As the trade rage between
the United States and China heightens, Nigeria and some major African
economies may soon be caught up in the web.
The development is also being fuelled by a slump in commodity prices, which is greatly affecting exporters.
The
revelation came from the latest report from ICAEW – the Institute of
Chartered Accountants in England and Wales – Economic Update: Africa Q3
2019.
The report provides GDP growth forecasts for various
regions including East Africa which is set to grow by 6.3 per cent, West
and Central Africa at 3.4 per cent, Franc Zone at 4.7 per cent, and
Southern Africa at 1.3 per cent.
The report, according to Africa
Business Community, was commissioned by ICAEW and produced by partner
and forecaster Oxford Economics, predicts that Africa’s growth rate is
set for a sluggish pace after a disruption in oil production in North
Africa and with low international oil prices in Francophone Africa.
It noted that regional GDP growth for Central and West Africa was forecast at 3.4 per cent in 2019.
“This
incorporates the impact of the Nigerian economy’s slow start to the
year, as pipeline damage curtailed its oil production,” the report
noted.
The situation will be further fuelled by policy
uncertainty, concerns over debt-landed parastatals and high unemployment
in South Africa.
Speaking during the launch of the latest
report, Michael Armstrong, ICAEW’s Regional Director for Middle East,
Asia and Africa, said that the growth of some regions in Africa is being
held back by the fluctuating price of oil.
“The growth forecast
for the Franc Zone this year is 4.7 per cent, due to a structurally low
international oil price environment, which continues to weigh on growth
in the region’s oil exporters,” said Mr. Armstrong.
“While still
expected to remain the strongest growing region on the continent, East
Africa is projected to record a slightly lower real GDP growth rate of
6.3 per cent this year compared to 2018.The fact that the countries in
the region are not as reliant on commodities as sources of income
shields them from global shocks,” he added.
Delving deeper into
the East African outlook, Uganda has a favourable economic outlook on
the development of its hydrocarbons sector and GDP growth is forecast
above six per cent p.a. over the medium term.
However, extended
delays in oil exploration and the widening twin deficits (due to an
increase in public debt and increasing capital goods imports to support
the nascent hydrocarbons sector) pose significant downside risks.
Uganda, in partnership with Tanzania, plans to build the East African
Crude Oil Pipeline which is worth $3.5 billion.
In North Africa,
the GDP growth rate is forecast to slow to 2.8 per cent due to
fluctuations in oil production in Libya which compounded the effect of
weak Eurozone demand on the region’s other economies.
Southern
Africa is forecast to keep struggling, with a growth rate of 1.3 per
cent in 2019. The region’s economic anchor, South Africa, is expected to
show nearly-flat growth because of policy uncertainty, concerns over
debt-laden parastatals and high unemployment. In the region’s other
countries growth has been slowed by supply-side challenges, notably
adverse weather conditions in the wake of two cyclones, a regional
rainfall deficit and power rationing.
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