WASHINGTON, April 9, 2020—Growth
in Sub-Saharan Africa has been significantly
impacted by the ongoing coronavirus outbreak and is forecast to fall
sharply from 2.4% in 2019 to -2.1 to -5.1% in 2020, the first recession
in the region over the past 25 years, according to the latest Africa’s
Pulse, the World Bank’s twice-yearly economic
update for the region.
“The COVID-19 pandemic is testing the limits of societies and economies across the world, and African
countries are likely to be hit particularly hard,” said Hafez Ghanem, World Bank Vice President for Africa. “We
are rallying all
possible resources to help countries meet people’s immediate health and
survival needs while also safeguarding livelihoods and jobs in the
longer term – including calling for a standstill on official bilateral
debt service payments which would free up funds
for strengthening health systems to deal with COVID-19 and save lives,
social safety nets to save livelihoods and help workers who lose jobs,
support to small and medium enterprises, and food security.”
The
Pulse authors recommend that African policymakers focus on saving lives
and protecting livelihoods by focusing on strengthening health systems
and
taking quick actions to minimize disruptions in food supply chains.
They also recommend implementing social protection programs, including
cash transfers, food distribution and fee waivers, to support citizens,
especially those working in the informal sector.
The
analysis shows that COVID-19 will cost the region between $37 billion
and $79 billion in output losses for 2020 due to a combination of
effects. They
include trade and value chain disruption, which impacts commodity
exporters and countries with strong value chain participation; reduced
foreign financing flows from remittances, tourism, foreign direct
investment, foreign aid, combined with capital flight;
and through direct impacts on health systems, and disruptions caused by
containment measures and the public response.
While
most countries in the region have been affected to different degrees by
the pandemic, real gross domestic product growth is projected to fall
sharply
particularly in the region’s three largest economies – Nigeria, Angola,
and South Africa— as a result of persistently weak growth and
investment. In general, oil exporting-countries will also be hard-hit;
while growth is also expected to weaken substantially
in the two fastest growing areas—the West African Economic and Monetary
Union and the East African Community—due to weak external demand,
disruptions to supply chains and domestic production. The region’s
tourism sector is expected to contract sharply due
to severe disruption to travel.
The
COVID-19 crisis also has the potential to spark a food security crisis
in Africa, with agricultural production potentially contracting between
2.6%
in an optimistic scenario and up to 7% if there are trade blockages.
Food imports would decline substantially (as much as 25% or as little as
13%) due to a combination of higher transaction costs and reduced
domestic demand.
Several
African countries have reacted quickly and decisively to curb the
potential influx and spread of the coronavirus, very much in line with
international
guidelines. However, the report points out several factors that pose
challenges to the containment and mitigation measures, in particular the
large and densely populated urban informal settlements, poor access to
safe water and sanitation facilities, and fragile
health systems. Ultimately, the magnitude of the impact will depend on
the public’s reaction within respective countries, the spread of the
disease, and the policy response. And these factors together could lead
to reduced labor market participation, capital
underutilization, lower human capital accumulation, and long-term
productivity effects.
“In
addition to containment measures, we have seen that in responding to
COVID-19, countries are opting
for a combination of emergency fiscal and monetary policy actions with
many central banks in the region taking important actions like cutting
interest rates and providing extraordinary liquidity assistance,” said
Albert Zeufack, Chief Economist for Africa at the World Bank.
“However, it is
important to ensure that fiscal policy builds in space for social
protection interventions, especially targeting workers in the informal
sector, and sows the seed for future resilience of our economies.”
The
authors emphasize the need for a customized policy response to reflect
the structure of African economies (especially the large informal
sector) and
the peculiar constraints policymakers currently face, particularly the
deteriorating fiscal positions and heightened public debt
vulnerabilities, and the overall low operational capacity to respond.
“The
immediate measures are important but there is no doubt there will be
need for some sort of debt relief
from bilateral creditors to secure the resources urgently needed to
fight COVID-19 and to help manage or maintain macroeconomic stability in
the region,” said Cesar Calderon, Lead Economist and
Lead author of the report.
Due
to the COVID-19 pandemic, economic circumstances within countries and
regions are fluid and change on a day-by-day basis. The macroeconomic
analysis
in the report is based on data available by the first quarter of March
2020.
The World Bank Group is taking
broad, fast action
to help developing countries strengthen their pandemic response,
increase disease surveillance, improve public health interventions, and
help the private sector continue to operate and sustain jobs. It is
deploying up to $160 billion in financial support over
the next 15 months to help countries protect the poor and vulnerable,
support businesses, and bolster economic recovery.
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