Brazil moots cancelling US$900m Africa debt

Brazilian officials said on Saturday that President Dilma Rousseff, visiting Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa to mark the African Union’s 50th anniversary, was set to announce a new development agency alongside the cancellation that will  offer assistance to African countries.

“The idea of having Africa as a special relationship for Brazil is strategic for Brazil’s foreign policy,” Thomas Traumann, presidential spokesman, told reporters in Addis Ababa.

“Almost all (aid) is cancellation,” Traumann said.
Among the 12 countries whose debts were pardoned, Congo-Brazzaville was the highest with a US$352 million debt cancelled, with Tanzania’s US$237 million debt the second largest.

Traumann said the move was part of Brazil’s efforts to boost economic ties with Africa, home to some of the world’s fastest growing economies.

He added that Brazil recently established an agency to support investments in industry and development in Africa and Latin America.

Rousseff met with several African leaders, including Ethiopian Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn, with whom she signed a series of co-operation agreements on agriculture, education, air transport and science.

Brazil’s interest in Africa is part of a larger trend boosting South-South cooperation, which has attracted investment from emerging economies in developing countries, namely in Africa.

Brazil, one of five members of the BRICS emerging nations group and with a GDP of US$2,425 trillion in 2012, is the world’s seventh largest economy.

The BRICs countries — comprising Brazil, China, India and Russia — are now Africa’s largest trading partners and its biggest new group of investors. BRICS-Africa trade is seen eclipsing US$500 billion by 2015, according to Standard Bank.

Traumann said most of Brazil’s future assistance would target infrastructure, agricultural and social programmes.

“Brazil has great expertise in what we call tropicalising European crops. We have that technology,” he said.
“The idea is how to transfer that technology from Brazil to other African countries.” — Al Jazeera.

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