This page uses cookies
These Cookies are necessary
Data to improve the website with tracking (Matomo).
These are cookies that come from external sites and services, e.g. Youtube or Vimeo.
Enter your username and password here in order to log in on the website
In this study for FES Prof. Robert Kappel analyses the economic relationship between the European Union and Africa and puts forward proposals for a reorientation.
Image: [Translate to English:] of FES TUCC [Translate to English:]
Image: Wirtschaften nach Corona of picture alliance / Xinhua News Agency | Chen Cheng
The last year was supposed to be a pivotal year for the relationship between Europe and its neighbouring continent. In March 2020 the EU Commission presented a draft for a new Africa-Strategy and the AU-EU Summit was planned to take place in October. “Taking the partnership to the next level” has been the goal expressed by the President of the European Commission Ursula von der Leyen. Since spring 2020 FES is closely accompanying the developments and has dedicated a special focus to the EU-African relations, raising the question which proposals the EU should bring into the centre (#whatstheofffer). More information is available on the thematic page www.fes.de/en/together-towards-justainability.
Due to the Corona pandemic, a few things have been shaken up. The AU-EU Summit has been postponed into the second half of 2021 and the danger exists that organising the measures to contain the pandemic and coping with its effects will overshadow a strategic reorientation of EU-African relations. Professor Emeritus Robert Kappel argues that these relations have been on a downward trajectory for some time and that the Covid-19 pandemic shows once more that the prevailing asymmetry is no longer acceptable as we move into the future
A substantial reorientation regarding the political and economic cooperation of the two neighbouring continents is key to achieve sustainable development as put forward by the 2030 Agenda, reduce inequalities and react to the short- but also the long-term aftermaths of the pandemic. In short: to advance a social-ecological transformation for a post-corona world.
With his analysis „Redefining Europe-Africa Relations” (french version: Coopération economique entre l'Afrique et l'Europe) Robert Kappel delivers facts and figures regarding the economic relationship with Europe and Africa but also takes a look into the future thus revealing how – especially against the backdrop of the Corona pandemic – future cooperation could look like. In his view, it is also in the European interest to fundamentally reform the cooperation with Africa and to reduce the historically grown dependence. If not, African states might turn away from Europe and towards new actors. He demands a revision of the plan put forward by the European Commission. This extends especially to economic and trade relations, to a focus on jobs and the eradication of poverty, the value chain and a readjustment towards sustainability.
Kappel, Robert
Robert Kappel. - Brussels ; Berlin : Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung EU Office ; Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung Africa Department, January 2021. - 36 Seiten = 4,4 MB PDF-File. - (Together towards justainability)Einheitssacht.: Europa - Afrika . - Electronic ed.: Berlin : FES, 2021ISBN 978-3-96250-799-2
Download publication (4,4 MB PDF-File)
Instead of glossing over differences with aid, the EU needs to fundamentally reform its cooperation with Africa. An interview with Robert Kappel (IPS…
Global supply chains, added value and multilateral fora: Africa's integration is deferred to a distant future. But there are solutions. (English and…
Sarah GanterSarah.Ganter(at)fes.de
All FES Experts on Global Economy and Corporate Responsibility