The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Africa’s economic growth fell to 3,2pc in 2023: AfDB

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AFRICA’S economic growth fell to 3,2 percent last year from 4,1 percent in 2022, the African Developmen­t Bank (AfDB) said on Friday, but it projected higher growth this year for all regions except Central Africa.

The AfDB said political instabilit­y and China’s economic slowdown were compoundin­g the shocks of Covid-19 and Russia’s war in Ukraine.

The final figure for 2023 was below the 3,4 percent growth the AfDB had forecast in November. It also cut its regional growth estimates for Central and North Africa, amid a recession in oil producer Equatorial Guinea and the aftermath of devastatin­g flooding in Libya.

“The shocks buffeting African economies since 2020 have damaged growth, with long-term implicatio­ns,” the bank said in a report.

Despite the shocks buffeting the region, 15 African countries posted economic growth of more than 5 percent last year, the AfDB said, including Ethiopia, which is restructur­ing its external debt, Ivory Coast, Democratic Republic of Congo, Mauritius and Rwanda.

The bank forecast faster growth in all regions except for central Africa in 2024, with Southern Africa seen as remaining the laggard at 2,2 percent compared with 5,7 percent in East Africa.

Southern Africa’s “sluggish performanc­e reflects the continued economic stagnation in South Africa,” the bank said, with the region’s largest economy, which holds national elections this year, predicted to grow 1.1 percent in 2024, up from 0,8 percent last year.

“This underwhelm­ing economic situation has aggravated the country’s persistent­ly high unemployme­nt, poverty, and inequality and prevented it from reaping democratic dividends in the 30 years since the end of White minority rule,” AfDB said.

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