Cape Argus

Jobs put at risk in Africa

20 million could face the axe as Covid-19 crisis puts squeeze on continent’s economy

- JOE BAVIER AND GIULIA PARAVICINI

JOBURG/ADDIS ABABA: About 20 million jobs are at risk in Africa as the continent’s economies are projected to shrink this year due to the impact of the coronaviru­s pandemic, according to an AU study.

Currently, Africa accounts for a fraction of cases of the disease which has infected more than one million people worldwide, according to a Reuters tally.

But African economies are already facing an impending global economic downturn, plummeting oil and commodity prices and an imploding tourism sector.

Before the onset of the pandemic, continent-wide gross domestic product (GDP) growth was projected by the African Developmen­t Bank to reach 3.4% this year.

However, in both scenarios modelled by the AU study, Impact of the coronaviru­s on the Africa economy, GDP would now shrink.

Under what the AU researcher­s deemed their realistic scenario, Africa’s economy would shrink 0.8%, while in the worst scenario, it would fall by 1.1%.

Up to 15% for foreign direct investment could disappear.

The impact on employment will be dramatic.

“Nearly 20 million jobs, both in the formal and informal sectors, are threatened with destructio­n on the continent if the situation continues,” the analysis said.

African government­s could lose up to 20 to 30% of their fiscal revenue, estimated at $500 billion (R9.43 trillion) last year, it found.

Exports and imports are meanwhile projected to drop at least 35% from last year’s levels, incurring a loss in the value of trade of about $270bn. This at a time when the fight against the virus’s spread will lead to an increase in public spending of at least $130bn.

Africa’s oil producers, which have seen the value of their crude exports plunge in past weeks, will be among the worst hit.

Sub-Saharan Africa’s biggest oil producers Nigeria and Angola alone could lose $65bn in income. African oil exporters are expected to see their budget deficits double this year while their economies shrink 3% on average.

African tourist destinatio­ns will also suffer. Africa has in recent years been among the fastest growing regions in the world for tourism.

But with borders closed to prevent the disease’s spread and airlines grounded, the sector has been almost entirely shut.

Countries where tourism constitute­s a large part of GDP will see their economies contract by an average of 3.3% this year. However, Africa’s major tourism spots, Seychelles, Cape Verde, Mauritius and The Gambia will shrink at least 7%. “Under the average scenario, the tourism and travel sector in Africa could lose at least $50bn and at least two million direct and indirect jobs,” the AU study said.

Remittance­s from Africans living abroad, the continent’s largest financial inflow over the past decade, were unlikely to cushion the blow. “With economic activity in the doldrums in many advanced and emerging market countries, remittance­s to Africa could experience significan­t declines,” analysis found. |

 ?? | OUPA MOKOENA African News Agency (ANA) ?? THERE will be a dramatic impact on employment in Africa, with nearly 20 million jobs lost, an AU analysis reports.
| OUPA MOKOENA African News Agency (ANA) THERE will be a dramatic impact on employment in Africa, with nearly 20 million jobs lost, an AU analysis reports.

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