On Monday, Washington-based multilateral lender released its biannual report on Africa's economy,
Africa Pulse.
Here are some of the key highlights of the report:
The good Prospects
The
Washington-based multilateral lender predicted that:
·
Sub-Saharan economies are set to grow by more than
5 percent.
·
Sub-Saharan Africa's growth would
be 4.9, 5.1 and 5.2 percent for 2013, 2014 and 2015 respectively.
·
Higher commodities,
increasing investment and a general pick-up in the world economy should all
boost the continent's growth to more than 5 percent.
·
Investment in
infrastructure would be key to the continued success of the oil and gas sectors
in East Africa and the exploitation of the huge coal deposits in Mozambique.
·
The mineral sectors in places
such as Ghana, Guinea, Liberia, Nigeria and Sierra Leone should continue to
attract investment
·
Global GDP is
expected to grow by an average of 2.4 percent in 2013.
·
Foreign
Direct Investment in Sub Saharan Africa will accelerate from around $35 billion
in 2011 to a record $ 54 billion in 2015, as companies exploit new oil and
mineral discoveries in Mozambique, Sierra Leone and other countries.
"Inflows to the extractive
industries sector and, to a lesser extent, the agriculture sector should be
supported by high, if somewhat softening, commodity prices over the next two to
three years." – World Bank Africa Pulse report.
·
Strong economic
growth in Africa had significantly reduced the extent of poverty in Africa over
the past decade or so.
·
Africans living on less than $1.25 a day fell
from 58 percent to 48.5 percent between 1996 and 2010. "If properly
harnessed to unleash their full potential, these trends hold the promise of
more growth, much less poverty, and accelerating shared prosperity for African
countries in the foreseeable future," said World Bank economist, Punam
Chuhan-Pole.
·
"Better governance will need
to underpin efforts to make growth more poverty reducing."
Concern
·
Africa is
set to grow 4.9 percent this year and 5.1 percent in 2014 - well below the
International Monetary Fund's January estimate for the region to grow 5.8 percent
this year and 5.7 percent in 2014. This
reflects a mounting strife on the continent.
·
Poverty reduction is
held back by income inequality and a reliance on mineral and mining exports in
some African countries. Resource-rich countries such as Equatorial Guinea,
Nigeria and Gabon were singled out as making less progress in combating poverty
than other African countries with fewer natural resources.
·
Food price spikes
could be a cause for concern.
·
Coups and
political crises across sub-Saharan Africa are weighing on the region's
economic growth. "In 2012, labor unrest in South Africa, terrorist
activity in parts of Nigeria, coups d'etat in Mali and Guinea- Bissau, and
political stalemate in Guinea and Madagascar curtailed economic activity to
varying degrees," the bank said. "Though most economies in the region
remain stable, simmering conflicts, particularly in the fragile states,
continue to pose an important downside risk to their economic activity in the
medium term."
·
A fragile global
recovery, whether characterised by a deterioration of market conditions in the
euro zone or a weaker pickup in the United States, could still undermine the
positive African outlook.
·
With Chinese demand
accounting for 50 percent of many industrial metals exported from Africa, a
sharper-than-envisaged downturn there could lead to a slump in commodity
prices, which would hurt resource-reliant African states.
·
"While the broad picture emerging from the data is that
Africa's economies have been expanding robustly and that poverty is coming
down, the aggregate hides a great deal of diversity in performance, even among
Africa's faster growers," said Shanta Devarajan, the World Bank's chief
economist for Africa.
Advise:
World Bank Africa Pulse report says:
·
African governments
have to do more to ensure that this growth reduced poverty.
·
“African governments
should administer mineral wealth better, develop agriculture and manage rapid
urbanisation to help bring down poverty levels further”- World Bank said.
·
Infrastructure
development is critical to ensure the strong pace of economic growth.
Read Full Report here: http://www.unmultimedia.org/tv/unifeed/2013/04/world-bank-africas-pulse/
Besides the so called primary commodity-induced growth which creates little or no real jobs, economic development will be enhanced by massive investment in infrastructures, education and improved security. There is relative peace on the continent except in Nigeria, Mali and parts of Ivory Coast, and this itself has helped in attracting FDI besides the commodity boom.
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