Welcome, Guest: Register On Nairaland / LOGIN! / Trending / Recent / New
Stats: 3,150,256 members, 7,807,884 topics. Date: Wednesday, 24 April 2024 at 09:33 PM

IMF: Trade Between Sub-saharan Africa, China Jumps 40-fold In 20yrs - Business - Nairaland

Nairaland Forum / Nairaland / General / Business / IMF: Trade Between Sub-saharan Africa, China Jumps 40-fold In 20yrs (2378 Views)

Despite Nigeria Border Closure, Benin Republic Maintains Strong Economy - IMF / Nestle To Close Nairobi Office As It Restructures Business In Sub-saharan Africa / Largest Edible Oil Refinery In Sub-saharan Africa Launched In Ibadan. (2) (3) (4)

(1) (Reply) (Go Down)

IMF: Trade Between Sub-saharan Africa, China Jumps 40-fold In 20yrs by froz(m): 10:39am On Oct 10, 2017
Says trade slumped 54% in 2015   Slowdown hinged on China’s shift from investment, export to domestic consumption     Delayed adjustment to commodity price decline constrains growth in Nigerian economy, others

Ahead of its 2017 annual meetings, which begins tomorrow, the International Monetary Fund has said trade between in the sub-Saharan Africa (Nigeria and others) and China rose more than 40-fold in 20 years as China’s share of African exports jumped from 1.6 per cent in 1995 to 16.5 per cent in 2015 and imports significantly increased from 2.5 per cent to 23.2 per cent over the same period.

However, trade slowed in 2015, when the value of African exports to China stood at $48 billion, having fallen from $105 billion in 2014, representing a slump of 54.29 per cent.

IMF, which disclosed this in its newly-released Annual Report 2017, noted that China’s rapid growth had boosted its demand for raw materials, many of which came from Africa, which led to the massive growth in the 20-year period.

The fund, however, pointed out that, currently, China’s growth was slowing with the drivers of its growth shifting from investment and exports to domestic consumption, a process referred to as “rebalancing.” 

According to the Bretton Woods institution, “A recent analysis prepared by the IMF shows that this shift had a particularly big impact on commodity exporters, many of which are in Africa: in 2015, the value of African exports to China fell to $48 billion from $105 billion in 2014, putting pressure on exchange rates and foreign exchange reserves. Sharply lower government revenue in commodity-intensive countries has forced them to cut public spending, including on badly needed infrastructure and social services. The short-term pain is acute.”

Stating that, “not all the news is bad, though,” the IMF noted that, “ Looking for more opportunities abroad, Chinese enterprises and financial institutions have expanded their direct investment and lending in Africa, notably in non-resource-intensive countries, which continue to enjoy high growth.”

“Over the medium term, this investment offers opportunities to sub-Saharan Africa to become part of global value chains, boosting much-needed structural transformation on the continent,” the fund reasoned.

“Every cloud has a silver lining,” said coauthor of the IMF analysis, Roger Nord. “While falling commodity prices hurt Africa in the short term, China’s shift to more consumption is an opportunity for Africa to accelerate its much-needed structural transformation.”

IMF explained that its activities in FY2017 focused on pressing global issues: trade, its impact on growth and employment; productivity, whose slowing has affected incomes; inclusive growth policies, to address inequality worldwide; gender equality, for the global economy to reach its potential; and debt management, to help some member countries adjust to lower revenues.

IMF attributed the constrained growth in sub-Saharan Africa to delayed adjustment to commodity price decline.  “In 2011 and more acutely since mid-2014, the decline in commodity prices has put severe strains on the 23 sub-Saharan African economies that rely significantly on commodities for their exports. In these countries, the ensuing decline in export proceeds and budgetary revenues has led to a rapid deterioration in the external and fiscal balances, particularly in oil exporters,” it stated.

As a result, it added, “pressures on exchange rates emerged, international reserves declined, and both public debt and arrears increased. Growth in resource-intensive countries has slowed markedly since 2014, compared with the previous period of buoyant growth.” 

According to the Bretton Woods institution, this picture contrasted sharply with the rest of the countries in the region, which had continued to enjoy strong momentum, as they also enjoyed tailwinds from a lower energy import bill. “Growth for sub-Saharan Africa as a whole reached just 1.4 percent in 2016—its worst performance in more than two decades.”

“The authorities in the sub-Saharan African countries most affected have started to adjust policies, but the adjustments have been slow and insufficient, creating uncertainty, holding back investment, and running the risk of generating even deeper difficulties in the future,” said African Department Division Chief, Céline Allard, who oversaw preparation of the April 2017 Regional Economic Outlook: Sub-Saharan Africa—Restarting the Growth Engine.

Pointing out that, as commodity prices are expected to remain low, IMF suggested that, “the hardest-hit countries urgently need to adjust if they want to restore macroeconomic stability and revive growth.”

“They need to combine fiscal consolidation with exchange rate flexibility where feasible. And this rebalancing will be durable only if these countries at the same time boost domestic revenue mobilisation, foster diversification, and address long-standing weaknesses in the business climate to attract investment in new sectors.”

 

SOURCE: https://brandspurng.com/imf-trade-between-sub-saharan-africa-china-jumps-40-fold-in-20yrs/

Re: IMF: Trade Between Sub-saharan Africa, China Jumps 40-fold In 20yrs by Nobody: 7:06am On Oct 11, 2017
Stating that, “not all the news is bad, though,” the IMF noted that, “ Looking for more opportunities abroad, Chinese enterprises and financial institutions have expanded their direct investment and lending in Africa, notably in non-resource-intensive countries, which continue to enjoy high growth.”
Re: IMF: Trade Between Sub-saharan Africa, China Jumps 40-fold In 20yrs by sakalisis(m): 7:37am On Oct 11, 2017
Re: IMF: Trade Between Sub-saharan Africa, China Jumps 40-fold In 20yrs by kay29000(m): 7:38am On Oct 11, 2017
Hmm! To be honest I don't understand all these 'economic lingo.' undecided

1 Like

Re: IMF: Trade Between Sub-saharan Africa, China Jumps 40-fold In 20yrs by Akinz0126(m): 7:41am On Oct 11, 2017
I can bet those above me don't even understand what the news is all about but i trust the ones below me has meaningful things to say
Re: IMF: Trade Between Sub-saharan Africa, China Jumps 40-fold In 20yrs by greatiyk4u(m): 7:49am On Oct 11, 2017
Good news
Re: IMF: Trade Between Sub-saharan Africa, China Jumps 40-fold In 20yrs by encryptjay(m): 7:49am On Oct 11, 2017
Akinz0126:
I can bet those above me don't even understand what the news is all about but i trust the ones below me has meaningful things to say
I tell you, just first to comment things.
Re: IMF: Trade Between Sub-saharan Africa, China Jumps 40-fold In 20yrs by codemaniacs: 7:55am On Oct 11, 2017
kk
Re: IMF: Trade Between Sub-saharan Africa, China Jumps 40-fold In 20yrs by Truth234(m): 8:14am On Oct 11, 2017
myn44 the IMF has started this meeting since yesterday and released economic forecast for Nigeria and the rest of the world.

This 2014 quotes about China has no direct meaning or relationship to Nigeria. There is forecast for Nigeria and suggestion posted on business thread.
Re: IMF: Trade Between Sub-saharan Africa, China Jumps 40-fold In 20yrs by seguntijan(m): 8:49am On Oct 11, 2017
Africa will pay a huge price for all the foreign investment and raw material based economy we currently operate today.
What if foreign investors withdraw all their investment in Africa?.
What if our natural resources/raw materials lose market value?.
What if natural resources get depleted from our lands?.
Africa will pay a huge price in future, I don’t know maybe 50, 100, 200 years, but I’m sure we will pay a huge price when our natural resources loss market value or get depleted from our lands and we have no more natural resources to export to China, America or Europe.

1 Like

Re: IMF: Trade Between Sub-saharan Africa, China Jumps 40-fold In 20yrs by seguntijan(m): 8:50am On Oct 11, 2017
There’s nothing wrong in manufacturing mobile phones in Congo and selling them at expensive price to China. There’s nothing wrong Ghana or Ivory Coast shipping coffee and chocolates to Europe. Because, chocolates and coffee that Ghana and Ivory Coast import are made right from the same cocoa they export overseas!. Let’s begin exporting finished products to Europe at high price. There’s nothing wrong Liberia manufacturing tyre from rubber and shipping them to America at high prices, the same way they do to us when we import finished products of raw materials obtained from Africa at very cheap price.
How would this be achieved?. It is actually very possible and it would be achieved by laying the foundations for SCIENCE education now.

3 Likes

Re: IMF: Trade Between Sub-saharan Africa, China Jumps 40-fold In 20yrs by newslifeop: 8:50am On Oct 11, 2017
Good
Re: IMF: Trade Between Sub-saharan Africa, China Jumps 40-fold In 20yrs by ayokellany: 10:33am On Oct 11, 2017
seguntijan:
There’s nothing wrong in manufacturing mobile phones in Congo and selling them at expensive price to China. There’s nothing wrong Ghana or Ivory Coast shipping coffee and chocolates to Europe. Because, chocolates and coffee that Ghana and Ivory Coast import are made right from the same cocoa they export overseas!. Let’s begin exporting finished products to Europe at high price. There’s nothing wrong Liberia manufacturing tyre from rubber and shipping them to America at high prices, the same way they do to us when we import finished products of raw materials obtained from Africa at very cheap price.
How would this be achieved?. It is actually very possible and it would be achieved by laying the foundations for SCIENCE education now.

But do we have leaders have the brain to comprehend this ? I know for a fact we do not. We have dead brains as leaders in Africa.
Re: IMF: Trade Between Sub-saharan Africa, China Jumps 40-fold In 20yrs by Ugosample(m): 6:28pm On Oct 13, 2017
seguntijan:
Africa will pay a huge price for all the foreign investment and raw material based economy we currently operate today.
What if foreign investors withdraw all their investment in Africa?.
What if our natural resources/raw materials lose market value?.
What if natural resources get depleted from our lands?.
Africa will pay a huge price in future, I don’t know maybe 50, 100, 200 years, but I’m sure we will pay a huge price when our natural resources loss market value or get depleted from our lands and we have no more natural resources to export to China, America or Europe.

You got a point

(1) (Reply)

How I Was Scammed Of N2,000000 This Year January / . / Information on Laundry and Detergent Soap Industry in Nigeria

(Go Up)

Sections: politics (1) business autos (1) jobs (1) career education (1) romance computers phones travel sports fashion health
religion celebs tv-movies music-radio literature webmasters programming techmarket

Links: (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10)

Nairaland - Copyright © 2005 - 2024 Oluwaseun Osewa. All rights reserved. See How To Advertise. 24
Disclaimer: Every Nairaland member is solely responsible for anything that he/she posts or uploads on Nairaland.