APA-Addis Ababa (Ethiopia) Ten African countries face the highest levels of poverty, the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (UNECA) has said.
The countries are Burundi, Somalia, Madagascar, South Sudan, the Central African Republic, Malawi, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Guinea-Bissau, Mozambique and Zambia.
Speaking at the fifty-fifth session of the ECA Conference of African Ministers of Finance, Planning and Economic Development on Tuesday in Addis Ababa, the Deputy Executive Secretary and Chief Economist Hanan Morsi said according to a research conducted recently in each of the ten countries between 60 percent and 82 percent of the population is poor.
ECA estimates that households in Africa spend up to 40 percent of their income on food, and the impact of global crises has hit the poorest households in Africa severely.
“A staggering 310 million Africans experienced some form of food insecurity and 6 million Africans faced extreme hunger in 2022,” Morsi said.
While the world was still fighting the COVID-19 pandemic, the war in Ukraine broke out in early 2022.
The impact of the two shocks has been exacerbated by the higher frequency and intensity of natural disasters.
Morsi told the fifty-fifth session of the ECA conference that there were significant levels of poverty and inequality in Africa even before recent global crises but now poverty has worsened, and inequality has widened.
Morsi said that the three overlapping crises have pushed more Africans into extreme poverty and resulted in increased inequalities and vulnerabilities on the continent.
“Today, 546 million people are still living in poverty, which is an increase of 74 percent since 1990”, stressed Morsi.
“Global shocks have ripple effects on the poor in Africa through inflation, which, in 2022, stood at 12.3 per cent, which was much higher than the world average of 6.7 per cent,” Morsi added.
The burden of import dependency, Climate change and rising debt stress
The commissioner for Trade and Industry of the African Union Commission, Albert M. Muchanga told the conference of African Ministers of Finance, Planning and Economic Development that although Africa is the richest in the world in terms of natural endowments, we are the poorest.
African reliance on imports makes the continent vulnerable to commodity price shocks. In 2021, 39 African countries were net importers of food products. In addition, in 2021, Africa exported only $5.7 billion of refined petroleum products but imported over $44 billion of them.
“Coming out of the low levels of income and wealth is now being made more challenging by climate change as seen in the recent flooding in Madagascar Malawi and Mozambique” stressed Muchanga.
“We must add to this, the looming debt crisis which could undermine all the growth achievements of the past 23 years”.
Experts and Ministers at the conference noted that African countries continue to face declining revenue, rising debt stress and increasingly constrained fiscal space.
In 2022, the government debt-to-GDP ratio in Africa was 64.5 percent, which is significantly higher than the pre-pandemic figure for 2019 that was 57.1 percent.
The two day-conference of African Ministers of Finance, Planning and Economic Development was convened under the theme: Fostering recovery and transformation in Africa to reduce inequalities and vulnerabilities.
MG/as/APA