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Conference on Islamic microfinance in Jeddah, co-organized with Islamic Development Bank, on 30 April and 1 June
AFD and the Islamic Development Bank have co-organized an international conference on Islamic microfinance in Jeddah (Saudi Arabia) with CGAP (microfinance network led by the World Bank). This conference gathered major players in Islamic microfinance and provided the opportunity to review the practices and products of this financing method which is experiencing rapid development.
A rapidly developing method to finance the economy
The work of the conference reviewed the practices, products and volumes of this financing method, which is experiencing rapid development with a billion dollar turnover and an annual growth rate of 30%. It also highlighted the results of a study jointly led by CGAP and AFD.
This conference was organized in the context of the partnership agreement signed last January between AFD and the Islamic Development Bank (IsDB).
The exchanges were rich and lively and brought to light the strengths and weaknesses of these tools, which are increasingly requested in a number of countries where AFD operates. They also more clearly identified the needs of beneficiaries, financial institutions and central banks, which play an essential role in terms of the regulatory framework and regulation.
A whole host of innovative experiences in the field
Several observations were made: the existence of a strong demand for this type of financial product, particularly from the poorest; the proliferation of innovative experiences in the field, which are often poorly identified; the need to launch benchmarking exercises in order to build technical, financial and institutional references.
A knowledge platform on the Internet
It was agreed that the various donors and institutions concerned, including IsDB and AFD, will support this process by promoting the implementation of information and exchange tools, such as a knowledge platform backed up by a dedicated website, and by holding an annual conference. An invitation was launched for the next one to be held at AFD’s headquarters in Paris.
Bilateral talks were held between AFD’s Chief Executive Officer, Dov Zerah, and the President of IsDB, Mr. Ali, on the sidelines of this conference, and meetings between the respective operational departments defined practical ways of implementing the agreement, notably the possibility of staff exchanges and the first cofinancing operations in the Mediterranean.
Publication of study “Reducing the Cost of Migrant Remittances and Optimizing their Impact on Development”
This study was led by a team of experts, under the supervision of Savings without Borders, in Morocco, Tunisia and Senegal, as well as in the Comoros. It proposes practical solutions to reduce the costs of migrant remittances and increase their impact on development.
The proposals made by the study aim to reduce the average cost of migrant remittances and to optimize their impact on the development of African countries. They specifically focus on improving linked bank accounts (dual bank accounts for migrants in their country of residence and in their home country with activities coordinated between the banks of both countries), the development of innovative financial products, support for electronic payment technologies and the adaptation of regulatory and legislative frameworks.
What are the lessons learned from the study?
Due to their importance for the recipient communities, the flows of money from migrants tend to remain stable and are less sensitive to changes in the economic climate.
How to optimize remittances and their impact on development
- Reducing the cost of migrant remittances will increase their contribution to development.
- An understanding of the local context is the key to reducing the cost of remittances and informal flows.
- It would appear that the cost of remittances in the Maghreb region and franc zone has stabilized at a level that remains too high.
- While the profile of actors is becoming more diverse, there is still a need to develop the range of services in order to be more competitive.
- An overhaul of regulatory frameworks, with the aim of promoting diversification in the range of services and financial products, would help increase competition and reduce the cost of remittances.
- Four types of financial and technological services and products can contribute to reducing the cost of remittances.
- Actors, services, tools, new technologies…: there are ultimately five areas to be explored in order to expand and strengthen the range of banking and non-banking products and encourage both a reduction in the cost of remittances and co-development.
Developing an African broadband telecoms network in 29 countries
During the signing, Ibrahim Mayaki, Chief Executive Officer of the NEPAD Planning and Coordinating Agency (NPCA) and former Prime Minister of Niger, and Yves Boudot, Director of AFD’s Sub-Saharan Africa Department, had the opportunity to discuss – in addition to ICT development in Africa – the headway made by the Programme for Infrastructure Development in Africa (PIDA), an initiative led by the African Union Commission, NEPAD and African Development Bank.
AFD’s long-standing support to NEPAD’s New Information Technologies initiatives
Since 2003, AFD has been supporting NEPAD’s activities in the telecoms sector (e-Africa Program) via an earmarked grant and the joint AFD-DBSA Project Preparation and Study Fund. These funds have cofinanced preparatory services for NEPAD’s ICT operations and have provided a residential technical assistant (on assignment since July 2009) to support the project for the UMOJANET (“umoja” means “union” in Swahili) broadband transmission virtual network.
This new financing has been delegated from the European Infrastructure Fund (EU-ITF) and follows on from an €850,000 AFD grant (allocated in 2006) to support NEPAD’s initiative to develop a continent-wide broadband transmission virtual network.
Umojanet is extending Uhurunet
The grant that has been allocated will finance the study program that results from the technical assistant’s research to finish off the design of the concept and of the UMOJANET network. The aim is to extend it to the 29 countries in North, West and Central Africa. This will complete both coverage on the continent and the UHURUNET project for Southern Africa.
This project aims to offer African operators a pan-African network of fiber-optic transmission channels. The resulting interconnection offer is required to meet criteria for comprehensiveness, guaranteed quality, open access, non-discrimination and lowest possible cost. The bid invitations will be published in February 2012.
AFD’s approach in supporting NEPAD’s activities is based on its research on promoting regional integration via the construction of major communication networks as a complement to the private sector. This strategy is in line with those adopted by other donors (World Bank, ADB, EIB, KfW, DBSA…). It previously prompted AFD to provide USD9.5m of cofinancing alongside other donors in 2007 for the Eastern African EASSy submarine cable project.
The signing of this additional financing for the implementation of the UMOJANET project should allow NPCA to present an effective implementation plan for a fiber-optic broadband network in West, Central and North Africa over the next 12 months. This will complete both coverage on the continent and the UHURUNET project for Southern Africa.
Que fait l'AFD en matière de lutte contre la faim ?
Volatilité des marchés agricoles et prévention des crises alimentaires sont au cœur des priorités de la présidence française pour le « G20 agriculture » qui a réuni pour la première fois, à Paris, les ministres de l'agriculture des pays du G20.
A cette occasion, décryptage des enjeux de la lutte contre l'insécurité alimentaire et précisions sur les objectifs et les actions menées par l'AFD dans le domaine.
Décryptage avec ce dossier spécial « Sécurité alimentaire » au lendemain du "G20 agricole" qui a réuni pour la première fois, à Paris, les ministres de l'agriculture des pays du G20.
► L'éradication de la faim n'est pas une utopie. Des solutions existent. Abolir la faim dans le monde « maintenant », tribune du Pr Ismaïl Serageldin et Dov Zerah
► 3 questions à Jean-Luc François, directeur de la division Développement agricole et rural
► Focus sur le Ghana, un pays pour qui l'agriculture est au coeur des priorités
"Moderniser les process agricoles mais également notre façon de penser le monde"
3 questions à Jean-Luc François
Jean-Luc François est responsable de la division Développement agricole et rural à l'AFD
Qu’entend par sécurité alimentaire ?
La sécurité alimentaire signifie que tous mangent à leur faim. Mais il ne suffit pas de nourrir les gens pour qu’ils aient faim. Il faut augmenter leurs revenus.
Quels sont, d’après vous, les causes de la très grande vulnérabilité alimentaire dans laquelle vivent les pays du Sud aujourd’hui ?
Hormis des causes structurelles et locales, nous sortons d’une décennie où la doxa dans le monde des économistes du développement était : libéralisation et nouvelles technologies. Cependant – cause ou conséquence ? – la vulnérabilité aux phénomènes climatiques critiques, l’accroissement de la demande des pays émergents, au premier rang desquels la Chine, et le passage de leurs populations à des régimes carnés – beaucoup plus consommateurs de ressources naturelles – ont provoqué une réduction drastique des régions excédentaires et donc une flambée des prix. Les pays du Sud, de plus en plus dépendants de leurs importations de denrées alimentaires et où la population rurale est extrêmement pauvre, ont été particulièrement touchés par cette flambée des prix.
Aujourd’hui, nous sommes toujours dans cette grande vulnérabilité alimentaire.
Quelle est la stratégie prônée par la France et l’AFD ?
Pour répondre au défi de la faim, notre axe prioritaire est de moderniser l’agriculture des pays du Sud. Moderniser les process agricoles certes mais également notre façon de penser le monde et notre environnement. Il convient de conjuguer réponse globale et solutions locales.
La mise en place d’instances d’échanges, de régulation régionales, voire mondiale, en matière de politique agricole et de marchés des matières agricoles sont devenues une nécessité pour la majorité des acteurs du secteur.
En Afrique, par exemple, l’AFD travaille avec la Communauté économique des États de l’Afrique de l’Ouest (CEDEAO) à la mise en place d’une gestion régionale des risques pour répondre aux désordres du marché.
Quels sont les axes d’intervention prioritaires en matière de développement rural et agricole ?
Nous intervenons en matière de structuration des filières, d’innovation, d’assurance et de crédit agricole ainsi que dans le domaine de la formation.
Des filières agricoles plus fortes sont également un moyen de lutter contre la vulnérabilité des populations. De la production à l’exportation en passant par l’accompagnement d’opérateurs intermédiaires, l’AFD accompagne certains de nos pays partenaires dans la structuration de ces filières.
Nous avons mis au point une palette d’outils financiers accessibles aux acteurs agricoles, en mixant prêts et dons, en développant des systèmes de garanties (fonds ARIZ par exemple).
Enfin, nous participons également à la recherche que ce soit sur les impacts de la libéralisation sur les agricultures du sud, sur la volatilité des prix et des moyens de la combattre, sur l’appropriation des terres, sur les filières vivrières, etc.
L’AFD est reconnu par ses partenaires comme un bailleur de fonds qui a une vision robuste de l’agriculture. Cependant, notre activité dans un pays, dans un secteur ne dépend pas que de nous. En effet, l’AFD répond à des demandes de ses partenaires. A nous de les convaincre.
Focus sur un pays, le Ghana, pour qui l'agriculture est au coeur des priorités
Interview de Bruno Leclerc, directeur de l'agence AFD d'Accra (durée 7 mn)
Abolir la faim dans le monde «maintenant»
Tribune du Professseur Ismail Serageldin et Dov Zerah, parue dans les Echos le 22 juin.
"L'éradication de la faim n'est pas une utopie. Des solutions existent. A la veille du G20 agricole, c'est plus que jamais une cause d'intérêt universel. L'agriculture africaine doit redevenir une priorité de l'aide internationale. "
AFD Annual Report 2010 published
Dov Zerah, Chief Executive Officer of Agence Française de Développement, presented AFD’s 2010 results today. With €6.8 billion of commitment approvals, AFD’s activity continued its upward trend in 2010. AFD has scaled up its presence alongside its partners in developing and emerging countries and has set out to consolidate its economic model.
►Download the Annual Report 2010 in French (PDF)
2010: a new year of growth to support development
With €832 million of budget resources allocated by the State,
AFD provided €6.8 billion of project financing in 2010, i.e. an 11% rise on 2009. Its activity accounted for 28% of France’s official development assistance. AFD also paid back €104 million of dividends to the State.
Africa remains the priority with €2.1 billion of financing in 2010.
Two-thirds of the financing break down between infrastructure, urban development, productive sectors and agriculture.
In 2010, AFD’s financing will contribute to:
- Improving drinking water supply systems for 33 million people
- Getting 13.4 million children into primary school
- Upgrading or building transport hubs that will be used by 85.8 million passengers a year
- Supporting energy efficiency by saving 5 million tons of CO2 a year
- Providing access to electrification for 3 million people
- Allocating microfinance loans that will benefit just over 700 000 people
- Supporting agricultural or irrigation projects that will benefit 1.4 million people
2011: consolidation of economic model
Dov ZERAH, Chief Executive Officer of AFD: “AFD has experienced a veritable revolution over the past few years. It has become a key player in development with an activity that has tripled in five years. Today, a new phase is beginning with the consolidation of our model.”
In the coming years, AFD will be focusing its activity on three priority areas:
- Sub-Saharan Africa: 60% of resources allocated to AFD by the State will be earmarked for this region, particularly for the sectors of agriculture and agro-industries, infrastructure, education and health.
- The Mediterranean: AFD will be supporting the recent developments in the region by scaling up its operations in Mediterranean Basin countries, particularly in the productive and vocational training sectors.
- Emerging countries: AFD will be supporting these countries via loans with a low level of concessionality in order to encourage them to set out on a growth path that respects the environment more and is more inclusive.
Consolidating the model requires stabilizing AFD’s level of activity, which is expected to reach €8 billion by 2013. AFD set up a Risk Department in 2011 in order to improve risk management. It has also reinforced its human capital with 125 recruitments in 2010.
Dov ZERAH: “Beyond financing, it is our expertise that our partners are seeking. AFD will also be continuing to actively provide input to international debates through its knowledge production. We will, at the same time, be forging an increasing number of partnerships with other development players such as NGOs, local authorities, private foundations, or again multilateral banks. They help increase the outreach and effectiveness of our actions. In a globalized world, the only winning strategies are cooperation strategies.”
In 2011, AFD will be celebrating the 70th anniversary of its creation in 1941 by General de Gaulle. AFD will be marking the occasion by organizing events to meet the French public in order to raise their awareness of North-South issues and allow them to learn more about development results. A travelling open-air exhibition called “Objectif Développement”, designed in partnership with Magnum Photos, will be launched in Bordeaux on 21 May 2011. It will be travelling to all the major cities in France throughout the year.
Agence Française de Développement (AFD) is a public development finance institution that has been working to fight poverty and support economic growth in developing countries and the French Overseas Communities for 70 years. It implements the development policy defined by the French Government.
With agencies in over 50 countries, AFD finances and supports projects that improve people’s living conditions, promote economic growth and protect the planet: getting children into school, support for farmers and small businesses, water supply, tropical forest preservation, fight against climate change…
AFD and Plan Bleu renew their partnership to support sustainable development in the Mediterranean
Agence Française de Développement (AFD) and Plan Bleu today signed a Memorandum of Understanding renewing their partnership. The aim is to continue to exchange information on actions implemented in the Mediterranean and to conduct joint research on the interactions between development and the environment in this region.
The partnership between AFD and Plan Bleu dates back to November 2007. It comes under the Mediterranean Strategy for Sustainable Development defined by 21 Mediterranean countries and the European Community during the Barcelona Convention in November 2001. This partnership focuses on core issues for the Mediterranean, such as climate change, water, energy, transport, tourism, as well as urban, rural and coastal areas.
With the launch of the Union for the Mediterranean, it has been possible to pool efforts and cooperation for sustainable development in the Mediterranean in order to support the priorities defined during the Summit of Heads of State and Government in Paris in July 2008: water, urban development, energy and transport.
The Marseille Center for Mediterranean Integration (CMI), to which both AFD and Plan Bleu contribute, will also make it possible to build synergies with the Center for Financial, Economic and Banking Studies (CEFEB), AFD’s corporate university which is also located in Marseille.

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