Angola’s economy may be booming on the back of high oil prices and strong diamond exports, but six years after a peace deal ended the 27-year civil war, unemployment stands at about 65%.
Take a walk down any street in Luanda and next to the shiny banks and new office buildings, there are street vendors, many just teenagers, hawking anything they can find to make a living.
The lack of jobs and the country’s poor education system were some of the major debating points for voters ahead of Friday’s election.
Ask anyone here what they want from politicians and while they usually say peace, their second wish is a job or the guarantee of a job for their children.
Bella, who looks significantly older than her 24 years, sells fruit on a patch of pavement near the National Assembly building. The pomp and majesty of the guards outside Parliament cut a stark contrast to her modest fruit stall, which is swarming with flies and sits just metres from puddles of stagnant water.
On a good day she makes up to 1 300 kwanzas ($17), but often it’s as little as 500 kwanzas ($6) — and from that she has to buy her stock and pay for a taxi to transport her to her sales spot from the market.
“I’ve been doing this for four years because I can’t find another job,” she explains. “It’s OK but I want another job to earn more money for my family. I have a four-year-old son and if I don’t make enough money, we go hungry. That’s how it is.”
One major reason for Angola’s high level of unemployment is the mass migration from the countryside into Luanda during the war.
Justino Pinto de Andrade, an economist at Luanda’s Catholic University, explains: “These families were from agricultural backgrounds, used to working on the land.
“But in the city it isn’t possible to farm the land, so they have had to find other activities, like selling things on the street, cleaning houses, driving et cetera. But this is not enough to create enough jobs for everyone, so we see this high number of people without work.”
While some Angolans are finding work within the oil industry, says Andrade, a lack of education — again because of the long war — means many lack the required qualifications and the jobs are going to expatriates instead.
He says there is a similar situation in the building industry, where contracts for major works such as hotels and apartment blocks usually go to Chinese, Brazilian and Portuguese companies, which then import their own unskilled labour.
“This isn’t generating jobs for Angolan workers,” he says.
Before the war, Angola was the world’s fourth-biggest coffee producer and a top exporter of sugarcane, bananas and cotton. As the fertile countryside is slowly demined and made safe, agriculture is once again being seen as an area of potential.
The ruling MPLA says that if it is re-elected, it will continue with recently launched micro-credit schemes to help small farmers make money from their land. Most opposition parties have included in their manifestos a policy on developing agriculture.
Jardo Muekalia, a senior member of Unita, also believes developing agriculture is a key step to improve Angola’s economy.
He says: “When the oil goes, we have no alternative. It’s almost a national security necessity to diversify our economy. Agriculture will not only take care of our food security but it will [also] employ more people as it is very labour intensive; it will address the need to develop rural economies, develop the rural towns.”
He adds: “Let’s use the resources we get from oil to begin to invest in our agriculture.”
A major challenge for Angola after the end of the war has been to decentralise. The MPLA, founded on Marxist principles, for many years focused on government-led schemes. There is now a movement towards the private sector.
Luanda-based economist Salim Abdul explains: “In the long term you have to invest in human capital, through education, through health, through living conditions to improve people’s performance, their productivity and their knowledge.
“You can have your natural resources but if you don’t manage them effectively, it is no good. You have to manage the human capital and that takes generations. If you look at India, China, Japan, how they developed was by human capital, so that’s the challenge for not only Angola but [also] the majority of countries in Africa.”
As dusk falls in central Luanda, Bella gathers up her unsold fruit and makes her way back across the city to her small home.
She says: “I will be voting, definitely. I don’t know if the election will make a difference, but I want the politicians to make more jobs, I don’t want my son to sell on the street like me when he grows up.” — IPS