Regional Economic Outlook, October 2011 : Sub-Saharan Africa - Sustaining the Expansion. için kapak resmi
Regional Economic Outlook, October 2011 : Sub-Saharan Africa - Sustaining the Expansion.
Başlık:
Regional Economic Outlook, October 2011 : Sub-Saharan Africa - Sustaining the Expansion.
Yazar:
African Dept., International Monetary Fund.
ISBN:
9781463966508
Fiziksel Tanımlama:
1 online resource (115 pages)
Seri:
Regional Economic Outlook
İçerik:
Cover -- Contents -- Abbreviations -- Acknowledgments -- 1. Sustaining the Expansion -- Introduction and Summary -- Growth with Risks -- Risks to the Outlook -- Policy Challenges -- 2. How Inclusive Has Africa's Recent High-Growth Episode Been? -- Introduction and Summary -- The Growth-Poverty Disconnect in Sub-Saharan Africa: More Apparent than Real? -- Insights from Case Studies -- New Evidence on the Evolution of Real Income in SSA from Engel Curves -- Conclusions -- 3. Sub-Saharan Africa's Engagement with Emerging Partners: Opportunities and Challenges -- Introduction and Summary -- Reorientation of Sub-Saharan African Countries toward New Markets -- Economic Impact of Sub-Saharan Africa's Engagement with New Partners -- Opportunities, Challenges, and Policy Issues -- Statistical Appendix -- References -- Publications of the IMF African Department, 2009-11 -- Boxes -- 3.1. How Sophisticated Are Sub-Saharan African Exports, and Does It Matter for Growth? -- 3.2. Chinese FDI Flows to Sub-Saharan Africa -- 3.3. China's Special Economic Zones in Sub-Saharan Africa -- Tables -- 1.1. Sub-Saharan Africa: Macroeconomic Aggregates, 2004-12 -- 1.2. Change in Outlook for Commodity Prices, 2011-12 -- 2.1. Macroeconomic, Poverty, and Consumption Aggregates in Sample Countries -- 2.2. Log Household Consumption Determinants (Most Recent Survey) -- 2.3. Employment Indicators -- 2.4. Engel Curves for Food in Ghana over the Period 1991-2005 -- 2.5. Engel Curves for Food in Cameroon, Ghana, Uganda, and Zambia -- 3.1. Exports Between Trade Partners -- 3.2. Labor Productivity and Cost in Selected SEZs -- 3.3. Trade Policy Restrictiveness and Tariff Escalation, 2006-09 -- Figures -- 1.1. Sub-Saharan Africa: Output Growth -- 1.2. Sub-Saharan Africa: Macroeconomic Indicators, December 2005-June 2011 -- 1.3. Sub-Saharan Africa: CPI Inflation, 2011 vs. 2010.

1.4. Sub-Saharan Africa: Food Inflation vs. CPI Inflation -- 1.5. Sub-Saharan Africa: Recent Changes in Policy Interest Rates -- 1.6. Sub-Saharan Africa, World: Changes in Nominal Effective Exchange Rate, June 2010-11 -- 1.7. Sub-Saharan Africa: Change in Reserves, June 2010-11 -- 1.8. Sub-Saharan Africa: Index of Monetary Conditions vs. Nonfood Inflation, June 2011 -- 1.9. Sub-Saharan Africa: Overall Fiscal Balance (Excluding Grants) of Oil Importers, 2009-10 vs. 2011-12 -- 1.10. Sub-Saharan Africa: Overall Fiscal Balance (Excluding Grants) of Oil Importers, 2004-12 -- 1.11. Sub-Saharan Africa: Overall Fiscal Balance (Excluding Grants) of Oil Exporters, 2007-12 -- 1.12. Sub-Saharan Africa: External Current Account, 2004-12 -- 1.13. Sub-Saharan Africa: Growth Prospects to 2012 -- 1.14. Sub-Saharan Africa: Primary Balance vs. Debt-Stabilizing Primary Balance, 2004-12 -- 1.15. Sub-Saharan Africa: Real Government Expenditure Growth, 2004-12 -- 2.1. Sub-Saharan Africa: Real GDP Growth -- 2.2. Sub-Saharan Africa: Average Change in US1.25 Poverty Headcount and Average per Capita GDP Growth, 1995-2010 -- 2.3. Growth and the Evolution of Headcount Poverty Rates in Sub-Saharan Africa, 1995-2010 -- 2.4. Growth, Infant Mortality, and Human Development Index -- 2.5. Growth Incidence Curves of Real Household Consumption per Capita -- 2.6 Vietnam's Growth Incidence Curve, 1993-2002 -- 2.7. Ghana: Density Estimates of the Consumption Distribution by Quartile, 2005 -- 2.8. Consumption Value of Characteristics of the Poorest Quartile -- 2.9. Total Employment to Working-Age Population Ratio -- 2.10. Food Expenditure Share and Household Consumption Expenditure per Capita in a Sample of 84 Countries, 2010 -- 2.11. Ghana: Food Expenditures as a Share of Total Household Consumption by Deciles of the Total Household Consumption Distribution.

2.12. Engel Curve for Ghana Estimated Using Data for the Period 1998-2005 -- 3.1. Sub-Saharan Africa: Total Exports and Imports by Partner -- 3.2. Sub-Saharan Africa: Non-Oil-Exporting Countries: Total Exports by Partner -- 3.3. Sub-Saharan Africa: Change in Ratio of Exports to Non-DAC Countries to Total Exports, 1990-2010 -- 3.4. Sub-Saharan Africa: Exports by Partner -- 3.5. Sub-Saharan Africa: Exports to BICs by Product Composition -- 3.6. Sub-Saharan Africa: Exports to the Group of Five and Intraregional Exports by Product Composition -- 3.7. Sub-Saharan Africa: Imports by Product Composition -- 3.8. Sub-Saharan Africa: Inflows of FDI from China -- 3.9. Composition of FDI Stocks in SSA from BICs, 2006 -- 3.10. Sector Composition of China's Investment in Africa by end-2009 -- 3.11. Sub-Saharan Africa: Export Partner Concentration and Volatility -- 3.12. Sub-Saharan Africa: Average Contribution to Export Growth -- 3.13. International Commodity and Manufactures Price Indices -- 3.14. Sub-Saharan Africa: Terms-of-Trade and GDP Growth, 1990-2010 -- 3.15. Sub-Saharan Africa: Estimated and Projected Exports by Partner.
Özet:
This year looks set to be another encouraging one for most sub-Saharan African economies. Reflecting mainly strong demand but also elevated commodity prices, the region's economy is set to expand by more than 5¼ percent in 2011. For 2012, the IMF staff's baseline projection is for growth to be higher at 5¾ percent, owing to one-off boosts to production in a number of countries. There are, however, specters at the feast: the increase in global food and fuel prices, amplified by drought affecting parts of the region, has hit the budgets of the poor and sparked rising inflation, and hesitations in the global recovery threaten to weaken export and growth prospects. The projection for 2012 for the region is highly contingent on global economic growth being sustained at about 4 percent. A further slowing of growth in advanced economies, curtailing global demand, would generate significant headwinds for the region's ongoing expansion, with more globally integrated countries likely to be most affected. Policies in the coming months need to tread a fine line between addressing the challenges that strong growth and recent exogenous shocks have engendered and warding off the adverse effects of another global downturn. In some slower-growing, mostly middle-income countries without binding financial constraints, policies should clearly remain supportive of output growth, even more so if global growth sputters. Provided the global economy experiences the currently predicted slow and steady growth, most of the region's low-income countries should focus squarely on medium-term considerations in setting fiscal policy while tightening monetary policy wherever nonfood inflation has climbed above single digits. In the event of a global downturn, subject to financing constraints, policies in these countries should focus on maintaining planned spending initiatives,

while allowing automatic stabilizers to operate on the revenue side. For the region's oil exporters, better terms of trade provide a good opportunity to build up policy buffers against further price volatility.
Notlar:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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