
Infrastructure Investment and the Covid-19 Pandemic in Sub-Saharan Africa - Avril 2021
Mai 2021
Banque Africaine de Développement (10 pages).
The COVID-19 pandemic has challenged macroeconomic fundamentals of both developed and developing countries.
The early responses by many African governments have been on containment of the spread of the virus with restriction of movements of people through border closures, economic and social responses including social protection palliatives for vulnerable citizens, and preservation of businesses using limited monetary and fiscal instruments to mitigate the devastating effects of the pandemic. These early measures might have contributed to limit the spread of the disease. However, this should not make African governments complacent from addressing long-standing healthcare deficiencies and basic services infrastructure deficit. As countries relax the restrictions on movement of people, goods and services, the importance of investing in adequate healthcare infrastructure cannot be overlooked. Beyond spending on testing, protective equipment and ventilators, African countries should focus on improving access to adequate healthcare, clean water and sanitation infrastructure to limit their vulnerabilities to the pandemic and other future epidemics.
This brief argues that the emergence of the COVID-19 pandemic provides renewed urgency for African countries to invest in the inadequate physical infrastructure for basic services such as healthcare, clean water, and sanitation.
Investing in basic services infrastructure now can deliver a huge social and economic value, while making the continent more resilient to pandemics and other health shocks. The World Health Organization (WHO) estimates every US dollar invested in water and sanitation delivers nearly three-fold and four-fold returns, respectively, in Africa.i As the continent braces for a pandemic-induced sharp downturn in economic activities, the region’s health vulnerabilities have become a concern to many.
Therefore, the brief discusses the importance of investing in basic services infrastructure in the region despite dwindling economies caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.
It further discusses challenges of financing infrastructure for basic services, infrastructure quality and maintenance, and offer potential financing solutions. Considering the unsustainability of prolonged restrictions on the movement of people, large-scale social protection and cash handouts, and other immediate fiscal stimuli, long-term investments in infrastructure for basic services has downstream multiplier effects that can provide sustainable economic stimulus to rejuvenating African economies.