Wed. Dec 25th, 2024

Panellists at the ongoing 29th Annual General Meetings of Afreximbank in Cairo, Egypt, have called on African leaders to strongly consider establishing stronger banks to fund the continent’s development needs.

They unanimously agreed that small banks and microfinance institutions were useful, but they were incapable of financing Africa’s infrastructure deficit.

Speaking on the topic: “Africa under the storm of external shocks and internal challenges” Mr Arnold Ekpe, former Chief Executive Officer, Ecobank Group, said financing infrastructure projects such as roads, railways, power stations, factories and large commercial operations necessary for economic development could only be financed by larger banks.

Sessions at the event include the meetings of the Advisory Group on Trade Finance and Export Development in Africa and the Annual General Meeting of Shareholders of the Bank, complemented by a full programme of seminars and plenaries featuring insights from senior government ministers, senior executives of international and continental organisations and authorities, captains of industry, and leading economists, amongst others.

The meetings are being attended by business and political leaders, banking industry professionals, trade and trade finance practitioners and other parties involved in economic development from across Africa and beyond. The Meetings have been ranked among the most important gatherings of economic decision-makers in Africa.

The African continent he said, must rely less on foreign funding and pay its own way for economic development.