Africa sees slow economic recovery: IMF
The IMF said in its World Economic Outlook that growth in Africa has slowed significantly as a result of the collapse of global trade and disruptions in global financial markets, but growth is expected to regain momentum as the global recovery gets under way.
The effect of the global recession was initially felt most strongly in those economies more highly integrated into global financial markets, including South Africa.
Subsequently, the impact of the fall in financial flows propagated to oil exporters, manufacturing exporters and commodity experts as global trade collapsed.
The report said oil exporters such as Angola, Equatorial Guinea and Nigeria are expected to experience the sharpest growth slowdown in 2009 as oil revenues have fallen hard. GDP growth in oil importers is projected to decelerate as well.
Real GDP in South Africa, the largest economy of the region and an oil importer, is projected to contract by 2.2 percent in 2009.
Two of the economies hardest hit by the global recession are Botswana and Seychelles; Kazinform cites Xinhua. See www.news.xinhuanet.com for full version.