A man balances a bowl with a print of the old
Nigerian naira banknote on his head at a local market in Agege district in
Lagos, Nigeria, Aug. 16, 2016.
Politics and petroleum have brought down Africa’s two biggest
economies, South Africa and Nigeria,
as both nations look down the barrel of recession.
Oil
giant Nigeria will release quarterly growth figures
Wednesday that most likely will confirm the economy is in recession. And the
South African economy, the continent’s most established and mature, has seen
slowing growth, with a contraction of 1.2 percent in the first quarter, as the
population grows faster than the economy. The government is expected to release
its second-quarter growth figures next week.
The
two nations often see each other as competition. They have in recent years
jockeyed for the economic top spot in Africa, with Nigeria recently losing the position to South
Africa. But many global investors see them as part of the same Africa package,
said Martyn Davies, managing director of emerging markets and Africa at the
auditing and consulting firm Deloitte
“South
Africa and Nigeria are the bookends, if you will, of the
sub-Saharan economy. One’s misfiring, the other one’s in severe contraction,”
he said.
While South Africa’s economy is more sophisticated and
established, “Nigeriawas undoubtedly the
flavor of the decade at least five, six years ago. For South Africa capital —
for global capital flowing into Africa — you had to have a Nigeriaplayer, a piece of Nigeria. ... It was too
big to ignore.”
Nigeria’s economy has been
hit hard by a global slump in oil prices, and further harmed by militant
attacks on pipelines in the oil-producing Niger Delta region that have dropped
production to about 1.5 million barrels a day from around 2.2 million barrels.
Another
problem for Nigeria is a shortage of foreign currency,
which means a shortage of imported raw materials for factories and consumer
goods for shops. That drives up inflation.
Nigeria’s
economy shrank about four-tenths of a percent in the first quarter, and the
second quarter is expected to be worse. John Ashbourne, Africa economist at
Capital Economics in London, said he expected Nigeria’s economy to
shrink by about 3 percent. He thinks, however, that growth will resume next
year.
Pabina
Yinkere, head of research at Vetiva Capital Management in Lagos, said the
government had taken encouraging steps by raising fuel prices and allowing the currency
to float freely against the dollar. Still, with less tax revenue, Yinkere said,
the government may struggle to spend the money it needs to revive the economy.
In South Africa, the continent’s hub for financial services,
investor confidence and the currency have been rattled by recent political
shocks, such as President Jacob Zuma’s decision last year to fire the
well-respected finance minister, and then fire his replacement just days later,
before finally hiring another former finance minister.
New
allegations of corruption around the new finance minister have further hit the
economy.
Zuma himself has been accused of denting South Africa’s image.
In 2014, the nation’s top anti-corruption czar determined that Zuma “benefited
unduly” by using 246 million rand — at the time, about $23 million — of
government money to upgrade his home. Zuma’s camp said the improvements were
necessary security measures befitting a head of state. Earlier this year, he
was ordered to pay back $500,000, or about 3 percent, of the money.
But
Davies, a longtime proponent of the “Africa rising” narrative, said Africa
might be down but isn’t out. East African economies, he said, like those of
Tanzania and Ethiopia, are growing and presenting alternatives for investors,
and South Africa and Nigeria can rebound, with time and
determination.
“I
think what they both have in common is the governance story, Nigeriaparticularly
so. Nigeria's
is not a short-term correction story,” he said.
“In
South Africa’s case, we have the corporate muscle, we have incredible
institutions, we have very, very deep capital markets, we have very well-run
institutions at a business level. We have all the ingredients we need to be a
successful emerging market economy. Unfortunately, we haven’t got the political
alignment.”
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