A customer buys cooking oil at a stall where smaller than standard measures of cooking oil is sold at Harare Mbare Musika marketplace. Supplies of essentials such as bread, medicine and petrol have regularly run short in the country as price increases hit their fastest pace since the government was forced to abandon the Zimbabwe dollar in 2009. PHOTO | AFP
Summary
·
Economies across Africa's 54 nations were
hard-hit by the global economic fallout of Russia's invasion of Ukraine, as
well as the impacts of climate change and aftershocks of the Covid pandemic.
Despite slowing growth and the worst inflation figures in a decade in 2022, African economies remain "resilient," and double-digit price hikes are expected to ease, an African Development Bank report said Thursday.
Economies
across Africa's 54 nations were hard-hit by the global economic fallout of
Russia's invasion of Ukraine, as well as the impacts of climate change and
aftershocks of the Covid pandemic.
A
stronger dollar, inflation, and slowdown in demand for exports to major trading
partners in Europe and China, had "dire consequences" for the
continent's economies, said the ADB report.
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