Mozambique complies with measures to come off FATF grey list - AIM | Watch
in file CoM
The World Bank has revised its economic growth forecasts for Angola, Cabo Verde (Cape Verde) and Mozambique in 2019 and 2020 upwards, unlike Guinea-Bissau.
In the 2019 Global Economic Forecasts released last week, the World Bank confirmed that 2018 was the third consecutive year of contraction for the Angolan economy, with a decline of 1.8 per cent, a performance 3.5 percentage points lower than previously forecast.
However, the World Bank raised its forecasts for Angolan GDP growth in 2019 (2.9 per cent, an additional 0.7 percentage points compared with the previous projection) and 2020 (2.6 per cent, or 0.2 percentage points more).
The decline in 2018 was due to the contraction of oil production, and the recovery this year is based on a “recovery in the oil sector, with new wells going into production and a resumption of activity in the oil sector, with reforms driving the business environment,” according to the study.
For Mozambique, the World Bank maintained its growth forecast for 2018 – 3.3 per cent – and increased its forecast for 2019 (3.5 per cent) by 0.1 percentage points and by 0.5 percentage points for 2020 (4.1 per cent).
However, Mozambique is the subject of a number of warnings from the World Bank, due to the debt-to-GDP ratio, which has increased by nearly 50 percentage points since 2013, reaching 102 per cent last year, with interest payments rising from 2.6 per cent of state revenue to 16.5 per cent.
“The deterioration was accompanied by increasing deficits – with fiscal policy remaining unconstrained in a scenario of lower raw material prices and reduced growth – and was exacerbated by the inclusion in 2016 of previously undisclosed commercial debts,” the World Bank reported.
By the end of 2018, Mozambique was ranked in the debt sustainability index of the World Bank and International Monetary Fund as a country in debt stress, alongside countries like Zimbabwe, South Sudan, and Gambia.
Cabo Verde, according to the World Bank’s economic forecasts, is expected to have grown 4.5 per cent last year, up 0.3 percentage points from the previous projection.
The growth acceleration trend is expected to be even stronger this year (4.7 per cent) and 2020 (4.9 per cent), with upward reviews of 0.7 percentage points and 0.9 percentage points, respectively.
In terms of economic growth forecasts, the World Bank is now much more pessimistic about Guinea Bissau, reducing the 2018 forecast by 1.2 percentage points (to 3.9 per cent).
Both the forecasts for 2019 (4.2 per cent) and for 2020 (4.4 per cent) were revised downwards by one percentage point.
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