Economic Growth in Sub-Saharan Africa Rebounds to a Projected 2.6% in 2017

Economic Growth in Sub-Saharan Africa Rebounds to a Projected 2.6% in 2017

LAGOS (Capital Markets in Africa) – Sub-Saharan Africa experienced a slowdown in investment growth from nearly 8% in 2014 to 0.6% in 2015, according to the new Africa’s Pulse, a biannual analysis of the state of African economies conducted by the World Bank. This sluggish investment has coincided with a sharp deceleration in economic growth in Africa, the World Bank said in a report on Wednesday. In this issue of the Africa’s Pulse, a special…

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Somalia’s GDP growth seen slowing to 2.5 pct in 2017 – IMF

Somalia’s GDP growth seen slowing to 2.5 pct in 2017 – IMF

KHARTOUM (Capital Markets in Africa) – Somalia’s economy is expected to slow sharply this year as a drought knocks production in farming, although the impact will be partially offset by a boost from construction and telecommunications, the International Monetary Fund said. In a statement late on Wednesday, the IMF projected the Horn of Africa nation’s gross domestic product would expand 2.5 percent this year down from estimated 3.4 percent in 2016. “The Somali economy is…

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INTO AFRICA February 2017 Edition: Africa’s Economic Path in 2017

INTO AFRICA February 2017 Edition: Africa’s Economic Path in 2017

LAGOS, Nigeria, Capital Markets in Africa: Welcome to the 2017’s first edition of INTO AFRICA, the publication with fresh insight into Africa’s emerging capital markets. In this edition, we bring you a selection of insights on Africa’s economic prospects in 2017. Please download by clicking: INTO AFRICA PUBLICATION: FEBRUARY 2017  EDITION.  The collapse of oil prices has had far-reaching effects on African economies in 2016. For commodity exporters, the implications are glaring – weaker revenues have…

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IMF Sees Bigger Ghana 2016 Deficit Target Slippage Than Forecast

IMF Sees Bigger Ghana 2016 Deficit Target Slippage Than Forecast

ACCRA (Capital Markets in Africa) – Ghana will miss its budget-deficit target for 2016 by a bigger margin than the government’s forecast due to weak revenue collection and higher-than-planned capital spending, according to the International Monetary Fund. West Africa’s second-biggest economy will probably miss the Washington-based lender’s budget-deficit forecast of 5.2 percent of gross domestic product by 2 to 3 percentage points, the IMF said in an e-mailed response to questions. Last month, former Finance Minister Seth Terkper said…

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Uganda Growth Seen Accelerating to 5.5% on Oil-Industry Spending

Uganda Growth Seen Accelerating to 5.5% on Oil-Industry Spending

KAMPALA (Capital Markets in Africa) – Growth in Uganda may accelerate to 5.5 percent next fiscal year, helped by increased spending on the oil industry, the Finance Ministry said. The growth rate may increase from a projected 5 percent in the current fiscal year and may reach 6 percent in 2018-19, the ministry said in the National Budget Framework Paper e-mailed to reporters on Monday in the capital, Kampala, by the Civil Society Budget Advocacy Group. Amos…

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Sub-Saharan Africa 2017 Growth to accelerate by 2.9 Percent, World Bank Says

Sub-Saharan Africa 2017 Growth to accelerate by 2.9 Percent, World Bank Says

LAGOS (Capital Markets in Africa) – Growth in Sub-Saharan Africa is estimated to have decelerated to 1.5 percent in 2016, the lowest level in over two decades, as commodity exporters adjust to low commodity prices. Regional GDP per capita contracted by 1.1 percent. South Africa and oil exporters account for most of the slowdown, while activity in non-resource intensive countries—agricultural exporters and commodity importers—generally remained robust. Commodity prices are expected to stabilize, but stay well…

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Uganda economy to grow 5 pct 2016/17, 5.5 pct 2017/18, IMF says

Uganda economy to grow 5 pct 2016/17, 5.5 pct 2017/18, IMF says

KAMPALA (Capital Markets in Africa) – Uganda’s economy will grow by 5 percent in the 2016/17 (July-June) fiscal year, the International Monetary Fund forecast on Wednesday, trimming the forecast from 5.5 percent after state revenues missed targets and some major projects faced delays. The IMF also predicted Uganda would grow 5.5 percent next fiscal year, boosted by rising spending on infrastructure. Uganda has been pressing ahead with several major projects, including new dams and roads….

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