The World Bank has predicted a
sharp fall in Nigeria’s real gross domestic product growth as countries in
sub-Saharan Africa head towards recession as a result of the ongoing
coronavirus outbreak.
The latest edition of Africa’s
Pulse, the World Bank’s twice-yearly economic update for the region, said
COVID-19 was driving sub-Saharan Africa towards the first recession in 25 years.
The report, which was released on
Thursday, said already, growth in the region had been significantly impacted by
the outbreak and is forecast to fall sharply from 2.4 per cent in 2019 to -2.1
to -5.1 per cent in 2020.
The regions three largest economies
– Nigeria, Angola, and South Africa – are expected to witness a sharp fall in
real GDP growth as a result of persistently weak growth and investment.
“While most countries in the
region have been affected to different degrees by the pandemic, real gross
domestic product growth is projected to fall sharply, particularly in the
region’s three largest economies – Nigeria, Angola, and South Africa – as a
result of persistently weak growth and investment,” the report said.
It is estimated that COVID-19 will
cost sub-Saharan Africa between $37bn and $79bn in output losses for 2020 due
to a combination of effects.
The effects include trade and
value chain disruptions for commodity exporters and countries with strong value
chain participation, as well as reduced foreign financing flows from
remittances, tourism, foreign direct investment and foreign aid.
Other effects are capital flight,
direct impact on health systems, and disruptions caused by containment measures
and the public response.
The World Bank report projected
that oil exporting-countries such as Nigeria will be hard-hit by the impact of
the outbreak.
It also projected that growth is
expected to weaken substantially in the two fastest growing areas – the West
African Economic and Monetary Union and the East African Community – due to
weak external demand, disruptions to supply chains and domestic production.
The region’s tourism sector is
expected to contract sharply due to severe disruption to travel.
The impact of the pandemic on
agriculture could lead to food security crisis, the report further observed.
“The COVID-19 crisis also has the
potential to spark a food security crisis in Africa, with agricultural
production potentially contracting between 2.6 per cent in an optimistic
scenario and up to seven per cent if there are trade blockages.
“Food imports would decline
substantially (as much as 25 per cent or as little as 13 per cent) due to a
combination of higher transaction costs and reduced domestic demand,” the
report said.
The report urged African
policymakers to focus on saving lives and protecting livelihoods by
strengthening health systems and taking quick actions to minimize disruptions
in food supply chains.
It also recommended
implementation of social protection programmes including cash transfers, food
distribution and fee waivers to support citizens, particularly those working in
the informal sector.
The report noted that factors
such as large and densely populated urban informal settlements, poor access to
safe water and sanitation facilities, and fragile health systems posed
challenges to the containment and mitigation measures.
“The COVID-19 pandemic is testing
the limits of societies and economies across the world, and African countries
are likely to be hit particularly hard,” World Bank Vice-President for Africa,
Hafez Ghanem, said.
The World Bank added that it was
helping developing countries to strengthen their response to the pandemic by
deploying up to $160bn over the next 15 months in programmes aimed at protecting
the vulnerable, supporting businesses, and bolstering economic recovery.
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