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African economies are growing at very different speeds

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·        New numbers from the IMF tell a tale of two Africas

 

How are sub-Saharan African economies doing? It depends on where you look, says the IMF (International Monetary Fund) in its latest survey of the continent.

Regional growth will slow to just 1.4 per cent this year, the most sluggish pace for two decades.

Things look grim in Nigeria, which is mired in recession. But the Ivory Coast, a short flight away, is thundering along at a growth rate of 8 per cent. Similar contrasts are found across the continent.

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Better to talk of two Africas, says the IMF, moving at different speeds.

The big divider is resources. As commodity prices have slumped, so too have the fortunes of big exporters.

As a group, resource-rich countries will grow on average by 0.3 per cent of GDP (Gross Domestic Product), says the IMF.

Take oil-rich Angola, once the fastest-growing country on the continent: it will not grow at all this year, and is wrestling with inflation of 38per cent.

Commodity-exporting countries saw the value of their exports to China almost halve in 2015. Public debt is rising sharply. Exchange rates are falling. Private consumption has collapsed.

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Things look very different in countries which are less resource-dependent.

They will grow at 5.6per cent this year, the IMF reckons. They have been helped by falling oil prices, which makes their imports cheaper.

They are stronger in other ways. In east Africa, for example, a wave of public investment in infrastructure has boosted demand.

Governments cannot set commodity prices. Nor can they stop drought, which has hit agriculture in countries such as Ethiopia and Malawi. But their decisions do make a difference.

Nigeria’s disastrous attempt to prop up its exchange rate hurt far more than it helped.

Investors in Mozambique were unimpressed when the country revealed hidden debts in April.

Growth in South Africa has slowed to almost zero amid political wrangles. Now is the time to get the policies right, urges the IMF.

The numbers should be read warily: GDP figures are only ever a best guess, and the large informal economy in most African states makes the calculation even harder.

Talk to traders in Uganda, for instance, and you will hear a story very different from the IMF’s rosy forecast of 5per cent growth.

The overall lesson, though, is clear. If you rely on commodities, diversify – or face the consequences. That is easier said than done.

Look to east African countries, hailed for their innovations in mobile banking, which are now touting a fresh source of riches: oil and gas.

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