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Africa: Economic Trends
Africa: Economic Trends
Date distributed (ymd): 011119
Document reposted by APIC
Africa Policy Electronic Distribution List: an information
service provided by AFRICA ACTION (incorporating the Africa
Policy Information Center, The Africa Fund, and the American
Committee on Africa). Find more information for action for
Africa at http://www.africapolicy.org
+++++++++++++++++++++Document Profile+++++++++++++++++++++
Region: Continent-Wide
Issue Areas: +economy/development+
SUMMARY CONTENTS:
This posting contains excerpts from two summaries of the current
economic situation in Africa, produced recently by the World Bank
and the International Monetary Fund. The sources for the full
reports, which appear in PDF format and include tables, are given
below for each summary. Note that the projections in these
summaries are highly uncertain, and that the IMF in particular
sharply reduced its global forecasts in a new statement on November
15.
Another posting today contains a press release and statement from
Africa Action, on the occasion of the meeting of the World Bank and
the International Monetary Fund in Ottawa, November 17-19, 2001.
+++++++++++++++++end profile++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
World Bank
Sub-Saharan Africa
Excerpted from
Regional Economic Prospects (Appendix 1)
Global Economic Prospects and the Developing Countries 2002
http://www.worldbank.org/prospects/gep2002
Recent developments
Growth in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) slowed to 2.7 percent in 2001
from 3 percent in 2000, interrupting a progressive recovery from
the slowdown of the late 1990s. With population growing at 2.4
percent, the rise in per capita GDP was minimal. The slowdown was
widespread throughout the region, in East, West, and Southern
Africa, and in both oil and non-oil commodity exporters.
The primary cause was the slowdown in developed countries. In the
face of weaker demand from the United States and the Euro Area,
merchandise exports managed just 3.4 percent growth in volume terms
compared to 8.8 percent in 2000. Services exports, including
tourism, were also affected, growing by 3.6 percent. Commodity
prices remained well below levels of the late 1990s, including
those that rebounded from recent lows. Beverage producers were
particularly hard hit, with coffee prices down over 25 percent from
2000 and cocoa prices-although they were up around 10 percent in
2001-only 75 percent of the average for 1995-2000. While oil prices
eased back from their peak of nearly $30 a barrel in mid-2000 they
remained strong, and oil exporters outperformed the region as a
whole, growing at an average of 3.6 percent for the year, compared
to 2.6 percent for non-oil exporters. Oil constitutes less than a
third of SSA exports, however, and net energy exports are only 5
percent of GDP. Thus on balance, recent world commodity market
trends represented a major drag on growth and incomes.
Apart from the external environment, developments within the region
painted a mixed picture. Better weather boosted agricultural
production and household incomes in a number of countries in East
and Southern Africa, including Ethiopia, Kenya, Mozambique, and
Tanzania. However, localized drought conditions persisted in these
and many other countries. In Southern Africa, food production fell
by as much as 25 percent, due to both adverse weather conditions
and civil disturbance. Overall, the Food and Agriculture
Organization of the United Nations (FAO) estimates that the need
for food aid will be unchanged from last year at around 2.7 million
tonnes (FAO 2001). Weather also contributed to a 12 percent
reduction in the cocoa crop in West Africa after the bumper harvest
of 1999-2000, according to the International Cocoa Organization
(African Business, July/ August 2001).
In the political sphere, some progress toward stability was
achieved in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Guinea, and Sierra
Leone, but peace seemed as elusive as ever in Angola, Liberia, and
the Sudan, and Zimbabwe's crisis intensified with the approach of
elections in spring 2002. Countries in conflict or experiencing
severe governance problems recorded the worst performances,
growing at -0.4 percent in 2001. On the plus side, robust growth
continued in a number of countries, including Ethiopia, Madagascar,
Mozambique, and Uganda, reflecting better policy and economic
management. Finally, 19 countries reached decision points under the
enhanced Heavily Indebted Poor Countries Initiative, cutting debt
servicing costs by a third, and relaxing balance of payments and
budgetary pressures.
In South Africa, the region's largest economy, a robust recovery in
the second half of 2000 dissipated in the first half of 2001 as
inadequate rains led to a disappointing maize harvest. The impact
spilled over from agriculture into manufacturing and, on the demand
side, into consumer spending, and growth slowed to 2.4 percent.
...
In Nigeria, the energy sector registered strong gains, thanks to
both oil and natural gas revenues and to keen investor interest,
particularly in the offshore sector. However, it is increasingly
evident that progress on reforms to date has had little impact on
the non-oil economy. A one-year, $1 billion standby credit from the
IMF was extended from August to October despite the government's
failure to meet important conditionalities, but especially with the
approach of elections in late 2002, the future of the reform
process is uncertain.
Near-term outlook
While many idiosyncratic factors will bear on near-term
performance, the slowdown in industrial countries during 2001 and
sluggish recovery in the first half of 2002 virtually guarantee a
poor out-turn for the coming year. Weak demand will continue to
depress export prices and volumes. However, as recovery
consolidates in OECD trade partners, demand for the region's
exports will strengthen setting the stage for stronger gains in
2003. For the region as a whole, merchandise exports are expected
to grow by only 2.9 percent in 2002, while terms of trade fall by
6.2 percent, equivalent to 1.8 percent of GDP. The subdued external
performance will hold GDP growth to 2.7 percent for a second year,
again leaving per capita incomes flat. Oil prices are expected to
fall to $21 a barrel in 2002, implying steep terms-of-trade losses
for oil exporters of 4.1 percent of GDP; their real growth will
average 3.1 percent, down from 3.6 percent in 2001. However, other
commodity prices should firm on average, even though non-oil
exporters' terms of trade deteriorate slightly because of higher
import prices. The modest improvement in the external environment
will raise non-oil exporters' growth to 2.7 percent from 2.6
percent 2001. For the SSA region as a whole in 2003, the forecast
anticipates a strong acceleration in export volume growth to 6.4
percent, pushing GDP growth to 3.9 percent. With decent rains, the
actual outcome might be even better. Nevertheless, terms-of-trade
weakness is expected to persist through the forecast period,
especially for oil exporters, as oil prices fall further to below
$20 a barrel.
Despite weak energy prices, substantial investment in oil
exporters promises to sustain real growth in oil sectors in the
medium term. Nigeria has struggled recently to meet OPEC quotas,
but plans to increase capacity significantly over the next few
years and a second liquid natural gas train at Bonny Island will
boost production by 50 percent beginning in 2002. Meanwhile, recent
offshore discoveries could substantially raise medium-term
production and exports for non-OPEC Angola and Equatorial Guinea.
Even in the near term, exploration and development activityincluding
the Chad-Cameroon pipeline project-is helping to offset
terms-of-trade losses, keeping real growth higher than otherwise
would have been the case. For non-oil exporters, faster world
growth will tighten the supply demand balance in primary commodity
markets allowing export prices and terms of trade to strengthen. In
addition to the rebound in the world economy generally, export
prospects will also benefit from a number of specific trade
initiatives, including the United States' Africa Growth and
Opportunities Act (AGOA), the EU's "Anything but Arms" initiative,
and the EU-South Africa Free Trade Agreement. Early evidence from
the first half of 2001 shows that 13 SSA countries benefited from
$3 billion of exports under AGOA preferences (USTR 2001).
Nonetheless, SSA's medium term performance will remain subdued as
a result of inelastic export demands and a lack of diversification.
Long-term prospects
Over the long term, the expectation is for a continuation of the
trend toward better economic policies and management and a broadly
favorable external environment. Internal market reforms,
deregulation, and privatization have raised productivity and
improved incentives, and encouraged nontraditional exports such as
fish and horticulture at a time when prospects for many traditional
crops are poor. Notably a number of well-managed reformers have
sustained high growth even through difficult external conditions.
In the baseline scenario, which assumes a continuation of current
productivity trends, output growth averages 3.7 percent from 2004-
10. With population growth falling to 2.2 percent, real per capita
income growth will average 1.5 percent, reaching $640 in real (1995
dollars) terms by 2010. For many countries, export diversification
and favorable price trends will sustain performance well above the
regional average.
This performance will fall short of what is needed to achieve the
international development goals, and SSA will continue to lag
behind other regions in the developing world. Low domestic savings
combined with only modest private foreign capital inflows will
limit investment rates to an average of below 19 percent of GDP.
Although up from barely 17 percent currently, this is far from what
is needed. As a result, capital accumulation will contribute less
than 1 percent annually to growth-not even a quarter of the rate
anticipated for East Asia. Low rates of human capital investment
and slow progress on rebuilding infrastructure will hold
productivity growth to around the same rate.
Despite the somewhat pessimistic outlook, if the forecast is
accurate the coming decade will see the region's best sustained
performance since the 1960s. ... Political and economic reforms
have gained pace since the mid-1980s, and are contributing to
higher standards of governance and economic management. Private
sector growth and increasing regional integration are helping to
boost efficiency and rationalize production. Greater openness and
debt relief are relaxing balance of payments constraints, easing
import restrictions, and over time encouraging more foreign
investment interest. But even as some countries notch up high
growth rates, overall performance will continue to be constrained
by the devastating effects of HIV/AIDS, slow progress on governance
in some countries, and the limited availability of resources to
rehabilitate productive capacity and infrastructure.
International Monetary Fund
Africa: Supporting Growth and Poverty Reduction
Excerpted from Chapter 1 of World Economic Outlook, October 2001
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/weo/2001/02
Released September 26, 2001
Growth in Africa is projected to reach close to 4 percent this
year, driven by a substantial improvement in the Maghreb regionespecially
as Morocco recovers from drought-and a more modest
increase in activity in sub-Saharan Africa. Inflation is expected
to remain subdued in the Maghreb, as well as most countries of
sub-Saharan Africa, although it remains a concern in some countries
-notably in Angola, the Democratic Republic of Congo, and Zimbabwe,
but also in Ghana and Nigeria. While the regional current account
deficit remains small-reflecting large surpluses in oil and gas
producers-many sub-Saharan African countries continue to experience
large deficits, in part driven by weak nonfuel commodity prices,
high oil prices, and still high external debt servicing costs.
With exports accounting for more than one third of African GDP, the
global slowdown will weaken external trading conditionsparticularly
trade with the European Union, which absorbs around 40
percent of the region's exports. More significant though for
external balances and economic activity in most African countries
are market conditions for individual commodities-which are not well
correlated in all cases with the global cycle. In the
energy-producing countries, including Algeria and Nigeria, high oil
and gas prices continue to support growth in domestic demand and
improvements in fiscal and external balances. At the same time,
these gains risk being cut short by looser macroeconomic
policies-notably but not exclusively in Nigeria-particularly if the
oil market were to weaken further. Most nonfuel commodity prices
remain weak. Among food and beverages, the most significant
development has been the severe drop in coffee prices-down more
than 60 percent since 1997-which has contributed to weak export
growth and high external trade deficits in Kenya and Uganda.
Agricultural commodity prices have also come down substantially
since 1997, including cotton (a key export of Benin, Chad, and
Mali) and tobacco (important for Malawi and Zimbabwe). Prices of
aluminum and copper-of particular significance for Mozambique and
Zambia, respectively-have declined since the beginning of 2001 and
could fall further as global demand weakens, although recent
increases in these countries' export volumes are helping to offset
the lower prices. The prolonged decline in gold prices continues
to weigh on export earnings of South Africa.
Global and commodity market developments notwithstanding, local
influences still play the dominant role in the economic prospects
of most African countries. In particular, the outlook for private
investment, economic diversification, and longer-term growth is
generally brighter in countries that have pursued sound
macroeconomic and structural policies. Reflecting this, relatively
strong growth-around 5 percent and above-is expected to continue in
Botswana, Cameroon, Mozambique, Tanzania, and Uganda. In contrast,
poor policy performance, often combined with political uncertainty
and/or conflict, has markedly adverse effects on prospects for
sustained growth and for reductions in poverty. ...
The central challenge remains how best to improve the environment
for growth and investment, particularly through improving public
service delivery-including education and poverty relief; promoting
conflict resolution and prevention; strengthening infrastructure;
liberalizing trade, to reverse Africa's declining share in world
trade; and improving governance. The main responsibility for such
progress must, of course, lie with African governments themselves:
recent developments are encouraging in this regard, including the
New African Initiative, which emphasizes the principles of African
ownership, leadership, and accountability in eliminating home-grown
obstacles to sustained growth. These efforts are being supported by
the enhanced initiative for Heavily Indebted Poor Countries (or
HIPC Initiative); through June 2001, 23 countries, mainly in
Africa, had qualified for and begun to receive debt relief totaling
some $34 billion-implying that on average their debt-to-GDP ratios
will be halved. Annual savings in debt service will represent
about $1 billion on average in the initial years, which is
substantially exceeded by the increase in social spending of more
than $1 / 2 billion-mainly on health and education, including
programs to combat HIV/ AIDS. For many sub-Saharan countries, the
HIV/ AIDS pandemic represents the largest threat to medium-term
growth. In addition to the HIPC initiative, encouraging progress
has been made in lowering the costs of antiretroviral drug
therapies and in providing support through the International
Partnership against AIDS in Africa, drawing together African
governments, the United Nations, and public, private, and community
sectors internationally. But, given the scale of the problem, an
enormous effort lies ahead-including developing the health sector
infrastructure to support advanced treatments, providing further
financial support to countries affected, and stepping up HIV/ AIDS
awareness and prevention efforts.
Looking at the three largest economies of the region, South
Africa's vulnerability to external shocks has been substantially
reduced as a result of sound macroeconomic policies, with public
spending effectively restrained, the budget deficit limited to
around 2 / 2 percent of GDP, and inflation expected to come back
within the target range of 3 to 6 percent. These policies have
helped sustain recent gains in external competitiveness and have
enabled the Reserve Bank to lower its benchmark interest rates by
100 basis points in June. Furthermore, higher private capital
inflows-including receipts from the sale of De Beers -have allowed
the Reserve Bank to lower its net open forward position to $5
billion as of mid-2001, down from $22.5 billion in 1998. Short-term
prospects have been weakened by the global slowdown, however, given
South Africa's relatively strong trade and financial linkages with
the advanced economies. In addition, regional uncertainty has
increased as a result of the ongoing economic and political
difficulties in Zimbabwe. Major challenges lie ahead. As in many
other African economies, extremely high unemployment (over 35
percent in South Africa) and minimal progress in raising per capita
incomes underscore the need for wide-ranging structural reforms to
improve the investment climate, boost employment, and raise growth
to a rate that can make sizable inroads on poverty. ...
In Nigeria, the spending of windfall gains from higher oil prices
has led to a substantial boost to activity. But serious
macroeconomic imbalances threaten these gains: sharply higher
government spending, especially at state and local levels, has been
accompanied by rapid monetary expansion, a surge in inflation, and
disorder in the foreign exchange markets. Efforts to restore
macroeconomic stability, particularly by restraining public
spending at all levels and saving a larger portion of oil proceeds,
remain an urgent priority. ...
Algeria's fiscal and external balances have also improved
significantly as a result of strong growth in oil revenues. But,
with a substantial share of oil revenues being set aside in a
stabilization fund-expected to total close to 20 percent of GDP by
the end of 2001-and sustained monetary discipline and low
inflation, Algeria should be able to avoid the same extent of boombust
cycle that Nigeria may face. ...
This material is being reposted for wider distribution by
Africa Action (incorporating the Africa Policy Information
Center, The Africa Fund, and the American Committee on Africa).
Africa Action's information services provide accessible
information and analysis in order to promote U.S. and
international policies toward Africa that advance economic,
political and social justice and the full spectrum of human rights.
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