By Reuters
In Summary
- Economic growth in sub-Saharan Africa will likely slow this year to its weakest in nearly two decades, hurt by a slump in commodity prices, the Ebola virus outbreak and drought.
- IMF says the region would likely grow 3 per cent this year - the lowest rate since 1999 - after expanding by 3.4 per cent in 2015.
Economic growth in sub-Saharan Africa will likely slow this
year to its weakest in nearly two decades, hurt by a slump in commodity
prices, the Ebola virus outbreak and drought, the IMF said on Tuesday.
In its African Economic Outlook, the Fund said the region would
likely grow 3 per cent this year - the lowest rate since 1999 - after
expanding by 3.4 per cent in 2015.
Growth is seen recovering to 4 per cent next year, helped by a
slight recovery in commodity prices, and the Fund said it was still
optimistic about the region's prospects in the longer term.
"However, to realise this potential, a substantial policy reset is critical in many cases," the Fund said.
Affected countries needed to contain fiscal deficits as the
reduction in revenue from the commodities sector was expected to
persist, it added.
Major oil exporters Angola and Nigeria were hardest hit by the
slump in commodities prices, as were Ghana, South Africa and Zambia, the
report said.
Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone were only gradually recovering
from the Ebola epidemic, while several southern and eastern African
countries including Ethiopia, Malawi and Zimbabwe were suffering from a
severe drought, the IMF added.
On the upside, Côte d’Ivoire, Kenya and Senegal would see growth
of more than 5 per cent, mostly "supported by ongoing infrastructure
investment efforts and strong private consumption," the report said.
"The decline in oil prices has also helped these countries,
though the windfall has tended to be smaller than expected, as exposure
to the decline in other commodity prices and currency depreciations have
partly offset the gains in many of them," it added
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