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Pardee Center Report Looks Nearly 50 years Into Africa's Future

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Alyssa Hurst

In a report made in partnership with the African Union Development Agency, Jonathan Moyer examines key trends in Africa's future

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AUDA report

In 1950, 30 percent of the global population was European. By 2030, 30 percent of the global population will be African.

Jonathan Moyer
Jonathan Moyer

鈥淭hat鈥檚 a huge transformation. An extra billion or so people,鈥 says Jonathan Moyer, director of the 91桃色鈥檚 . 鈥淚t means huge changes in the global system, and people should be aware of them and the magnitude of these changes.鈥

Massive shifts like these present formidable questions 鈥 ones which Moyer and his team of researchers at Pardee aim to help answer. In fact, this is the very mission of the center, created in 2007 to improve the human condition through long-term forecasting and global trend analysis.

The trajectory of Africa鈥檚 demographic shifts and other transformations are outlined in a prepared by the Pardee Center in collaboration with (AUDA-NEPAD), which serves as the development arm of the African Union. The report was launched by the AUDA-NEPAD in Addis Ababa in front of influential figures in African politics, including Vera Songwe, head of the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa.

The Pardee Center鈥檚 supporting role with the AUDA-NEPAD dates back to 2012 and promises to extend well into the future. 鈥淲e are in conversations to formalize the partnership听in a more concrete way,鈥 Moyer says. 鈥淥ur role is to sit back and wait for guidance and instructions from them, because they are setting the agenda and we are filling a gap in that technical space.鈥

Moyer hopes that the report will help guide the AUDA-NEPAD in its decision making over the next 50 years. 鈥淲e want to build capacity to do analysis using the tools we have here to help continental, regional and national governments better plan for development and to make choices that prioritize human capability improvements within the context of environmental sustainability,鈥 Moyer says. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 the goal.鈥

Pardis Mahdavi, acting dean of the Josef Korbel School of International Studies, home to the Pardee Center, considers this pairing of research and application critical to the school鈥檚 mission. 鈥淭he Pardee Center鈥檚 partnership with the African Union Development Agency is an excellent example of the Korbel School鈥檚 broader mission to bring academics and policy makers to the same table, and to marry research to real-world applications and solutions,鈥 she says. 鈥淲e're striving to break down the walls between academics and practitioners, and this partnership is a good model for how this works. For our students, it's a unique opportunity to see how what they learn in the classroom plays out across the globe.鈥

While predicting the future seems tricky, Moyer is confident Africa will see transformations in four areas, all discussed in the report: demographics, human development, technology and natural systems. 鈥淪ome things are more certain than others,鈥 he says. 鈥淭he demographic future is pretty certain. The massive population growth is happening. 鈥 Human development is happening 鈥攖hat鈥檚 persistent. Education will improve. Life expectancies will improve. Renewable energy growth is a persistent trend. The fact that climate change is happening is a persistent trend.鈥

All of that exists within a framework of uncertainty, of course. Governance and choice remain unpredictable as ever, presenting a true wild card that could vastly impact the country鈥檚 trajectory. And, with a booming population comes challenges related to education, health care and infrastructure. What鈥檚 more, just as technological advancements like cell phones and ATMs can improve lives, others,听like automation and robotics, threaten to reduce the number of jobs, even while accelerating development.

鈥淏eing aware of the big transformations that we are highlighting is important, but then also understanding that building government capacity, improving transparency and effectiveness, improving inclusion 鈥 these are all important drivers of the future of the continent,鈥 Moyer says. 鈥淧olitical decision makers, civil society and citizens will make the decision about where to go, so we are meant to play a background role in this space.鈥

Without a doubt, though, says Moyer, Africa is a power on the rise. 鈥淎frica is going to be a giant economic block and a giant demographic block,鈥 he explains. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a huge amount of uncertainty still, but Africa will be bigger, wealthier and more developed.鈥

And, Moyer adds, it has a slight competitive edge when it comes to sustainable development: 鈥淭here isn鈥檛 another region that developed with a continental organization like the AUDA-NEPAD that鈥檚 trying to help guide the development. This is completely unique.鈥