Lions on the move: The progress and potential of African economies

September 3, 2010

Africa's collective GDP, at $1.6 trillion in 2008, is now roughly equal to Brazil's or Russia's. While Africa's increased economic momentum is widely recognized, less known are its sources and likely staying power. Among the key findings:


 
  • Africa's growth acceleration was widespread, with 27 of its 30 largest economies expanding more rapidly after 2000. All sectors contributed, including resources, finance, retail, agriculture, transportation and telecommunications. Natural resources directly accounted for just 24 percent of the continent's GDP growth from 2000 through 2008. Key to Africa's growth surge were improved political and macroeconomic stability and microeconomic reforms.
  • Future economic growth will be supported by Africa's increasing ties to the global economy. Rising demand for commodities is driving buyers around the world to pay dearly for Africa's natural riches and to forge new types of partnerships with producers. And Africa is gaining greater access to international capital; total foreign capital flows into Africa rose from $15 billion in 2000 to a peak of $87 billion in 2007.
  • Africa's economic growth is creating substantial new business opportunities that are often overlooked by global companies RMGI projects that at least four groups of industries-consumer-facing industries, agriculture, resources, and infrastructure-together could generate as much as $2.6 trillion in revenue annually by 2020, or $1 trillion more than today. 
  • Today the rate of return on foreign investment in Africa is higher than in any other developing region. Early entry into African economies provides opportunities to create markets, establish brands, shape industry structure, influence customer preferences, and establish long-term relationships. Business can help build the Africa of the future. 
  • The rise of the African urban consumer also will fuel long-term growth. Today, 40 percent of Africans live in urban areas, a portion close to China's and continuing to expand. The number of households with discretionary income is projected to rise by 50 percent over the next 10 years, reaching 128 million. By 2030, the continents' top 18 cities could have a combined spending power of $1.3 trillion. 

    To understand the growth opportunities and challenges of individual economies, MGI developed a framework that groups them in four broad clusters: diversified economies, oil exporters, transition economies, and pre-transition economies. Though imperfect, this framework can guide business leaders and investors developing strategies for the continent and policy makers working to sustain growth.


 
 

Opportunities in Africa despite global market conditions

September 2, 2010

London, UK Despite the global recession, Africa provides property investment opportunities with the rapidly developing telecommunications, mineral extraction and energy sectors fuelling growth according to Knight Frank’s Africa Report 2009.

Knight Franks Africa Report 2009 provides a guide to markets in 33 African countries, covering cities from Cairo to Cape Town, and Dakar to Dar Es Salaam. The report includes prime property rental values and yields across all sectors, as well as...


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Richer than you think

September 2, 2010

Africa investor and The Africa Group (TAG), a consulting firm with a focus on growth opportunities and investment in the private sector, set out to size and evaluate eight sectors in Africa to determine the potential opportunity over and above todays market size. The result is the Africa Wealth Cheque report, a comprehensive analysis that addresses actual and potential market sizes of energy, minerals, agriculture, tourism, water, forestry, fisheries, and human capital. Mark Allix profiles...


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Africa Summit 2010: Take a Look at Emerging Africa

September 1, 2010
Africa is set to become the developing world’s next success story. In 2008, Africa’s combined GDP reached $1.5 trillion - more than India or Brazil - and GDP growth rates averaged 5 percent per year between 2002 and 2009. The IMF expects this outperformance of markets like Brazil, Russia and Eastern Europe to continue in the future. Foreign direct investment into Africa stood at $62 billion in 2008, seven times more than in the year 2000. Already per capita GDP is higher in Africa than in...
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Africa prospects lure investors, but is it ready?

September 1, 2010

 Jul 7, 2010 2:24am EDT

 By Matthew Tostevin and Stuart Grudgings

 

SAO PAULO (Reuters) - Africa offers among the world's best investment prospects as emerging markets grow ever more important, although its economies risk being destabilized by the slew of capital they stand to attract in coming years.

 

Energy-producing continental giant Nigeria was identified as a top pick by some of the most influential figures in emerging markets finance who spoke to the Reuters Emerging Markets Summi...


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What's the Big Idea? Africa as the next "BRIC

August 28, 2010

Harvard Kennedy School, May 14, 2010: “How has a decade of change shaped development thinking?”

 

What’s the Big Idea? To reposition Africa as the Fifth BRIC- A Destination for Investment, not just Aid

 

Remarks by Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, Managing Director, The World Bank

 

Let me start with a riddle: What trillion dollar economy has grown faster than Brazil and India between 2000 and 2010 in nominal dollar terms and is projected by the IMF to grow faster ...


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12 Reasons to Invest in Africa

August 27, 2010

Over the past decade, South Africa outperformed the MSCI Emerging Markets Index

By Ben Baden

Posted: August 26, 2010

 

Forget the BRIC countries of Brazil, Russia, India, and China. Larry Seruma, chief investment officer of Nile Capital Management, says many retail investors are missing a tremendous opportunity for growth in Africa. Seruma manages the Nile Pan Africa fund, the first actively managed, U.S.-based mutual fund to focus exclusively on Africa. He recently released a report,...


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They called it The Gold Coast for a reason!

August 27, 2010

THURSDAY, 26 AUGUST 2010

 

Ghana, once known as the Gold Coast Crown Colony, was the first Sub-Saharan African nation to achieve independence from the British Empire in 1957. It was renamed Ghana to reflect the ancient Empire of Ghana, which once extended throughout much of West Africa.

 

The Republic of Ghana is considered by many to one of the most pragmatic states in Africa. Ghana was placed 7th out of 48 sub-Saharan African countries in the 2008 Ibrahim Index of African Governance. Th...


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Sub-Saharan Africa is Speeding Towards Affluence

August 26, 2010

Julio Godoy

25 August 2010


Africa is heading towards a bright economic future, according to a new book co-authored by the former director of the French state agency for economic cooperation and released recently in Paris.

 

In the book "Le temps de l'Afrique" ("The African Age"), Jean-Michel Severino, until last April director of the French state agency for economic cooperation, and his co-author Olivier Ray argue that sub-Saharan Africa has started the new millennium under far better ec...


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Nedbank Analysis - Why the HSBC Deal is Difficult to Judge

August 25, 2010

Nedbank Analysis - Why the HSBC Deal is Difficult to Judge

Tim Cohen

24 August 2010


Johannesburg — Apart from the larger slice, how would HSBC's transaction be different from the ICBC and Barclays deals?

 

WHAT South African game enthusiasts know about civets is that they are small, shy, nocturnal cat-like animals and that they are a rare find on a game drive. Even to game- watching aficionados, it may be something of a surprise that civets produce a musk that is highly valued as a fr...


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