Business
AfDB To Invest In Vaccines, Manufacturing, Healthcare Systems
The African Development Bank (AfDB) Group has said that it would invest “heavily” in the domestic manufacturing of vaccines and healthcare system in Africa.
President of the AfDB, Dr Akinwumi Adesina, said this at the closing of the 2021 Annual Meetings of the bank, last Friday.
According to a statement from the bank on Saturday, Adesina noted that only 51 per cent of public health facilities had basic water and sanitation, while 31 per cent of healthcare facilities had electricity.
The AfDB president also underlined the fact that Africa still imported 60 per cent to 70 per cent of its pharmaceutical drugs.
“The lives of 1.2 billion people in Africa are at risk.
“We must give hope to the poor, and the vulnerable, by ensuring that every African, regardless of their income level, gets access to quality healthcare, as well as health insurance and social protection”, he said.
Akinwunmi further proposed an African stability mechanism, to act as a firewall against external shocks and pledged the bank’s commitment to strengthen support to African countries.
The proposal included that the bank act as a conduit for the International Monetary Fund (IMF) special drawing rights, which it would then on-lend to African countries.
He said the support would be towards tackling the economic and health impacts of the pandemic.
Ghana’s Minister of Finance and Economic Planning, Mr Kenneth Ofori-Atta, urged the AfDB to take a leading role in the continent’s recovery.
“Our bank, distinct in its role, has to be at the centre of Africa’s build-back, through targeted support to tackle Africa’s development challenges and lay the foundation to respond to future challenges,” Ofori-Atta said.
Meanwhile, green growth was also high on the agenda.
In a panel discussion, British Member of Parliament and President of the Conference of the Parties (COP) 26, Mr Alok Sharma, said it was vital that developed countries delivered on a 100-billion-dollar commitment, to tackling climate change.
The 2021 Annual Meetings of the AfDB had the 56th Annual Meetings of the Bank Group, and the 47th meeting of the Governors of the African Development Fund, the bank’s concessional lending arm.
The meetings included closed-door discussions between finance ministers and central bank governors of the regional and non-regional member countries of the bank, and knowledge events on healthcare, debt sustainability and climate change.
In attendance were IMF Managing Director, Kristalina Georgieva; World Trade Organisation Director-General, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, and United Nations Deputy Secretary-General, Amina Mohammed.
Former United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, who is President and Chairperson of the Global Green Growth Institute, was also among the panelists.
The bank’s 81- member countries met virtually for a second successive year.
Ghana would host the next Annual Meetings in 2022.
Business
Lokpobiri Condemns Abandoned Refinery Project in N’Delta … Vows Revival
Business
FG Unveils Industrialisation Strategies In 2025 … To Conduct MSMEs Census
Business
Coy Strengthens Commitment To Nigeria’s Energy Future
-
News2 days ago
RSU Lecturer Unveils Research Innovation On Soap Production
-
Nation2 days ago
Commissioner Inaugurates Street Lights In 16 Communities
-
Niger Delta9 hours ago
Oborevwori Tasks Public Officers On Selflessness
-
Niger Delta2 days ago
ThisDay award, Affirmation Of Oborevwori’s Performance — Commissioner
-
Sports2 days ago
NCF targets success after W’Cup outing
-
Sports8 hours ago
Kano Pillars Signs two Europe returnees, four others
-
Politics2 days ago
Controversy As Ondo Dep Gov Allegedly Incurs N130m Hotel Bill In One Year
-
News10 hours ago
Shake-ups At Federal Varsities As Tinubu Sacks UniAbuja, UNN VCs, Appoints New Leaders