Slowed Down Growth Looms for Sub-Saharan Africa

Oct 7 , 2023


[ssba-buttons]

The growth prospects of sub-Saharan countries decelerate with rising instability, weak economic growth, debt distress, and climate shocks, according to a report published by the World Bank last week. It indicates that the economic growth rate is set to decelerate by one percentage point from last year to 2.5pc in 2023. Although inflation has receded, with the decline from 9.3pc to 7.3pc in 2023, 18 African countries have had average annual inflation rates of double digits in 2023. Inflationary pressures dominated by higher food and fuel prices and weakened domestic currencies are eroding household income and weighing on private consumption, the report states. Debt burdens continue to weigh heavily on sub-Saharan African economies, with 21 countries at high risk of external debt distress since June. Africa's Pulse, a bi-annual publication by the Chief Economist in the World Bank Africa Region, analyses the short-term economic prospects for the continent and current development challenges. The urban employment share of the working-age population has remained roughly 23 over the past two decades. Much of the population in the region remains rural and employed in agriculture, which is strongly associated with poverty. The report suggests supporting demand-driven skills, promoting organisational transformation, ensuring political stability, and strengthening institutions to enable a thriving market economy.


Radar

US Renews National Emergency, Sanctions on Ethiopia

The United States has extended the national emergency and sanctions on Ethiopia for another year under the African Growth & Opportunity Act (AGOA). Signed by President Donald J. Trump, the measure was first declared on September 17, 2021, through an executive order citing the conflict in northern region of the country as an "unusual and extraordinary" threat to U.S. national security and foreign policy. The extension, effective until September 17, 2026, keeps in place restrictions targeti...


Radar

Rockefeller Pitches Clean Cooking to Curb School Meal Emissions

A recent study has revealed the staggering environmental toll of school feeding programs. A single school serving 400 students can burn through the equivalent of 56 hectares of forest each year to fuel cooking. The Rockefeller Foundation flagged the health risks too, with most cooks, predominantly women, breathing smoke levels ten times higher than the World Health Organisation's safe limit. "If every school meal transitioned to clean cooking with electricity and solar, the emissions saved wo...


Radar

Sun-Powered Grid Brings Light to Qunbi District

A new 600KW solar mini-grid in East Hararge'sQunbi district has connected 2,200 households to electricity, marking a milestone in the recent rural electrification push. Ethiopian Electric Utility (EEU) laid seven kilometres of medium-voltage and 10 kilometres of low-voltage lines, installing four transformers to reach communities long cut off from power. Customers cover only meter and installation costs before accessing the service. The project is part of the national strategy to expand energ...