The African Development Bank has projected that about 39 million Africans could be pushed into extreme poverty in 2021 as a result of the coronavirus pandemic.
This was contained in the bank’s 2021 edition of the African Economic Outlook which focuses on debt resolution, governance, and growth in Africa.
From the report, NewsSpecng learnt that Africa’s predicted growth could be subject to major downside risks arising from both external and domestic factors.
Part of the report read, “Despite the challenging backdrop of a global pandemic and external economic shocks, Africa is expected to recover from its worst recession in half a century and reach 3.4 percent growth in 2021.
“The outbreak of the novel coronavirus in December 2019 has taken a massive toll on Africa, hitting tourism-dependent economies, oil-exporting economies and other-resource intensive economies the hardest, as well as deepening inequality.
“The continent-wide projected recovery, following a 2.1 per cent contraction in 2020, does not remove the threat of increasing poverty. An estimated 39 million Africans could possibly slip into extreme poverty this year, following about 30 million who were pushed into extreme poverty in 2020 as a result of the pandemic. The report finds that populations with lower levels of education, few assets, and working in informal jobs are the most affected and must be protected.”
On debt, the report noted that in 2020, government spending across Africa skyrocketed as countries strived to support their populations through the pandemic.
It added, “This has had a direct negative impact on budgetary balances and debt burdens: the average debt-to-GDP ratio for Africa is expected to climb by 10 to 15 percentage points in the short to medium term, fueled by the surge in government spending and the contraction of fiscal revenues as a result of COVID–19.
“This will result in fast-paced debt accumulation in the near to medium term. Although the average debt to-GDP ratio had stabilized around 60 percent of GDP, recent debt restructuring experiences in Africa have been costly and lengthy because information asymmetries, creditor coordination problems, and the use of more complicated debt instruments.”