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Sub-Saharan Africa’s Economic Growth Rate to Stall in 2015
Plunging oil prices, sluggish growth in the developed world and a
slowdown in China’s pace of industrialization will bring down
sub-Saharan Africa’s growth rate this year to its lowest in two decades,
the World Bank said Monday.
Economic output is expected to grow
by 4% across the region in 2015, the World Bank said in its biannual
economy report “Africa Pulse,” significantly below the historic average
of 4.4%. While that is still well above the global economy average, seen
by the World Bank at 2.9% for 2015, the decline highlights how
vulnerable the world’s second-fastest growing region is, both from
trouble at home and abroad.Growth will pick up in sub-Saharan
Africa in 2016 to reach 4.5%, but only “gradually,” the report said. And
risks are on the downside.“On the domestic front, a new generation of violent conflict poses
security risks with the potential to undermine development gains; and
the Ebola epidemic serves to highlight the pre-existing weaknesses in
the health systems of much of the continent and the potential for
systemic risks from communicable diseases,” the report said. It added
that “on the external front, a sharper-than-expected slowdown in China, a
further decline in oil prices, and a sudden deterioration in global
liquidity conditions are the main risks.”Some African nations
are feeling the pain a lot more. The report singles out Angola and the
Republic of Congo as economies that are so reliant on oil exports they
have nowhere to seek refuge in this phase of low global oil prices.
Sub-Saharan Africa as a whole is a net exporter of oil and other
commodities. The double-whammy of falling fuel prices and the end of the
so-called “commodity super-cycle”--a period that started in 2000 marked
by extraordinary demand for commodities fueled by China’s rapid
expansion—are hitting the region.