest growing middle-class in the world, dense urban centers
and a nearly 30 percent Muslim population.
Smart Partnerships
Through smart
partnerships, the risk and complexity associated with first market entry can be
reduced, enabling companies to increase the probability of success in securing
a strategic foothold while Africa’s competition barriers are still low.
As the largest exporter
of halal goods in the world already, with exports reaching to around $11
billion in 2013, Malaysia is well-positioned to lead such a charge into Africa.
The global halal market is rapidly expanding beyond the traditional confines of
the food and beverage space, to include products such as cosmetics, tourism and
health products, becoming a more holistic concept.
Although Africa
currently represents only 15 percent of this global market, the continent’s
population is expected to double to about 1.9 billion by 2050, with the Muslim
population growing at a rate of 170 percent — both highly favorable growth
drivers ahead for halal.
While the ASEAN-Africa
nexus is still in nascent stages, Malaysia is standing out as a trailblazer for
new markets and industries. Africa is rising and its nations are turning to
Asia for partners in development. With Malaysia on track to achieve First-World
status by 2020, it is a development showcase for what this once mislabeled
“hopeless” continent is set to achieve in its own right in the coming decades.
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