South Africa’s economy to grow by 5pc until 2026

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Offline Md. Anwar Hossain

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South Africa’s economy to grow by 5pc until 2026
« on: May 06, 2018, 07:46:31 PM »
South Africa will sustain an average economic growth of 4.91 percent per year for the next eight years until 2026, according to a new report by Harvard University’s Centre for International Development.

This is far ahead of other projections, particularly that of the IMF, which only expects 1.5 percent in 2018 and 1.7 percent next year.  The World Bank sees a growth of 1.4 percent this year, reports Business Insider South Africa.

The report didn't provide any details on South Africa's economic growth case. It still lags behind projections for other African countries including Egypt with 6.63 percent, Tanzania 6.15 percent, Mali 5.89 percent and most notably Uganda with an expected annual economic growth of 7.49 percent.

The ‘New Global Growth Projections’ report, released on Thursday, found that after a decade of commodity and oil-driven economic growth, diversified economies are set to grow faster.

India and Uganda are set to be the fastest growing economies until 2026, with a 7.9 percent and 7.5 percent growth annually, respectively.

China will grow slower than India with 4.9 percent because it “has already realized many of the income gains from a diverse, complex economy,” the report found.

Other first world countries such as the US and UK are set to grow by only 3.07 percent and 3.69 percent - with Germany only expect to grow a meager 2.38 percent.

The report states that if low-income countries want to experience rapid growth, economic diversification and complexity is a necessity.

“Many low-income countries, including Bangladesh, Venezuela, and Angola have failed to diversify their know how and face low growth prospects,” said Sebastian Bustos, a researcher in trade and economic complexity methods.

“Others like India, Turkey, and the Philippines have successfully added productive capabilities to enter new sectors and will drive growth over the coming decade.”
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