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Where am I? Fin24.com  > Economy

Unemployment wave hits Africa

Jan 16 2009 10:43

Johannesburg - South African finance minister, Trevor Manuel, said on Friday that the first wave of unemployment is being seen in Africa as many foreign direct investors scale back or shut down their operations.

He was speaking at the first-ever meeting of the "African Committee of 10", which arises from a meeting of African Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors convened in Tunis on November 12 2008 by the three Pan-African institutions - the African Union, the African Development Bank and the UN Economic Commission for Africa.

Manuel said that increasingly, African states are encountering significant fiscal pressures as their revenue sources dry up, as expenditures rise to meet the most elementary levels of service provision and as they battle to retain expenditure levels in the face of "significantly reduced GDP growth".

"We are witnessing that the export markets developed with enormous sacrifice are suddenly closed to imports from our countries, as a result of falling consumer demand and increased protectionism," he added.

"We are living through intense liquidity pressures as our domestic banking sector battles to secure the finance to on-lend. Significant changes to financial regulation must be undertaken. Many countries are witnessing the drying up of remittance flows which have, over the past number of years, been a reliable source of finance which offsets impact to the skills drain," he noted.

Manuel also made the point that the mainstays of recent developments in sectors such as tourism are already in decline as the numbers of tourists rapidly diminish.

And he pointed out that Africa has not yet recovered from the severe impact of high food and fuel prices that the continent has lived through over the past 15 months.

"We are, however, duty-bound to raise these matters. To ask each of our Heads of State to evaluate the specific impact within their country and to advise the collective. This meeting is the beginning of such African collaboration. We offer no apologies for doing what we must," concluded Manuel.

- I-Net Bridge

 

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Zuma
Jan 16 2009 22:29 Report this comment

I'm just about to take a hot shower, but I'll get back to that .....
 
Eish
Jan 16 2009 14:56 Report this comment

Just wondering how the ANC, which promised millions of jobs going to run up this wall. They'll blame it on the economic tsunami, afterwards, but we all new it before hand? Like our Eskom friends. Can Zuma please repond to this.
 
sunny
Jan 16 2009 13:57 Report this comment

Tito has killed this country. We could have been better off had he not incessantly raised rates. Growth has been decimated because of negative policies. We will be in a reccession if he doesn't get off his overly paid ba..kside and drop rates enough so that growth can be attained again
 
Postman
Jan 16 2009 12:35 Report this comment

Africa has so many opportunities but Trevor is correct when he says “foreign direct investors scale back or shut down their operations” this is very true in Africa where mines are closing down on the back of low commodity prices. Added to the effect is the general corrupted government structures that have also become to expensive. The economical correcting might just be what is needed, take Zimbabwe where general retail is trading in US $ currently. Who is in charge, the printing country or the ruling party?
 
Anon
Jan 16 2009 12:21 Report this comment

I'm living in Europe and know of many other South Africans here and they have their whole families. Sorry to say but the immigrants who sell off all their ZA assets and transfer the money abroad are more than offsetting that small value going back in to ZA... Plus the massive amounts ZA has to pay foreign companies to do work that could have been done locally instead if it weren't for the brain drain.
 
kaddy
Jan 16 2009 12:17 Report this comment

Agree with andrew, the country has been consuming at the trough of the commodities boom, and at the same time gorging itself on credit financed by hot money. Savings, capital development, direct investment has been badly neglected in the process. Seems the party is now coming to an end,with a huge hangover waiting....
 
Wade
Jan 16 2009 12:16 Report this comment

Unfortunately our present leaders are sadly more interested in playing to the tune of Cosatu in order to gain votes instead of focusing on long term economic issues.
 
Chris
Jan 16 2009 12:13 Report this comment

Kobus , in KSA, Iraq and Afghanistan there is about 30 000 South Africans sending money back at a rate of about $10000 , I know , since I am here in KSA that flooded with South African engineers. The Vast Majority are here on single Status , holidaying in SA and banking in SA but working in the middle east. Dubai is a bit different since families move over You can do the math 10 000 * 30000 * (R/$) Excange of say 9.0 = 2.7 Billion Rand heading into south Africa every month , usually on the 15 and the 25 as pay day’s See how the rand will drop on Tuesday next week after every one on by weekly has been paid and see how it runs on the 25 – 28 jan as monthly employees get paid And see how the financial wizart keep on getting it wrong saying we are getting investment from outside ……..no we are just being paid
 
 
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