Africa Progress Panel
Abbreviation | APP |
---|---|
Formation | 2007 |
Type | Non-profit |
Purpose | To affect positive change in Africa through both individual panel member capacities and through the APP’s publications. |
Headquarters | Geneva, Switzerland |
Panel Chair | Kofi Annan |
Panel Members | Michel Camdessus, Peter Eigen, Bob Geldof, Graca Machel, Strive Masiyiwa, Linah Mohohlo, Olusegun Obasanjo, Robert Rubin, Tidjane Thiam |
Website | www.africaprogresspanel.org |
The Africa Progress Panel (APP)The Africa Progress Panel is chaired by former Secretary-General of the United Nations and Nobel Laureate, Kofi Annan, and consists of the following members:
- Michel Camdessus - Former Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund
- Peter Eigen - Founder and Chair of the Advisory Council, Transparency International and Chairman of the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative.
- Bob Geldof - Musician, Businessman, Founder and Chair of Band Aid, Live Aid and Live 8, Co-founder of DATA, and ONE
- Graça Machel - President of the Foundation for Community Development and founder of New faces New Voices.
- Strive Masiyiwa - Founder Econet Wireless
- Linah Mohohlo - Governor, Bank of Botswana
- Olusegun Obasanjo - Special Envoy of the UN Secretary General on the Great Lakes Regions and former President of Nigeria
- Robert Rubin - Co-Chairman of the Board, Council on Foreign Relations and former Secretary of the United States Treasury
- Tidjane Thiam - Chief Executive Officer, Credit Suisse
Overview
The Africa Progress Panel is a Swiss-based foundation. The panel aims to bring about policy change through unique combination of cutting-edge analysis, advocacy and diplomacy. The panel’s members have access to the worlds of politics, finance, business and civil society at the highest levels, globally and in Africa.
The Africa Progress Panel influences policy though the robust, evidence-based analysis in the annual Africa Progress Reports, the Panel members’ high-level access, and creative, far-reaching communications work. The Africa Progress Panel’s capacity to generate and promote authoritative, independent recommendations enables the Panel to influence key policies that have profound consequences for the continent’s future.
The Panel’s work is supported by a secretariat, established in 2008, and presently headed by Executive Director, Caroline Kende-Robb.
History
In the wake of the Gleneagles G8 Summit in 2005 and the Commission for Africa Report in 2007, the Africa Progress Panel was originally formed through a UK Government initiative as a vehicle to maintain focus on commitments made to Africa by the international community. As such, the Africa Progress Panel’s work centres on complex and high-impact issues that are particularly relevant to Africa.
The Secretariat
The Geneva-based secretariat is a non-profit foundation under Swiss law. The secretariat is led by Executive Director Caroline Kende-Robb and Deputy Director Max Bankole Jarrett.
Publications
The Africa Progress Report
Published annually, the Africa Progress Reports are the flagship publications of the Africa Progress Panel.
Africa Progress Report 2015—Power, People, Planet: Seizing Africa’s Energy and Climate Opportunities
Demand for modern energy in Sub-Saharan Africa is set to surge, fuelled by economic growth, demographic change and urbanisation. As the costs of low-carbon energy fall, Africa could leapfrog into a new era of power generation. Utility reform, new technologies and new business models could be as transformative in energy as the mobile phone has been in telecommunications. The Africa Progress Report 2015 explains the bold steps that leaders globally and in Africa must take to achieve this vision. Above all, the report shows that the global climate moment is also Africa’s moment to lead the world.
The 2015 Africa Progress Report was launched in Cape Town, South Africa on 5 June 2015 by Executive Director Caroline Kende-Robb and Panel Members Graça Machel, Linah Mohohlo, and Michel Camdessus.
Africa Progress Report 2014—Grain, Fish, Money: Financing Africa’s Green and Blue Revolutions
To sustain growth that improves the lives of all Africans, the continent needs an economic transformation that taps into Africa’s other riches: its fertile land, its extensive fisheries and forests, and the energy and ingenuity of its people. To achieve such a transformation, Africa will need to overcome three major obstacles: a lack of access to formal financial services, the weakness of the continent’s infrastructure and the lack of funds for public investment. The Africa Progress Report 2014 describes how African governments and their international partners can cooperate to remove those obstacles – and enable all Africans to benefit from their continent’s extraordinary wealth.
The 2012 Africa Progress Report was launched in London, United Kingdom on 8 May 2014 by Kofi Annan, Tidjane Thiam, Bob Geldof, Peter Eigen and Caroline Kende-Robb.
Africa Progress Report 2013 – Equity in Extractives: Stewarding Africa’s Natural Resources for All
In 2013, Africa’s economies were riding the crest of a global commodity wave that had the potential to transform the continent’s prospects. The 2013 Africa Progress Report explains how this unprecedented chance might lift millions out of poverty, and improve the prospects of generations to come, by strengthening fiscal policy and increasing equitable public spending on infrastructure, health, education, water and sanitation.
The 2013 Africa Progress Report was launched at the World Economic Forum on Africa in Cape Town, South Africa on 8 June 2013 by Kofi Annan, Linah Mohohlo, and Strive Masiyiwa.[9] The report’s hard-hitting findings and policy recommendations received substantial international attention.
The 2012 Africa Progress Report looks at three of the most critical ingredients for transforming a promising economic upturn into a sustained recovery and lasting human development – jobs, justice and equity. The report explores the fundamental role jobs play in African’s life-chances, and hones in on how, over the long run, issues of injustice and inequality can undermine long-term economic growth, productivity and the development of markets.
The launch of the 2012 Africa Progress Report was covered by international news publications, including The Wall Street Journal,[10] The Guardian,[11] The Financial Times,[12] and the African Business Magazine ran a cover story based on the report.[13]As part of the launch, Executive Director Caroline Kende-Robb and Panel Member Olusegun Obasanjo were interviewed for the video series This Is Africa.[14]
Africa Progress Report 2011 - The Transformative Power of Partnerships
Africa Progress Report 2010 - From Agenda to Action: Turning Resources into Results for People
External links
- Africa Progress Panel Website
- Africa Progress Panel Facebook
- Africa Progress Panel Twitter
- Kofi Annan Foundation