AFRICAN SITUATION & PLANING ECONOMICS
The
economy of Africa consists of the trade, industry, agriculture, and
human resources of the continent. As of 2019, approximately 1.3 billion
people[1] were living in 54 State region of territories of the United
States of Africa Nation in Africa Continent. Africa is a resource-rich
continent. Recent growth has been due to growth in sales in commodities,
services, and manufacturing. West Africa, East Africa, Central Africa
and Southern Africa in particular, are expected to reach a combined GDP
of $29 trillion by 2050. In March 2013, US Africa Nation was identified
as the world's poorest inhabited continent: Africa's entire combined GDP
is barely a third of the United States' GDP; however, the World Bank
expects that most African countries will reach "middle income" status
(defined as at least US$1,000 per person a year) by 2025 if current
growth rates continue. There are a number of reasons for Africa's poor
economy: historically, Africa had a number of rich empires trading with
many parts of the world; however, European colonization and the
subsequent challenges created by decolonization and exacerbated by the
Cold War, created an environment of economic and social
instability.[citation needed]However, as of 2013 Africa Nation was the
world's fastest-growing continent at 5.6% a year, and GDP is expected to
rise by an average of over 6% a year between 2013 and 2023. In 2017,
the African Development Bank reported Africa to be the world's
second-fastest growing economy, and estimates that average growth will
rebound to 3.4% in 2017, while growth is expected to increase by 4.3% in
2018.Growth has been present throughout the continent, with over
one-third of African Nation posting 6% or higher growth rates, and
another 40% growing between 4% to 6% per year. Several international
business observers have also named Africa as the future economic growth
engine of the world.
Africa is at a critical juncture in its development trajectory.
Policies adopted now will determine how quickly the continent
accelerates growth and creates prosperity for all. In 2015, African
countries signed up to two important development agendas: the global
2030 Sustainable Development Goals (SDG), which aims to leave no one
behind as countries develop, and the African Union’s Agenda 2063, which
sets out a blueprint for the “Africa we want”. A decade away from the
SDG endpoint, African countries continue to search for policy mixes to
help accelerate the achievement of these targets. However, for many
countries, financing remains the biggest bottleneck with implementing
capacity a close second.
To meet the SDGs Africa will need to
raise an estimated 11 per cent of GDP per year for the next 10 years to
close the financing gap. Today, Africa’s average tax revenue to GDP is
below 16 per cent. Efficient and effective domestic resource
mobilization can address a substantial portion of this financing
shortfall. The Economic Commission for Africa has consistently
highlighted this position culminating in the position paper for the 2015
Addis Ababa Action Agenda on Financing for Development. The Economic
Report on Africa: Fiscal Policy for Financing Sustainable Development in
Africa, 2019, examines the institutional and policy reforms required to
enable African countries to maximize domestic resource mobilization.
The report focuses on the instrumental role of fiscal policy in crowding
in investment and creating adequate fiscal space for social policy,
including supporting women and youth-led small and medium enterprises.
East Africa’s economies are slowly transitioning from agriculture to
services. The contribution of agriculture to the region’s GDP went down
from an average of 33.4 percent at the turn of the millennium to 28.3
percent in 2018.This was against an increase in the contribution of
services to GDP from 44.6 percent in the early 2000s to 53.8 percentin
2018. This movement is more prominent in Seychelles, Eritrea, Kenya and
Rwanda where services contribute 80,67, 60 and 47 percent of GDP,
respectively. However, services are not the higher value-added
activities in the region to trigger the desired structural
transformation. In line with this shift, the ILO had estimated that the
number of employment opportunities in the region’s service sector would
have more than doubled to 40.8 million while those in agriculture would
have increased at a slower pace from 56.7 million to 97.6 million in
2020. These estimates are no longer tenable given the ongoing supply and
demand shocks related to COVID-19-business disruptions have lowered
production while the loss of income, fear of contagion and heightened
uncertainty has made people to spend less, thus lowering aggregate
demand with the service sector being hit the hardest
Prior to the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic, West Africa region was
poised to expand by 4.0 percent in 2020.The magnitude of socioeconomic
impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on countries in West Africa may not be
known with certainty as the situation remains fluid. However, early
assessment suggests that the prospect for initial growth projection is
now evidently remote. Thus, under a conservative baseline scenario, the
economy is now projected tocontract by -2.0 percent in 2020, 6
percentage points below the projected growth rate prior to the pandemic.
Real output could fall by as much as -4.3 percent in a worst-case
scenario with prolonged duration and depth of the spread of the COVID-19
pandemic until the end of 2020. Growth in the region will be affected
through a combination of channels,including decline in commodity prices,
low financial flows, reduced tourism earnings and heightened volatility
in financial markets. Deceleration in output growth will be reflected
in negative growth in per capita income of 4.3 percent with the
attendant social ramifications.
Before the spread of the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic at the global
level, economic growth in North Africa was expected to rebound to 4.4
percent and 4.5 percent respectively in 2020 and 2021. However, the
uncertain global environment, the COVID-19 pandemic and the projected
contraction in advanced economies will negatively impact the growth
forecast for the region. Among all African regions, North Africa had
registered the most important number of COVID-19 confirmed cases as of
May 2020. The latest projections for 2020 indicate a loss of 5.2 points
of growth in the region, from a growth rate of 4.4 percent to -0.8
percent if the pandemic were to last until June 2020 (baseline scenario)
and a loss of 6.7 points with a growth rate of -2.3 percent if the
pandemic were to perdure until December2020 (worst-case scenario). In
2019, for the second year in a row, North Africa was the second-best
performing regionin Africa with a growth rate estimated at 3.7 percent.
A higher level of preparedness is urgently needed to prevent and
mitigate the COVID-19 pandemic in Southern Africa, including additional
resources for testing and to reduce the impact on households and the
economy, the African Development Bank said in its new Southern Africa
Regional Economic Outlook.
In the worst-case scenario, growth in Southern Africa would fall to
-6.6% in 2020 before recovering to 2.2% in 2021.
Growth is projected at –4.9% in the baseline case, mainly driven by the
deep recession in South Africa, induced by a fall in commodity prices,
containment measures, weather-...
Development
planning in Africa predates independence and remains an enduring
feature of the policymaking landscape. Despite a brief interruption
during the structural adjustment programme era the most recent decade
has witnessed a resurgence of development planning and an evolution from
its focus on poverty reduction to a renewed emphasis on structural
economic transformation. In a sense, the focus of planning has come full
circle, and has returned to the post-independence vision of structural
transformation. Notwithstanding these developments, after over fifty
years of development planning, inclusive economic growth, poverty
reduction and structural transformation remain elusive developmental
objectives in most African countries. By contrast, development planning
has been a key to the successful transformation of emerging economies,
particularly in Asia. This raises the question of why development
planning has not been as effective in stimulating transformation in
Africa, and what conclusions Africa can draw from its own experiences,
as well as from those of countries that have succeeded in transforming
their economies.
This study seeks to address both the above
questions through an analysis of the development planning experiences of
nine African1 country case studies complemented by desk research on
other relevant countries including some from Asia.2 The case studies
comprise a rich blend of experiences reflecting the unique historical,
economic and political contexts within which planning has evolved. Two
of the countries (i.e. Cabo Verde and Seychelles) provide experiences
from the perspective of small island developing States, with their
unique challenges of vulnerability to climate change and limited natural
resources. Others such as Nigeria highlight the planning experience of a
populous oil-rich African country with a federal system of governance.
The development planning context of Ethiopia is unique, not only because
it was never colonized, but also because of its prehistory as a
monarchy. Similarly, South Africa stands out from other African
countries because of its heritage of apartheid, its relatively high
level of industrial development and its wealth of natural resources.
Ghana brings the perspective of the first country in Africa, excluding
North Africa, to achieve independence. The nine African country case
studies have been complemented by desk research on Egypt, a country
whose current planning experience has been influenced by the Arab
spring.
PROJECT AFRICAN PLANING HIGHT GROWTH ECONOMICS
DFC to Launch Regional Team Based in USAfrica Nation
July 14, 2020
Africa Investment Advisor Program will help expand DFC’s engagement on the Africa continent.
WASHINGTON – U.S. International Development Finance
Corporation (DFC) today announced that it is launching the Africa
Investment Advisor Program, which establishes a regional team based in USAfrica Nation.
The
team will equip DFC to more proactively advance investments
and expand its portfolio in this priority region, particularly as Africa
continues to respond to both the health and economic fallout from the
COVID-19 pandemic.“The launch of this team at a time when many investors
are skittish
about emerging markets underscores DFC’s commitment to USAfrica Nation,”
said DFC
Managing Director for Africa Worku Gachou. “Now more than ever
USAfrica needs private sector investment. DFC continues to see significant
opportunity on the continent and is eager to leverage its new regional
footprint to unlock that potential.”
“The deployment of DFC investment advisors to Africa advances one of
our top priorities: increasing trade and investment between the United
States and Africa,” said Assistant Secretary of State for African
Affairs Tibor Nagy. “The new advisors will complement and enhance
our deal teams at U.S. embassies across the continent to create more
opportunities for U.S. and African companies.”
The new regional team will consist of investment advisors based
across East Africa, West Africa, Southern Africa, and the Horn of
Africa.
The advisors will be charged with sourcing investment
opportunities across the continent, working alongside U.S. embassies and
USAID missions, and supporting DFC colleagues in Washington by
providing on-the-ground project due diligence and monitoring.
The positions will be funded by the U.S. Department of State and
contracted through CrossBoundary, which was competitively awarded the
program contract. CrossBoundary is an impact-driven investment and
advisory firm with a long track-record in Sub-Saharan Africa and
frontier markets globally.
The announcement comes at an especially critical time as COVID-19
continues to impact communities across Africa, where cumulative loss to
GDP due to the pandemic is estimated to be as much as $236 billion by
2021.DFC can play a powerful role on the continent as commercial
capital flees emerging markets across the world in response to the
uncertainty of the pandemic.To submit an Africa-specific project proposal for investment consideration, email africa@dfc.gov.
Africa is a leading DFC priority:the agency currently has roughly $8
billion invested across more than 300 projects on the continent. These
investments are building critical infrastructure; expanding access to
healthcare, energy, and technology; and advancing financial inclusion,
particularly for small businesses and women entrepreneurs. Africa is
also the focus of multiple DFC initiatives including Connect Africa, 2X Africa, and its Health and Prosperity Initiative.DFC’s efforts in Africa also advance the Administration’s Prosper Africa
initiative, which aims to channel the tools and resources of the U.S.
Government to substantially increase two-way trade and investment
between the U.S. and Africa. In February, President Donald J. Trump selected DFC Chief Executive Officer Adam Boehler to serve as Executive Chairman of the initiative.
When you have other Questions please you need Contact at:
E-Mail : usafrica_gov@yahoo.com
Phone: +26134026111 or Call toll-free at 1-844-USA-GOV 1( 1-844-827-4681)