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World Bank predicts 5.5% growth for Kenya in 2018

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The World Bank forecasts Kenya’s economy to grow by 5.5% in 2018 up from the 4.9% growth it had projected for 2017 as inflation eases.

In its  January 2018 Global Economic Prospects report, the Breton Woods institution says Ethiopia is likely to remain the fastest growing economy in East Africa, but growth is expected to soften as it takes measures to stabilise government debt. Growth is expected to  to firm in Tanzania on strengthening investment growth.

In the Sub-Saharan Africa, the regional economy is anticipated to pick up to 3.2% this year from 2.4% in 2017. South Africa’s economy is expected to grow by just 1.1% in 2018. This is one of the lowest growth rates in sub-Saharan Africa.

Only two of the 43 countries in the region – Equatorial Guinea and Zimbabwe – fared lower than South Africa. Stronger growth prospects were expected in so-called “non-resource intensive countries’’.

“Côte d’Ivoire is forecast to expand by 7.2% in 2018, Senegal by 6.9%, Ethiopia by 8.2%, Tanzania by 6.8% and Kenya by 5.5% as inflation eases”, says the study.

Meanwhile, major oil exporters, Nigeria and Angola were forecast to grow at 2.5% and 1.6% in 2018 respectively.

The report says many African countries would likely be looking to China for trade.

“An abrupt slowdown in China could generate adverse spillovers to the region through lower-than-expected commodity prices,”  it says.

Overall, the World Bank forecasts global economic growth to edge up to 3.1% in 2018 after a much stronger-than-expected 2017, as the recovery in investment, manufacturing, and trade continues, and as commodity-exporting developing economies benefit from firming commodity prices.

However, this is largely seen as a short-term upswing. Over the longer term, slowing potential growth—a measure of how fast an economy can expand when labour and capital are fully employed—puts at risk gains in improving living standards and reducing poverty around the world, the World Bank warns.

Post-crisis accomodation

Growth in advanced economies is expected to moderate slightly to 2.2% in 2018, as central banks gradually remove their post-crisis accommodation and as an upturn in investment levels off. Growth in emerging market and developing economies as a whole is projected to strengthen to 4.5% in 2018, as activity in commodity exporters continues to recover.

“The broad-based recovery in global growth is encouraging, but this is no time for complacency,” World Bank Group President Jim Yong Kim said. “This is a great opportunity to invest in human and physical capital. If policy makers around the world focus on these key investments, they can increase their countries’ productivity, boost workforce participation, and move closer to the goals of ending extreme poverty and boosting shared prosperity.”

2018 is on track to be the first year since the financial crisis that the global economy will be operating at or near full capacity. With slack in the economy expected to dissipate, policymakers will need to look beyond monetary and fiscal policy tools to stimulate short-term growth and consider initiatives more likely to boost long-term potential.

The slowdown in potential growth is the result of years of softening productivity growth, weak investment, and the aging of the global labor force. The deceleration is widespread, affecting economies that account for more than 65% of global GDP.

Without efforts to revitalise potential growth, the decline may extend into the next decade, and could slow average global growth by a quarter percentage point and average growth in emerging market and developing economies by half a percentage point over that period.

“An analysis of the drivers of the slowdown in potential growth underscores the point that we are not helpless in the face of it,” said World Bank Senior Director for Development Economics, Shantayanan Devarajan. “Reforms that promote quality education and health, as well as improve infrastructure services could substantially bolster potential growth, especially among emerging market and developing economies.  Yet, some of these reforms will be resisted by politically powerful groups, which is why making this information about their development benefits transparent and publicly available is so important.”

Risks to the outlook remain tilted to the downside. An abrupt tightening of global financing conditions could derail the expansion. Escalating trade restrictions and rising geopolitical tensions could dampen confidence and activity. On the other hand, stronger-than-anticipated growth could also materialize in several large economies, further extending the global upturn.

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“With unemployment rates returning to pre-crisis levels and the economic picture brighter in advanced economies and the developing world alike, policymakers will need to consider new approaches to sustain the growth momentum,” said World Bank Development Economics Prospects Director Ayhan Kose. “Specifically, productivity-enhancing reforms have become urgent as the pressures on potential growth from aging populations intensify.”

In addition to exploring developments at the global and regional levels, the January 2018 Global Economic Prospects takes a close look at the outlook for potential growth in each of the six global regions; lessons from the 2014-2016 oil price collapse; and the connection between higher levels of skill and education and lower levels of  inequality in emerging market and developing economies.

Written by
BT Reporter -

editor [at] businesstoday.co.ke

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