The African Development Bank Group’s Acting Chief Economist and Vice President for Economic Governance and Knowledge Management, Professor Kevin Chika Urama, shares his thoughts on the inaugural Africa’s Macroeconomic Performance and Outlook report, released on Thursday 19 January.
The new biannual publication aims to provide African policymakers, global investors, researchers, and other development partners with an incisive, timely, evidence-based evaluation of the continent’s recent macroeconomic performance and short-to-medium-term outlook amid dynamic global economic developments.
Why is Africa’s Macro-Economic Performance and Outlook report important?
Like other world regions, Africa continues to face overlapping shocks such as the COVID-19 pandemic, climate change-related impacts, rising geopolitical tensions, supply chain disruptions and the tightening global financial conditions impacting key macroeconomic indicators.
The macroeconomic indicators include economic growth, financial sector development, interest and exchange rates, fiscal positions, current account positions, financial flows and debt dynamics that are making policymaking and investment decisions very challenging.
The Africa’s Macroeconomic Performance and Outlook report covers all African countries and aims to provide regular analysis on the recent evolution and short to medium-term outlook of these key macroeconomic indicators at the continental, regional and country levels. It also proposes policies to aid policymaking and investment decisions on the continent.
The report will be released twice a year – in the first and third quarters – to provide policymakers, investors and all stakeholders with real-time and evidence-based information on the factors shaping Africa’s development.
Why did the bank find it necessary to produce the report? What were the key objectives?
Africa’s Macroeconomic Performance and Outlook Report responds to a critical need for timely information to help decision-making in a context of heightened global and regional uncertainties.
Global macroeconomic conditions have recently become uncertain, with persistent multiple shocks that make policymaking and investment decisions challenging. With these global shocks and their interaction with prevailing pockets of domestic and regional risks, the need for regular diagnosis and targeted policy actions to address their impacts on African economies is critical.
With the publication of Africa’s Macroeconomic Performance and Outlook Report, The Bank –Africa’s premier knowledge broker — is reaffirming to African policymakers that it has a mandate to shape the African narrative on key issues of relevance to the continent’s development.
The report, therefore, serves as a compass for African countries on their economic situation, providing interested parties and stakeholders with an up-to-date evidence-based assessment of the continent’s recent macroeconomic performance and short-to-medium term outlook amid dynamic global economic developments.
What distinguishes this report from the African Economic Outlook, which is released yearly by the African Development Bank Group?
The new report complements the African Economic Outlook (AEO) report, which is the Bank’s flagship publication and which focuses on key emerging issues relevant to Africa’s development.
The MEO aims to provide a current and timely evidence-based assessment of Africa’s macroeconomic performance and short-to-medium-term outlook while the AEO is both broad-based as it discusses Africa’s macro- and micro economic performance and outlook, and theme-oriented, focusing its analyses each year on a different key emerging issue relevant to Africa’s development in line with the Bank’s High 5s of Light up and Power Africa; Feed Africa; Industrialize Africa; Integrate Africa; and Improve the Quality of Life for the People of Africa.
How did African countries fare in 2022? What are the economic projections for Africa for 2023–2024?
Despite increasingly uncertain and challenging global macroeconomic conditions, Africa’s economic performance proved resilient. Out of its 54 countries, 53 maintained positive growth in 2022, ensuring that the continent recorded a stable 3.8 percent growth rate in the period.
Africa’s stable economic performance is expected to continue in the medium term, with growth projected at 4% in 2023 and 2024, higher than the projected global averages of 2.7 percent and 3.2 percent, respectively.
The stable outlook projected for 2023-2024 reflects continuing policy support in Africa, global efforts to mitigate the impact of external shocks and rising uncertainty in the global economy, the expected growth in demand for Africa’s commodities and green minerals as countries seek alternative sources of food and energy to counter the effects of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, and green minerals to support global green transitions.
The rise in food and energy prices stoked by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, and effects of drought and flooding in some countries have fueled inflationary pressures, pushing Africa’s average inflation rate 0.9 percentage points to 13.8% in 2022, the highest rate in over a decade. Inflation is however projected to decline to 13.5% in 2023 and reach a single-digit level of 8.8% in 2024.
The tightening global financial conditions in 2022 destabilized foreign exchange markets in many African countries, driving depreciations in domestic currencies and increased sovereign borrowing costs which could exacerbate debt vulnerabilities in 2023 and 2024.
What is your prognosis for Africa’s economy in the medium term based on the findings of the report? What are the risks to watch?
The welcome recovery and the economic resilience of African countries in the short to medium term come with cautious optimism given the considerable global uncertainties and risks.
The risks of debt default could increase in some African countries—given the already high accumulation and changed structure of public debt in the past decade, the additional financial pressures created by the appreciating US dollar, and tightening monetary conditions globally.
Climate change could increase losses and damages due to extreme weather events and exacerbate fiscal risks for countries. The high dependence on exports of primary commodities with limited value addition exposes countries to commodity price volatility and could delay the structural transformation presented by the green transition.
With the low rates of COVID-19 vaccination across Africa, currently 26%, there is a moderate risk of new variants emerging, which could be amplified by a full reopening of the global economy.
We also have regional conflicts in key hotspots such as Burkina Faso, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Ethiopia, Mali, and Mozambique that could exert further pressures on the fiscal position of countries through increased security expenditure and reverse investment flows.
In addition, political risks could rise in 30 African countries. Algeria, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Egypt, Ethiopia, Libya, Madagascar, Nigeria, South Africa, and Zimbabwe are scheduled to hold national elections in 2023 or 2024.
Last, there is low to moderate risk of sustained geopolitical tensions, and an escalation of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine that could further disrupt global supply chains and commodity markets.
What are some of the measures that countries need to follow to mitigate these risks?
There are various measures African countries could deploy in the short-to-medium and long-term to deal with existing and emerging threats to inclusive and sustainable development.
They include deploying timely and aggressive monetary policy tightening – especially in countries with acute inflation – and cautious tightening in countries where inflationary pressures are low.
Effective coordination of fiscal and monetary actions to optimize the outcomes of targeted policy intervention is required to tame inflation and fiscal pressures as well as boost intra-Africa trade, especially in manufactured products, to cushion economies from volatile commodity prices.
Another important action would be accelerating structural reforms to build tax administration capacity and investments in digitalization and e-governance. This would enhance transparency, reduce illicit financial flows, and scale up domestic resource mobilization.
Africa also needs to embrace institutional governance and enact policies that leverage private financing — especially in climate-proof and pandemic-proof greenfield projects—and mobilize Africa’s resources for inclusive and sustainable development.
Equally important is the targeting of structural budget deficit reduction and accumulation of public debt in countries facing a high risk of debt distress or that are already in debt distress.
Managing foreign exchange reserves to reduce exchange-rate volatility and enhance export competitiveness could be part of effective risk-reducing agents.
Countries also need to implement local-content development and franchising policies to develop value chains and get more value from natural resources, especially in countries with minerals for green development.
African countries should boost regional trade to enhance resilience to spillovers from the global economic slowdown and reduce persistent trade deficits. Carrying out structural reform to boost regional trade can lead to a more vibrant regional market in the medium to long term.
What would you say are the key takeaways from the report?
The report offers fundamental insights that African policymakers, global investors, researchers, and other development partners will find handy and utilize as an essential reference tool. It gives hope for continued economic resilience amid the heightened risk of global recession. Importantly, the economic growth was positive across all five African regions and that 53 of 54 African countries in 2022 with a stable outlook in the medium term against multiple shocks.
But the recovery and the economic resilience of African countries in the short-to-medium term come with cautious optimism given the considerable global uncertainty. Therefore, bold policy actions outlined above should be implemented to address the effects of rising inflation and sustain growth to a higher trajectory needed to reduce poverty. To meet the significant financing gaps in Africa, it is imperative to enact policies that can mobilize and leverage private financing for development in Africa.