4. The slowdown in regional economic growth was due to the decline in
sub-regional growth, which will be explained later. Given the significance
of agriculture in the African economies, smaller harvests had adverse consequences
on income, consumption and on the performance of the processing industries.
Poor rainfall and drought in Morocco reduced its GDP growth for the fourth
time in the last six years and necessitated higher cereal imports. The
El Nino-induced weather condition in Southern and parts of East Africa
provoked critical food shortages, eliciting urgent calls for international
food aid in some countries such as Ethiopia - which had achieved food self-sufficiency
in 1996 - Eritrea, Somalia, Rwanda, the Sudan, Tanzania and Uganda. Modest
growth was nevertheless recorded in West and Central Africa although severe
food shortages were reported in Burundi, the Republic of Congo and the
Democratic Republic of Congo.
5. Despite the slowdown in the regional production due to low oil prices
and poor agricultural output, exports continued to expand on the strength
of increases in volume and this was the most significant factor behind
GDP growth in several countries in 1997. Global output is estimated to
have grown at a steady rate of more than 3 per cent in 1997. The financial
turmoil in Southeast Asia did dampen its performance and may have reduced
global growth by as much as one percentage point. Fortunately for Africa,
its major trading partners successfully sterilised the negative fallout
from Asia and strengthened their growth momentum. The strong rebound in
Europe and particularly the robust recovery in France and Germany as well
as the resilience of North American economies provided the stimulus for
the high growth of world output and trade.
6. The volume of world trade is estimated to have grown by 9.4 per cent
in 1997 as against 5.3 per cent in 1996. Africa's trade volume increased
by 8 per cent. The larger export volumes boosted export revenues and made
up for the decline in the prices of the continent's exportables. Africa's
total export revenue increased by 5.9 per cent in 1997. However, despite
the increase in export volume and earnings, the continent's share of world
trade continued to decline, shrinking from 2 per cent in 1996 to 1.9 per
cent in 1997.
7. Inflation moved up from 25.1 per cent in 1996 to 28.3 per cent in
1997, due mainly to food price increases. It jumped to double digits -
the highest level in recent years - in Kenya and Uganda, two countries
that had earlier reduced inflation to single-digit level, and remained
high in Angola, Burundi, the Democratic Republic of Congo and the Sudan,
where political factors disrupted the production and distribution of goods.
Wage increases contributed to inflationary pressures in countries such
as Benin and Zimbabwe, while in Ghana, inflation remained high as a result
of exchange-rate depreciation and increases in the administered prices
of petrol and electricity, among other things. In CFA zone countries, prices
were generally stable, averaging a 2.5-per cent increase, with the exception
of Cote d'Ivoire where the inflation rate more than doubled from 2.5 per
cent in 1996 to 6 per cent in 1997.
8. In 1997, the overall policy thrust focused on minimizing the negative
impact of the slowdown in agriculture on the economy and society through
proactive and countercyclical measures, and on sustaining the growth momentum
of the last three years. Although strong attempts were made to stabilise
the economy through restrictive fiscal and monetary policies, the degree
of freedom in some countries such as Morocco, Ethiopia, Zambia and Zimbabwe
was circumscribed by their need to cushion the social impact of declining
harvests. In other respects, African governments continued to deepen and
widen the reform programmes, including trade and financial-sector liberalization,
institution-building, and the reformulation of investment-related legislation
to create an environment friendlier to foreign investment.
9. At the same time that these reforms were taking place, African governments
sought to diversify their production base. The diversification drive focused
on the horizontal dimension not only because that is where African countries
have their comparative advantage but also because other options, and more
so the dynamic expansion of the manufacturing industries, continue to face
impossible impediments.
I.A.1. Growth of Agricultural Output
10. The strong recovery of agricultural output in 1996 was not sustained
in 1997. For the African region as a whole, agricultural production growth
decelerated to 1.7 per cent in 1997, after bumper crops had raised output
by a record 5.2 per cent in 1996. This was essentially due to weather conditions
that affected production in major producer nations. The production of the
major export commodities fell in 1997 below their 1996 levels and this
decline was particularly noticeable in the case of cocoa and coffee.
11. In the food sub-sector, regional production in 1997 was adversely
affected by the erratic changes in weather conditions, mainly because most
countries depend overwhelmingly on rain-fed agriculture. Civil strife also
played a significant part in accentuating the region's food-supply difficulties.
According to data from the United Nations Food and Agricultural Organization
(FAO), cereal production fell by about 10.5 per cent from 126 million metric
tons in 1996 to 113 million metric tons in 1997. Fruits, jute and vegetable
production was slightly lower than in 1996, while the production of pulses
increased.
12. Due to poor performance, difficulties are emerging in the eastern
and north-eastern parts of the region. In Tanzania, for example, the 1997
cereal crop declined by one-third. In Rwanda and Burundi, although production
has been recovering, it remained well below pre-crisis level. In Ethiopia
and Eritrea food production fell drastically. Stocks were exhausted in
an effort to make up for the shortfall and this required an urgent call
for assistance to the international community to contain an impending disaster.
...
13. In West Africa, the performance of agriculture was mixed, but the
already precarious food situation in some countries such as Sierra Leone
continued to deteriorate as a result of the negative impact of civil strife.
Improvement was achieved in Liberia following the conclusion of the civil
war and the installation of the democratically elected government.
14. The generally negative or poor record of 1997 points to serious
gaps in food supply for the majority of African countries. Again this is
likely to lead to a sharp decline in the stock-to-utilisation ratio in
1998, pushing it below the minimum level necessary to safeguard regional
food security. Of the 31 countries projected by the FAO to face critical
food deficits, 20 are located in Africa. The replenishment of stocks might
be suspended by low-income countries and the resumption of such efforts
will require sizeable improvements in production techniques and increases
in actual production in the coming year otherwise these countries will
revert to long-term dependence on food aid.
15. Among the subregions, the most drastic falls in cereal production
were recorded in North Africa, where production declined by 50-60 per cent
in Algeria, Morocco and Tunisia, and by about 30 per cent n the subregion
as a whole. Performance was poor in Central Africa and mixed in West, East
and Southern Africa.
16. Shortfalls in the production of cereals and other food crops triggered
an increase in food prices and required significantly larger imports, particularly
wheat. Preliminary estimates by the FAO put the 1997/1998 wheat imports
by African countries at a record 21 millions tons, with imports by Algeria,
Egypt, Morocco and Tunisia forecast to exceed 14 million tons.
17. Major commercial crops did not do well in 1997, again as a result
of adverse weather conditions. The cocoa bean harvest declined by 9 per
cent. Most of the shortfall came from Cote d'Ivoire, which reported climatic
disruptions during the planting and harvesting seasons. Similarly, tea
and sugar production declined by 7.8 per cent and 0.48 per cent respectively,
in 1997. The region's negative tea output resulted mainly from a poor harvest
in Kenya.
18. The production of green coffee was much lower in 1997 than in 1996
in Kenya, Madagascar, Rwanda, Tanzania and Uganda as well as in Côte
d'Ivoire. Ethiopia managed to increase production by some 7.8 per cent,
but the prevailing adverse conditions in Kenya and Uganda resulted in a
21- and 25.8-per cent fall in the two countries respectively. In consequence,
the regional output of coffee fell by 7 per cent from about 1.2 million
metric tons in 1996 to about 1.1 million metric tons in 1997. The generic
decline in commercial-crop production was equally evident in other crops,
with total seed cotton production declining by 1.4 per cent.
I.A.2. Growth in the Industrial Sector
19. The output of the industrial sector (broadly defined to include
non-agricultural commodity production) increased by 3.3 per cent in 1997,
well below the 1996 rate of 5.4 per cent, due mainly to the slowdown in
the mining subsector (3.3 per cent in 1997 as against 6.5 per cent in 1996).
Manufacturing industries maintained their growth rate of 2.5 per cent.
The booming industrial activities in 1997 as in the previous years, were
construction (5.4 per cent) and energy and water (3.1 per cent).
20. Performance indicators of the African mining industry in 1997 were
similar to those for 1996 despite the surge in investment. The production
results of the 15 main minerals representing over 90 per cent of the sector's
total output show that, with few exceptions, output either declined or
stagnated in 1997. The overall mining-production index (excluding oil)
remained virtually unchanged in 1997, increasing marginally by 0.6 per
cent over 1996.
21. In Ghana, gold production in the first half of 1997 increased by
10 per cent at the Ashanti Goldfield at Obuasi, the country's largest.
Despite this early surge in output, production was estimated to have remained
unchanged at 44.4 tons for 1997 due to considerable slowdown during the
second half of the year.
22. In South Africa, most mines continued to face significant productivity
problems associated with working conditions, dwindling reserves and slender
profit margins. Output in the sector fell by 0.5 per cent in the first
quarter of 1997. Gold production was particularly affected due to the declining
quality and quantity of the ore milled. Production in 1997 was estimated
at 484 tons, down from 495 tons in 1996. The increase in copper production
in Zambia was overshadowed by a steep decline in production in the Democratic
Republic of Congo.
23. The oil sector continued to pursue dynamic development in 1997.
The favourable conditions under which African countries offer concessions
to the oil companies, coupled with low exploration and production costs,
due to technological developments, have continued to attract investment
to the continent. Important new oil discoveries were reported, particularly
in Algeria, Angola, Egypt and Equatorial Guinea, and exploration and drilling
activities have been booming across the continent.
24. Crude oil production in Africa increased from 368.4 million tons
in 1996 to 378.4 million tons in 1997. Production from members of the Organization
of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) increased marginally to 252.10
million tons, 2.8 per cent more than in 1996, due to the quota system imposed
on member countries by the organization. Production from non-OPEC oil-producing
countries rose to 126.30 million tons in 1997 from 123.24 millions tons
in 1996.
Table 1.4: Crude Oil Production in Africa, 1993-1997
(Millions of tons)