Nigeria’s Adesina Elected African Development Bank President

May 28, 2015/Bloomberg

Nigerian Agriculture Minister Akinwumi Adesina was elected president of the African Development Bank, beating other candidates from the continent’s west.

Adesina secured 58 percent of the votes in the final round at a meeting in Abidjan, Ivory Coast on Thursday, and will succeed Donald Kaberuka as head of the bank on Sept. 1, the AfDB said on its Twitter feed. In a day-long voting process, he faced off against Chadian Finance Minister Kordje Bedoumra, who secured 32 percent support, and his counterpart from Cape Verde, Cristina Duarte, at 10 percent.

“We can make Africa the pride of the world in terms of having a lot of inclusive growth,” Adesina said in a speech following the announcement of the results.

Adesina, known for his trademark bow tie and mustache, became agriculture minister in 2011 after former central bank Governor Lamido Sanusi recommended him to outgoing President Goodluck Jonathan. Adesina has said the AfDB needs to focus on promoting investment by businesses.

“He is an example of a leader in the Nigerian political space who has done well,” Ebenezer Essoka, vice chairman for Africa at Standard Chartered Plc, said in an interview in Abidjan.

Adesina, 55, takes over from Kaberuka, 63, at a time when falling prices of oil, copper and other commodities dim the outlook for economic growth and investment in Africa. The AfDB’s loans and grants amounted to $7.8 billion in 2014, 22 percent more than the previous year.

As agriculture minister, Adesina has tried to revitalize farming after decades of neglect following the discovery of oil in Nigeria in the 1950s. He has been praised for bringing more transparency to fertilizer subsidies, a program riddled with corruption in the past. Nigeria’s government estimates that food production increased by 21 million metric tons during his tenure.

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