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World Bank cites Nigeria and others as causes of slowed growth in Africa

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The World Bank, yesterday, disclosed how slowed economic growth in some key African economies – Nigeria, South Africa, and Angola – is affecting the rest of the continent.

According to the bank’s latest issue of Africa’s Pulse in which this information is contained, it was also acknowledged that Sub-Saharan economies continue to recover although at a slower rate.

The report also disclosed that the earlier 3.1% economic growth forecast for the region is no longer feasible, even as the World Bank now projects a growth rate of just 2.7% in 2018.

In the meant, Governments in the region must take some decisive actions in order to facilitate faster economic growth.

More details: How Nigeria, South Africa, and Angola influenced growth rate

As noted earlier, the World Bank said that while the economic growth rate in the rest of the sub-Saharan Africa region was steady, same cannot be said for the likes of Nigeria, South Africa and Angola.

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These three African countries, which are also some of the biggest economies on the continent, experienced “sluggish expansion” which was caused by such factors as lower oil output (in Nigeria and Angola), and a contraction in South Africa’s Agric sector.

“The slower pace of the recovery in Sub-Saharan Africa is explained by the sluggish expansion in the region’s three largest economies. Lower oil production in Angola and Nigeria offset higher oil prices, and in South Africa, weak household consumption growth was compounded by a contraction in agriculture.” -World Bank

Other issues highlighted in the report

Measure that must be taken to remedy the situation…

The report surmised that Governments in the region must “focus on investments that foster human capital, reduce resource misallocation and boost productivity” in order to ensure facilitate and sustain growth.

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