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Global economy to slow in 2023, Nigeria’s growth expected at 2.8% – World Bank

Global economy to slow in 2023, Nigeria's growth expected at 2.8% - World Bank

Nigerian market

Article summary


The World Bank has recently disclosed its projections for Nigeria’s economic growth, estimating it at 2.8% in 2023 with a slight revision since January and a marginal increase to 3.0% in 2024.

However, the bank emphasizes that this growth rate will only result in a meager per capita income growth of 0.4% per year on average in 2023-24, falling far short of what is necessary to make significant progress in reducing extreme poverty.

Additionally, the report warns of various obstacles, including foreign exchange restrictions, high living costs, security challenges, and limited fiscal space, which are expected to impede growth momentum, as highlighted in the June 2023 Global outlook.

 

The growth projection

World Bank stated that Africa’s three largest economies in Sub-Saharan Africa-Nigeria, South Africa, and Angola  projected to grow by about 2.1%  annually over 2023-24,

Nigeria

Growth in Nigeria is projected at 2.8 % in 2023, revised down marginally since January, and is forecast to inch up to 3.0%  in 2024.

They added Financing needs are projected to remain elevated, due to higher borrowing costs, lower oil production and prices, and persistent fiscal and external pressures amid weak domestic revenue mobilization.

Global

World Bank forecasts that After growing 3.1% last year, the global economy is set to slow substantially in 2023, to 2.1%,  amid continued monetary policy tightening to rein in high inflation, before a tepid recovery in 2024, to 2.4%.

They added that Global growth could be weaker than anticipated in the event of more widespread banking sector stress, or if more persistent inflation pressures prompt tighter-than-expected monetary policy as  Weak growth prospects and heightened risks in the near term compound a long-term slowdown in potential growth, which the overlapping shocks of the pandemic have exacerbated, the Russian Federation’s invasion of Ukraine, and the sharp tightening of global financial conditions.

Africa

Growth in Sub-Saharan Africa is expected to slow from 3.7% in 2022 to 3.2 % this year, a 0.4 percentage point downgrade from January forecasts with a moderate improvement to 3.9%  next year.

 

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