Analysis: Falling oil prices affect Africa more than Ebola

Published Nov 28, 2014

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Ed Cropley

PLUNGING world oil prices have dealt a blow to Africa far greater – in purely economic terms – than Ebola, setting back investment in exploration and plans to industrialise.

The highest profile victim so far has been Africa’s top producer, Nigeria, which was forced to devalue its naira currency by 8 percent this week after the central bank admitted dwindling reserves were making it hard to defend it.

In dollar terms, the devaluation knocked $40 billion (R438bn) off the value of Nigeria’s economy – considerably more than the $32bn worst-case scenario the World Bank projected in October for Ebola’s economic impact on the entire sub-Saharan region.

Last week, the bank’s chief Africa economist said the latest assessments of the epidemic suggested the economic fallout might not be as bad as feared, and would probably be closer to the $3bn to $4bn end of its projected range.

The same cannot be said for crude-backed African currencies. Even after the Nigerian devaluation and a 100 basis point hike in interest rates, the naira came under more pressure, trading at a record low of 178.85 (R11.005) to the dollar.

It opened flat yesterday around 177, a level that is already weaker than the de facto 176.40 lower limit of the central bank’s target band, revealing scepticism the currency can hold at that level.

In Angola the kwanza has shed more than 3 percent since September, hitting record lows amid concerns about the state of government finances. A year ago, Luanda was projecting growth of 8.8 percent with a fiscal deficit of 5 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) as it poured cash into reconstruction from a long civil war that ended in 2002.

But its spending plans were all predicated on oil – which accounts for half of GDP and 90 percent of foreign exchange earnings – at $98 a barrel.

The government is budgeting a more sober $81 for next year but even that might be over-optimistic after Brent crude hit a four-year low yesterday of $76.

Reserves are at a relatively healthy $27bn – enough to prevent a full-scale currency blow-out, analysts say – but if oil stays below $80 for some time, the kwanza will continue to weaken and the budget deficit will balloon.

The result is likely to be reduced spending, an increase in foreign borrowing, either through Eurobonds or syndicated loans, and possibly an International Monetary Fund (IMF) bailout, as happened after the 2008 financial crisis.

“If there’s no support for oil prices, the budget deficit could be much larger than 7.6 percent and then you could see an IMF programme,” Samantha Singh, an African currency strategist at Standard Bank, said.

Although they have agricultural potential, the likes of Nigeria and Angola import almost all food and consumer goods, which will become more expensive, fuelling inflation and even raising the prospect of social and political unrest.

Weakening currencies also make imports of machinery more expensive, hampering Africa’s efforts to capitalise on above-average growth rates by building industries to employ the millions of young people entering the labour market each year.

Ghana, which became an oil producer in 2011, has already had to go the IMF route to try to stabilise a plunging cedi and pull itself out of a fiscal crisis caused in part by lower-than-expected oil receipts.

Even beyond sub-Saharan Africa’s established oil producers, which also include Equatorial Guinea, Chad, Sudan and South Sudan, the effects are being felt as frontier exploration projects contemplate shrinking margins. – Reuters

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