Picture a great market at dawn, and two traders
arriving with the same basket of fruit. The first trader is well known. He
wears a good suit, speaks with ease and comes from a town whose name inspires trust.
His basket is glanced at, weighed quickly and sold at a fair price.
The second carries fruit of the same quality, sometimes
fresher and sweeter. But he comes from a village people had learned to describe
before they had learned to understand. So they ask more questions.
They inspect
his basket twice. They discount him. They warn buyers that perhaps the road
from his village is unsafe, perhaps his scales are off, perhaps next season's
harvest will fail.
In 1873 a slight, asthmatic Englishman named Walter
Bagehot explained the City of London to itself, and produced the finest book
ever written about money called Lombard Street. Bagehot’s central insight was
almost theological.
He posited that the entire towering apparatus of Victorian
finance, bills, bonds and discount
houses, that moved fortunes before breakfast, rested not on gold but on one
fragile intangible thing. Confidence. This instinctively led to credit or
credere in Latin.
Credere means to believe, trust or place one’s
heart. It meant entrusting someone with something valuable, so if you entrusted
money to someone, you were extending trust.
Bagehot understood this and explained that belief
cannot be argued into being. It is either earned or guaranteed by someone
the world already trusts.
A loan is extended on the belief that the lender will
be repaid; an interest rate is the price a lender puts on his doubt; and the
deepest law of the trade is a paradox. That the man who must prove he is worthy
of credit has, in the very act of proving, already begun to lose it.
In this sense, the tragedy of the second trader
was not that his fruit was bad. It is that he was priced before he was seen.
This is the story of Kenya and Africa at large in
the global economy.
For many years, the continent has not only
suffered from the shortage of capital, infrastructure, technology and fair
trade, but from something more intangible and highly expensive. It has suffered
from the price of perception.
An investor looks at a project in Africa and
immediately adds a risk premium. A lender looks at an African sovereign and
prices uncertainty into the loan. A rating agency looks at an African economy
and often sees fragility before it sees growth.
A global company looks at
African minerals and too often wants extraction without value addition. The
result is that before the first road is built, before the first factory opens, or
even before the first job is created, Africa has already been charged an
invisible tax.
That tax is called risk.
Hence why the conversation about President
Ruto’s presence at the recently held G7 Summit in Évian, France, must not be reduced
to the photos, handshakes, motorcades or whether or not he was the first
Kenyan president to be invited. It should be understood as a fight over this
hidden tax.
He was not merely saying that Africa needs investments. He was
restating that Africa needs a financial architecture that stops punishing it
for being African.
However, the reflex in our commentariat is to
dismiss every presidential journey as tourism billed to the taxpayer. President
Ruto sat as the only African leader at the table of the G7. He did not beg for
money.
He argued for belief. His thesis, which was placed across three working
sessions, was that Africa is a victim of vast mispricing.
He called it a
capital injustice whereby the continent is charged ruinous interest, not
because its fundamentals are poor, but because the world’s risk models still
squint at it through Victorian eyes.
The President’s seat at this table was itself a
line of credit telling the world to extend to Kenya a measure of belief. And
the architecture that he pressed for was the Africa Trade and Investment
Development Insurance (ATIDI) and the Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency (MIGA),
blended finance, and instrument for debt transparency and risk sharing.
He
stressed that a guarantee, though not money, is confidence. This may be the
most Bagehotian sentence ever spoken by a Kenyan or African head of state. And
he was right.
The G7 nations face shrinking or flatlining
budgets for traditional Official Development Assistance (ODA). So at the G7,
they championed alongside Kenya as a partner country, moving towards an
investment and guarantee model designed to de-risk and mobilise private capital
for emerging markets, particularly across Africa. This endorsement formalises
ATIDI as a primary vehicle for turning perceived un-investable projects into
highly secure, bankable options for international financiers.
To back this G7 push, regional and non-regional
partners are actively reinforcing ATIDI’s balance sheet with the African
Development Bank approving a $125 million equity investment into ATIDI to
expand its capacity to support the continent's new economic corridors.
Likewise, MIGA is the political risk insurance
arm of the World Bank Group and the G7 leaders welcomed the joint work of the
World Bank and AfDB to scale up MIGA’s guarantee instruments.
So for instance,
if an international commercial bank wants to fund a major renewable energy
project but is blocked by strict internal country-risk ceilings, MIGA will
issue a non-commercial risk guarantee. And if the government breaches its
contract, MIGA covers the losses.
In practical terms, these endorsements allow a
pension fund in Frankfurt to lend to a geothermal plant in Naivasha at a rate
that reflects the project, not the area code.
The ultimate challenge for modern
development finance is no longer finding external funding, but successfully
de-risking and channelling these immense reservoirs of domestic savings out of
passive government securities and into productive, high-throughput regional
infrastructure.
Bringing this closer home, the continent sits on
a massive $4 trillion of its own domestic capital, driven by rapidly
growing pension funds, insurance savings and sovereign wealth portfolio
waiting only for an architecture brave enough to mobilise it.
Begs the question. Will Ruto be that architect?
For too long, Africa has been invited into
global rooms as a problem. Climate change victim. Debt victim. Conflict victim.
Poverty victim. Migration source. Disease risk. Humanitarian burden. The language
used may be polite, but the posture is demeaning. It invites sympathy, but
sympathy is not power.
We also speak of capital as if it flows wherever
opportunity exists. Actually, it does not. Money flows through credit agencies,
guarantee mechanisms, insurance and legal protection. The richer world spent
decades laying its own.
At Évian, the President presented a different
argument. Kenya and Africa are not asking to be pitied. We are asking not to be
discounted. And this is the quiet shift in Ruto's diplomacy where the old
posture asked for aid, but the new one asks for financial instruments.
This is
precisely the same argument that the recently read budget made, where Treasury
declared the era of building every road on a sovereign loan was over and
instead turning to private capital through public-private-partnerships.
Évian
and our budget are not two separate events. They are one strategy. And that is
to stop financing the country on the state’s overpriced credit card and start
financing it on guaranteed private capital that does not crowd out the Gikomba
hawker.
This distinction matters.
At Evian, President Ruto told the world to pay
attention to Africa because the future of global growth will be shaped here. There
is no question that the world is redesigning supply chains and searching for
critical minerals. But to benefit, Kenya and by extension Africa cannot arrive
as a supplicant.
We are a country and continent of young people, minerals,
markets, arable land, renewable energy potential, entrepreneurs and digital
adoption.
We cannot forever be described through the vocabulary of lack. In
essence, what he presented was a correction that Africa is not expensive
because it lacks value, but it is expensive because the world has mispriced it.
Because for decades the continent's mineral
story has been where Africa digs, others process, Africa exports weight while
others export value.
So when Kenya speaks of critical minerals and insists on
domestic processing, it is contesting an old arrangement. The task is not to
move minerals out of the ground but rather to move Kenyans up the value chain.
And Kenya's advantage is certainly not about the size of our reserves. It is
definitely about our stability, ports, legal confidence, green power and
connectivity that can enable us to become a node in the supply chain rather
than a mine. A mine can be exhausted, but a node continues to accumulate
relevance.
Do we have problems? Absolutely. And major ones
at that. Corruption, insecurity, poor governance, weak implementation and
enforcement, policy unpredictability and debt pressures are real.
So I concede that we should not romanticise
ourselves. But neither should we permit the world to confuse our problems with
our total identity.
Finally, my unsolicited advice is to President
Ruto. Bank this. A summit photograph is a souvenir, but a signed guarantee
facility is an asset. ATIDI has just been recapitalised for precisely this
purpose.
So, the capacity now exists. What is now missing is the deal. So,
convert access into investment, minerals into factories, guarantees into
cheaper capital, and do so with unfashionable speed, anchoring a concrete
instrument that outlives the news cycle.
Every banker knows that if he has to prove
that he is worthy of credit, however good may be his arguments, in fact his
credit is gone - Walter Bagehot
The writer is a political economist