By
Daniel Pelz / MC
Poverty is declining and
a new middle class is springing up in Africa. This was the mantra that lured
global corporations to African markets. But now the hype is losing its gloss.
Western corporate belief in a rising African middle class
would appear to be fading. Barclays is leaving the continent. The British
banking giant is selling its South African subsidiary Absa, which it acquired
in 2005. Last year, food giant Nestle shed 15 percent of its workforce in
Africa.
"We thought Africa was the new Asia, but we
discovered that the middle class is extremely small and not growing,"
Cornel Krummenacher, chief executive for Nestle's equatorial Africa region,
told the Financial Times.
Not so long ago, Africa was perceived as a growth market.
In 2011, the African Development Bank (AfDB) concluded in a report that 350
million Africans counted as members of the middle class, that's 34 percent of
the continent's population. That sounded like a middle class boom. In 2000, the
figure was just 27 percent. More recent figures paint a less rosy picture,
however. According to the Swiss bank Credit Suisse, just 18 million Africans
qualify for membership of the middle class.
Middle
class in Rwanda but not in Switzerland?
But
not everybody agrees that Africa's middle class is small or in decline.
"There is a middle class in Africa and it is growing," said Mthuli
Ncube, who is a professor of public policy at the University of Oxford. He is
also, incidentally, the former chief economist at the AfDB who oversaw that
2011 report.
Ncube said being middle class was a question of
definition, or rather of location. "A middle class person in Switzerland
or Germany is not like a middle class person in Rwanda to be fair, so there
will be some differences," he told DW.
Critics find this unconvincing. Political scientist
Henning Melber, professor at Free State and Pretoria Universities in South
Africa, said the definition of middle class as used by the AfDB in its report
covers everybody in Africa who earns between $2 and $10 a day (1.83 and 9.13
euros).
"When I go into a supermarket in Namibia or South
Africa and buy a carton of milk that costs almost as much as it does in
Germany, then I realize this idea of what makes you middle class in Africa is
pure fantasy," Melber told DW.
Definitions
Credit Suisse has quite a different definition of middle
class, according to which anybody in South Africa who wishes to consider
themselves a member of this social grouping must have assets of not less than
$22,000.
Those who adhere to
the notion of a growing African middle class claim they can see a continent in
which affluence is spreading. There are long traffic jams because there are
more cars on the roads. Shopping malls are sprouting on every corner, a sign of
a growing middle class, they claim.
This doesn't convince Robert Kappel, former director of
German Institute of Global and Area Studies (GIGA) in Hamburg. "The
shopping mall phenomenon has nothing to do with the middle classes in the true
sense of word," he said. He says the malls are patronized by wealthy
members of an upper class who are just consuming more.
Many analysts consider it unlikely that Africa's middle
class will expand any further. "Once economic growth falters and the
bottom falls out of commodity prices, then the phenomenon of an African middle
class will disappear," said Kappel.
That is exactly what is happening. Declining commodity
prices and economic difficulties in China - Africa's key trading partner - are
driving down African economic growth rates. The International Monetary Fund
(IMF) was forced to revise downwards its growth forecasts for Africa twice last
year.
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