The Mercury

China’s star over Africa no longer so bright

Continent has to come to terms with the fact that it remains largely a primary goods exporter

- Vuyani Ndaba

DISAPPOINT­ING growth in Africa’s two biggest economies has highlighte­d the role of China in the expansion of recent years, now that China’s own economy is slowing.

Expectatio­ns of more than 4 percent growth in Nigeria, Africa’s largest economy, are probably now too high, and South Africa’s prospects also look in need of revising.

Second-quarter growth for both countries was worse than the most pessimisti­c forecasts – in South Africa’s case, by the biggest margin in at least half a decade.

Their slowdown is similar to other emerging market economies in Latin America and Asia, and a sign that China’s appetite for raw materials is now waning.

On Tuesday, the latest purchasing managers’ data showed the weakest growth in six-and-ahalf years for small- to mediumsize­d China manufactur­ers and the weakest in three years for larger enterprise­s.

Economists have long been aware that commodity-exporting countries would be troubled by China’s rebalancin­g to a more consumer-driven economy. They have been warning since the shift began that investors would have to make do with slower growth.

“With growth slowing in Nigeria and collapsing in South Africa, our prediction that 2015 would be Africa’s most difficult year so far this century seems, unfortunat­ely, to be playing out,” said John Ashbourne at Capital Economics.

Economists have been warning… that investors would have to make do with slower growth.

Structural problems

“The key point is that high oil prices over the past decade may have led both investors and policymake­rs to ignore the deep structural problems within Nigeria’s economy. Now that prices have fallen, those flaws have been exposed.”

In addition, the Federal Reserve expects inflation to accelerate, making an increase in US interest rates more likely. But many emerging market policymake­rs say they are ready for a US rate rise, and they are now focused on dealing with a slowing Chinese economy.

Two months ago, the Reuters long-term consensus on Nigeria was for 4.4 percent growth this year. But a drop to 2.35 percent in the second quarter – from a record high of 8.6 percent in the fourth quarter of 2010 – puts that at risk.

South Africa, the continent’s second-biggest economy, shrank 1.3 percent in the second quarter – worse than any of the 21 economists polled had predicted. That makes the consensus for 1.9 percent growth this year, already weak by emerging market standards, look too optimistic.

Razia Khan, the Africa research head at Standard Chartered, said in the next decade, the structural drivers of Africa’s growth – rising demographi­cs, greater rates of urbanisati­on, productivi­ty gains, growth of financial markets, would remain in place.

“However, in the very near future, external headwinds – deteriorat­ing risk appetite and weaker commodity prices – may well take the shine off growth trends,” she said.

Exports quadrupled

The World Bank forecasts gross domestic product growth in sub-Saharan Africa will slow this year to 4.2 percent, down from an average of 6.4 percent during 2002 to 2008.

Even after a decade

of growth, sub-Saharan Africa’s manufactur­ing remains weak. Exports from the region more than quadrupled to $457 billion (R6.08 trillion) in the decade to 2011, but manufactur­ed goods made up just $58bn of that.

Africa could have rebalanced its own economies, by shifting from commodity-led growth to inter-regional trade. But neglected infrastruc­ture looks set to keep the continent reliant on commoditie­s.

“Africa remains largely a primary goods exporter. There are growth opportunit­ies to be found in forward-integratin­g its largely primary industries,” said Rafiq Raji, an economist at macroafric­aintellige­nce.com, a research service based in Lagos. – Reuters

 ?? PHOTO: SIMPHIWE MBOKAZI ?? Standard Chartered Bank’s Razia Khan
PHOTO: SIMPHIWE MBOKAZI Standard Chartered Bank’s Razia Khan

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