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Boma Summit: AU leaders sign 4D Initiative to accelerate agenda 2063

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(4 minutes read)

African leaders are signing a pact to usher in the 4D Initiative to accelerate agenda 2063 flagships at Boma Summit 2023. Agenda 2063, launched eight years ago, is the central development plan and framework of all of Africa’s 55 countries. The 4D Initiative, on the other hand, is a mechanism for implementing some of the plan’s elements by mobilising major public and private stakeholders to work more closely together.

African leaders are signing a pact to usher in the 4D Initiative to accelerate agenda 2063 flagships. Agenda 2063, launched eight years ago, is the central development plan and framework of all of Africa’s 55 countries. The 4D Initiative, on the other hand, is a mechanism for implementing some of the plan’s elements by mobilising major public and private stakeholders to work more closely together.

The Boma Summit witnessed a gathering of Africa’s key policymakers in various sectors to hasten Africa’s actualisation of the Agenda 2063 – single market integration and continent-wide prosperity. African Union and AfroChampions experts and strategists behind the summit revealed that the launching of the 4D initiative was made the centerpiece of the summit due to its immense significance to the post-pandemic recovery of the continent. The event is taking place virtually

The new 4D Pact is intended to secure tens of millions of dollars from key African and global development finance institutions to fund innovators, start-ups, researchers, SMEs and university spinoffs to play a more frontal role in the quest to make Africa self-sufficient in vital technologies and commodities like vaccines, biopharmaceuticals, artificial intelligence systems and genomic applications.

Underlying this new radical vision is a strategy to deepen cross-border and cross-sector synergies across public and private domains in Africa to create smart jobs in the context of the new geopolitical wrangling over supply chains, critical minerals and climate transitions. Besides these geopolitical pressures, which saw Africa marginalised during the pandemic as shortages of health supplies intensified and during the war in Ukraine when grain and fertilizer exports were curtailed, are Africa’s unique demographic challenges and the huge burden for job creation it creates.

The original blueprint for 4D is the Trillion Dollar Fund, set up by the African Union at the instance of African Union Heads of State, with technical support from AfroChampions. Whilst the initial emphasis was on trade, it has now become clear that without innovative production, trade alone will not suffice. The slow pace of commercialisation of the continent’s innovations as clear evidence that the laissez-faire approach has failed.

Over time, and especially after the pandemic and the Russia-Ukraine conflict, and the massive debt and cost of living crises triggered in Africa, it became clear that more urgency is needed to realise the goals of market integration as outlined in Agenda 2063, Africa’s common development plan. The missing piece is linking the fast-growing start-up and innovation ecosystems in the private sector with the classical development and aid programs that are dominated by the public sector.

In addition to crowding in funds from aid agencies, major philanthropies, and development finance institutions to support and enrich private sector financing of innovation, 4D operates through scaling instruments. These instruments are pieces of digital infrastructure that serve as amplifiers of private sector efforts. They include ProPer, Tranzyt, PanaBIOS, Transforma, and the AfCFTA Hub. Working together, they connect the individual efforts of startups, SMEs, innovators, and even e-government projects into a single continental ecosystem.

Experts at AUDA-NEPAD believe that only such coordinated interventions can overcome the massive infrastructure and institutional gaps private sector innovators confront when playing their role in Africa’s industrialisation and the broader quest to make the continent self-sufficient in vital development areas such as health, AI, and agriculture.

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Nardos Bekele-Thomas, the Chief Executive of the African Union’s main development think tank and planning agency, AUDA-NEPAD, described 4D as a complete game changer because of how it responds to these pressures. She said that for the first time, the AU and its lead agencies and affiliate pan-African institutions, with technical support from AfroChampions, are working together to influence the funding of innovation on the continent, something that has long been left to the private sector to do. To her, this is no longer tenable, since it has led to the continent being unable to cater to basic developmental needs.