Eswatini Daily News

Sub-Saharan Africa incomes falling further behind rest of world, says IMF

- By Rachel Savage and Karin Strohecker

JOHANNESBU­RG/WASHINGTON, — Incomes in Sub-Saharan Africa are falling further behind the rest of the world amid a “tepid” economic recovery, the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) said on Friday, warning of risks from geopolitic­s, domestic instabilit­y and climate change.

The IMF earlier this week said the region’s economy would grow 3.8 per cent this year, up from 3.4 per cent in 2023, as it begins to emerge from four years of shocks, from the Covid-19 pandemic to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and rising global interest rates.

“When accounting for population growth, the income gap with the rest of the world is widening,” the fund said in its biannual Regional Economic Outlook report, launched during its Spring Meetings this week in Washington.

It noted that other developing countries saw real income per person more than triple since 2000, while they grew 75 per cent in Sub-Saharan Africa and 35 per cent in developed countries.

However, there were some positive developmen­ts.

“Two-thirds of the countries are already experienci­ng accelerati­on in growth; diversifie­d and fairly broad-based growth,” said Abebe Selassie, director of the IMF’s African Department, said in an interview with Reuters in Washington.

Many of the more diversifie­d economies had already enjoyed some growth recovery since the pandemic, he added.

Inflation falling

Economic conditions have started to ease for many countries this year, with Ivory

Coast, Benin and Kenya issuing internatio­nal bonds and median inflation falling to 6 per cent in February from almost 10 per cent a year earlier, the IMF said.

But political instabilit­y is rising and denting investor confidence, it said, pointing to junta-led states Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger leaving the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) and 18 elections across the region this year.

Devastatin­g droughts last year in the Horn of Africa and currently in southern Africa, as well as cyclones and floods, have also increased the region’s struggles.

South Africa is set to grow just 0.9 per cent this year, a slight increase from 0.6 per cent in 2023, amid ongoing rolling power cuts and problems with the country’s railways and ports, the IMF said, adding that “electoral uncertaint­ies” could derail ongoing energy sector reforms.

Africa’s most industrial­ised economy holds an election on May 29, in which the ruling African National Congress (ANC) party could lose its majority for the first time since the end of apartheid in 1994.

West Africa’s largest economy, Nigeria, is set to grow 3.3 per cent this year, as it struggles with high inflation amid painful currency and subsidy reforms.

In its northern neighbour Niger, meanwhile, growth is predicted to rocket from 1.4 per cent last year to 10.4 per cent, as oil exports ramp up.

 ?? ?? ▲Street vendors wait for customers at an open market, ahead of Nigeria’s Presidenti­al election in Awka, Anambra state, Nigeria.
▲Street vendors wait for customers at an open market, ahead of Nigeria’s Presidenti­al election in Awka, Anambra state, Nigeria.

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