Showing posts with label Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs Johnnie Carson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs Johnnie Carson. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 21, 2009

Seeking a New Path to Stability in Sudan, and Africa





Johnnie Carson

The Obama administration on October 19 announced a new U.S. policy on Sudan that seeks engagement with the Sudanese government to end atrocities in Darfur, implement the peace agreement between North and South Sudan, and prevent Sudan from becoming a haven for terrorism. Johnnie Carson, assistant secretary of state for African affairs, says for the United States to offer incentives, Khartoum will need to show clear progress on all three areas. On development issues facing the continent, he stresses the importance of spurring an agricultural green revolution similar to that of Asia in the 1970s, and of encouraging regulatory reform that attracts greater foreign investment. "There is no doubt that the greatest driver of development in Africa over the long period will be from foreign and domestic investment," he says.

There's a perception that Africa isn't a safe place to do business because of some of the conflicts reflected in major media coverage of Africa, probably most notably right now, Sudan. The administration has announced a new Sudan policy that focuses on Darfur, the implementation of the Comprehensive Peace Agreement, and preventing a safe haven for terrorism in Sudan. Which of these three areas would the Sudanese government need to show progress on to receive incentives from the U.S. government?

Sudan would have to show progress on all three of these areas. They are all extremely important and they are not divisible. We need to see an end to the humanitarian crisis in Darfur and a resolution of the political conflict that exists in that region of Sudan. We need to see a full implementation of the North-South peace agreement. We have to have continued assurances that Sudan will not in fact become a safe haven for international terrorists. Progress must be concrete, identifiable, and irreversible across a broad front. There will be benchmarks and milestones, which are clearly recognizeable by us and by them as progress, but all of these issues are all of significant and important weight to us.

Let me also say something about your question about American investors saying that it's instability that is at fault. Far too many American investors look at Africa as a single, homogenous, unified, monolith. Africa is composed of some fifty-three different African states, forty-eight of them in sub-Saharan Africa. Comparing Botswana, South Africa, and Namibia to what is going on in Sudan is the equivalent of saying that Chicago was in turmoil when Katrina hit Louisiana. The distances between Chicago and Louisiana are as great as the distances between Southern Africa and Khartoum and the differences are just as stark as well. It is important that African countries do as much as they possibly can to insure that they have the kind of legal and regulatory environments that are pro-business and pro-growth. It is equally important that American companies also do their due diligence in looking at African countries individually and not associate the crises that may occur in Darfur or Eastern Congo with the real prospects for being able to advance their business interests in Tanzania, for example, which is remarkably stable and has been since its independence in 1963.

The Comprehensive Peace Agreement [CPA] is such a complicated document with many benchmarks and different tasks that are meant to be accomplished ahead of the 2011 referendum [on whether southern Sudan will become an independent state]. Could you highlight two or three concrete implementation benchmarks that you are looking to as the most important ones that the Government of South Sudan and Khartoum will need to meet in the next year?

"There will be benchmarks and milestones, which are clearly recognizeable by us and by them as progress, but all of these issues are all of significant and important weight to us."

With respect to the North-South agreement, it is important that agreements be reached by the North and the South on the census that draws up the number of people who are in fact in the North and who are in the South. Second, it's important that the national elections that were agreed to in the CPA be held. Thirdly, it is important that the modalities on the referendum be agreed to in the North and in the South as to whose votes will be counted, what percentage will be required for unity, or for independence, depending on what the people decide. There must be a decision on the issue of the census; there must be a completion of the national elections; there has to be a date certain for the referendum; and the modalities of the referendum, including the actual percentage required for yes or no, also should be worked out. There should be an agreement on how the referendum will take place in the Three Areas--Kordofan, Blue Nile, and Abyei. All of those issues are yet to be fully resolved but they have to be fully resolved if there's going to be a peaceful transition.

The United States is focused on sustained economic development on the continent. Could you talk about one or two countries that you see as models in terms of forward-thinking development policies?

Even in a time like this when the global economy is in relatively difficult shape, countries like South Africa, Mauritius, Botswana, Namibia, Tanzania, and Ghana have all adopted pro-growth policies. They have all accepted the notion that they need sound currencies; they need to have a balanced budget; they need to have good fiscal policies; they have to have good environments that promote both domestic and foreign investment; they have to have good regulatory environments; and they have to be good stewards of the resources that they have in their country. Along with countries that I've mentioned, I would include amongst that list Rwanda, which has in fact done remarkably well. All of these countries tend to have good central banks, good finance ministers, excellent policies, good environments for voting, trade, and investment.

What are the primary tools that the United States will be using to complement existing African economic development efforts?

We need to continue to be a strong partner in providing development assistance to the African countries in greatest need. We need not only to provide humanitarian assistance where it is required, but we also need to have foreign assistance programs that help Africa deal with the issues related to health, education, and human capacity growth, because those are areas that are frequently important but underfunded. The second part is clearly the need to do everything we can to support the expansion of trade and development and foreign investment into African countries. There is no doubt that the greatest driver of development in Africa over the long period will be from foreign and domestic investment. Foreign and domestic investment will help set up businesses that provide employment, that will provide production, that will provide a base of revenue for taxes for governments, that will build up exports, that will drive the earnings of foreign exchange, and that will probably--if it's good capital investment--help create smaller companies that will also do the same thing: create job opportunities, create employment for people, create tax revenues for governments, create product sales, some of which will be for export.

"Comparing Botswana, South Africa, and Namibia to what is going on in Sudan is the equivalent of saying that Chicago was in turmoil when Katrina hit Louisiana."

We can [promote] that, as we should, through continued support for AGOA [the African Growth and Opportunity Act], which remains the most important instrument for trading with Africa. It opens our market to approximately six thousand items on a duty-free basis. We encourage African countries to diversify and to take greater advantage of that. Many African countries that have been a part of AGOA have largely used the textile benefits from AGOA. Only one country, South Africa, uses a broad range of the AGOA trade benefits. We still think that AGOA is extremely important, we think that MCC [the Millennium Challenge Corporation] is extremely important. The Overseas Private Investment Corporation [OPIC] is extraordinarily important because it provides loans and loan guarantees to American investors going overseas. We think that the Export-Import Bank, which is a source of financing for American companies investing in trade in African countries, is critical. And we hope that there will in fact be a successful Doha round because that too can provide benefits for trade and investment for African countries. But beyond that, we hope that the U.S. Trade Representative's Office will continue to play a very useful role in broadening out the trade and investment agreements that can be signed with African countries.

Can you discuss the motivations behind the agriculture and food security initiative that has been announced by the administration? Why is the United States making this initiative such a priority in its overall Africa policy?

Some 60 to 70 percent of all Africans depend primarily or secondarily on agriculture as their primary source of livelihood. Over 50 percent of all Africans continue to live in rural areas where agriculture is the primary source of their economic existence. Agriculture remains the most important economic sector for the vast majority of Africans in sub-Saharan Africa. Doing something in agriculture probably has a greater impact on the average African than almost any other area. But as we well know, the agricultural sector has generally underperformed [in] Africa. The whole effort here is designed to help in hunger, food shortages across the continent, and to help give Africa the opportunity to create the kind of agricultural green revolution that helped to transform Asia and Latin America twenty years ago. That agricultural green revolution has not come to Africa. If it can be brought to Africa, it can help to end hunger and starvation at the family, village, and community level. But it can also help to generate substantial agrobusiness across Africa, where those countries that have favorable agricultural conditions are able to grow increasingly large volumes of crops and export and sell them to their neighbors or sell them overseas in a broader market.

One interesting part of the policy is the focus on regional integration on the continent, where many countries are landlocked and would benefit from trading with their neighbors. How can the United States encourage regional integration?

One is to work with the regional organizations to remove and eliminate tariff barriers, especially on things like agricultural products. [Another is] to improve and increase the uniform nature of vital sanitary conditions that apply to the movement of agriculture and livestock across borders.

We can hopefully work with those organizations to improve the regulations and the trade regimes that have inhibited movement of food across borders. We can work with governments to improve the infrastructure that exists between countries, both road and other transportation networks. All of these things are important to get crops across borders from one country to another. Small market sizes sometimes create problems but they can also provide opportunities.

Interviewee:
Johnnie Carson, Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs
Interviewer:
Stephanie Hanson, Associate Director and Coordinating Editor, CFR.org

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Thursday, July 9, 2009

AGOA Forum Seeks to Expand U.S.-Africa Trade and Investment

Assistant Secretary Johnnie Carson speaks to African diplomats

The eighth African Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA) Forum, which will be held in Nairobi, Kenya, August 4–6, is the only ministerial event held annually between the United States and sub-Saharan Africa, said the assistant secretary of state for African affairs, Ambassador Johnnie Carson, who said the Obama administration is seeking to strengthen and deepen America’s ties with the region.

Carson spoke to the African diplomatic corps in Washington June 19 at the State Department, along with Peter Ogego, the Kenyan ambassador to the United States, whose country will host the forum. They were joined by a broad array of other senior U.S. officials who plan to attend the trade ministerial. All had gathered to brief the diplomatic corps on the ministerial and to solicit input.

President Obama, with the close support of Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, “wants to engage positively, actively with Africa,” Carson told his audience, in one of his first appearances before the African diplomatic corps as assistant secretary of state for African affairs. “You are clearly part of our foreign policy agenda,” he told his audience. “We value Africa and the role that it plays in the international community, and it is our determination to try to strengthen the relationship, build it as broadly and as deeply as we possibly can.

“In building bridges and in building relationships with countries,” he said, “it is indeed a two-way street. We can do our part, and we are determined to do that. We hope that we will have strong partners on the other side to help work with us to help achieve our objectives.”

AGOA is a part of that process, he said. “AGOA is a part of the effort to strengthen the relationship in the area of trade and commerce, and we want to do more. We want to build on this.”

Carson, a former U.S. ambassador to Uganda, Zimbabwe and Kenya, said the United States is “extraordinarily pleased” that the government of Kenya will host the eighth AGOA forum, which will be centered on the theme “Realizing the Full Potential of AGOA through the Expansion of Trade and Investment.”

Trade and investment, Carson said, are two of the “many important links” between sub-Saharan Africa and the United States, “which share many historic bonds and common objectives.”

The Trade and Development Act of 2000, which created AGOA, mandated an annual trade and economic cooperation forum with eligible sub-Saharan African nations to discuss expanding trade and investment relations between the United States and sub-Saharan Africa. The act offers tangible incentives for African countries to continue their efforts to open their economies and build free markets.

At a time of economic crisis, he explained, it is important that both the United States and sub-Saharan African countries “work cooperatively to protect the advances in economic growth that have been made and lessen the negative impact of market fluctuations.”

To ensure the widest possible U.S. government participation, Carson said, members of the U.S. Congress have been briefed on AGOA and have been asked as well for their views. “We have also been working very closely with members of civil society and the private sector to ensure that we have captured their concerns as well,” he added.

The AGOA Forum will begin with private sector and civil society events August 4 at the same time the Africa Consultative Group convenes. The ministerial will begin August 5 and conclude August 6.

Carson praised the government of Kenya for doing an “absolutely wonderful job” of organizing what he predicted would be a “dynamic and very successful” AGOA Forum.

Carson thanked the African diplomats for providing their suggestions on the AGOA Forum and, in particular, Kenya’s ambassador, Ogego, for his work to make the event a success.

Topics to be covered at the forum range from democracy and good governance to regional trade integration. Discussion topics include “Possible Effects of Global Challenges on AGOA,” “Africa Trade,” “Successes and Prospects,” “Transportation and Supply Chain Infrastructure” and “Meeting Food Markets Poverty Challenges by Transforming Staple Food Markets and Trade Systems.”

Carson told the diplomats: “We value your input, your engagement and your activity in making this year’s forum a success. I certainly look forward in working with your governments in Nairobi to make this one of the best AGOA Forums that we have ever had.”

By Charles W. Corey

http://www.besternews.com/related/America.gov-World%20Regions:%20Africa/AGOA%20Forum%20Seeks%20to%20Expand%20U.S.-Africa%20Trade%20and%20Investment/?ref=world|africa/

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Monday, May 25, 2009

High-Level Engagement with Africa Has Started

Washington — “High-level engagement has already started” between the Obama administration and Africa, Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs Johnnie Carson said May 19.

Speaking at a gala reception in Washington marking the beginning of “Africa Week,” Carson said: “Most of the Obama administration’s Africa team is in place, and we are gearing up. We will continue to build on and strengthen the strong bipartisan consensus in Congress and among the people of America that has motivated U.S. policy towards Africa.”

“Over the next four years, we will be focusing our efforts on strengthening democracy, promoting sustainable development, resolving or mitigating conflict, and dealing with transnational issues such as climate change and agriculture,” he pledged.

Additionally, he said, President Obama was expected to meet shortly with Tanzanian President Jakaya Kikwete at the White House. “Secretary Clinton will be meeting with the Angolan minister of foreign affairs, Assunção Afonso dos Anjos. She has already met with her Nigerian and South African counterparts. And in July,” Carson said, “the president will be making his first trip to Africa in his current capacity, when he travels to Ghana.”

Earlier that same day, Carson told his audience, on the 16th anniversary of U.S.-Angolan bilateral relations, United States Trade Representative Ron Kirk signed the U.S.-Angolan Trade and Investment Framework Agreement with Angolan Minister dos Anjos.

Carson said, “It is anticipated that Secretary Clinton will be traveling to Kenya to participate in the African Growth and Opportunity Act [AGOA] Forum in early August, and possibly visit other countries as well.”

Speaking to a capacity crowd made up of African ambassadors, business executives, Africanists and well-wishers, Carson reminded his audience that “Africa has played and continues to play a major role in the life of the United States and today is one of America’s most important friends and global partners.

“The ties that bind the United States and Africa are stronger and more enduring today than they have ever been,” he said. Those ties, he added, “extend from the shores of West Africa, where freed American slaves founded the proud state of Liberia, to the White House, where President Barack Obama, the son of a Kenyan father, is now serving as president of this country.”

The links that connect Africa and the United States, he said, are built on a “rock-solid foundation.” He reminded everyone that more than 13 percent of America’s population is of African descent and that that number continues to grow because of immigration laws that have opened the door to a new generation of African immigrants.

“Across the African continent, the trans-Atlantic connections and strong feelings of friendship and good will are kept alive by thousands of African professionals, political leaders and government workers who have been able over the years to travel to the United States to attend our many colleges and universities,” he said.

Volunteer opportunities like the Peace Corps, which sends thousands of Americans to Africa each year, and education opportunities like the Fulbright Program and Humphrey Scholarships, which bring hundreds of Africans to the United States, guarantee that the links that connect Africa and the United States will remain strong well into the future — and may even generate another president of the United States.

Turning to democracy, Carson said, “Africans have always shared U.S. values and principles about democracy, and African governments are in the process of consolidating the democratic gains of the recent past.”

In January 2009, Carson noted, Ghana saw its fourth successful election and second peaceful transfer of power from one party to another, and in South Africa, the election in April of President Jacob Zuma marked the fourth successful election since the end of the apartheid era.

“Ghana’s and South Africa’s elections are two of the most recent marquee events showcasing the winds of change that have swept the continent,” he said, “but they are far from the only ones. The elections also demonstrate that democracy is not a one-time event, but a process.”

America’s ties with Africa are also based on a strong strategic and economic foundation, Carson said. “Today, approximately 17 percent of America’s oil imports come from Africa, with Nigeria supplying some 8 percent of America’s needs, followed by major imports from Angola, Algeria and Equatorial Guinea.”

Nigeria, Angola and Algeria provide 98 percent of liquefied natural gas imports into the eastern United States, he noted.

“In the months to come,” Carson told his audience, “I look forward to getting reacquainted with those of you that I already know, and to meeting for the first time those I have not yet had the pleasure of meeting. Please again accept my congratulations for a successful Africa Week 2009.”


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