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Published 16th April 2020

Vol 61 No 8


South Africa

Heroes and villains in the pandemic

Pic: South African Government
Pic: South African Government

The coronavirus outbreak has turned the spotlight on those in charge, highlighting successes and exposing deficiencies

With South Africa in the third week of a lockdown that may only be lifted at the end of April, and possibly not even then, President Cyril Ramaphosa and Health Minister Zweli Mkhize have been riding a wave of approval with both praised for decisive leadership in handling the coronavirus outbreak.?


The war for the cure

15 April 2020. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus holds a virtual briefing on the Covid-19 pandemic in Geneva. Pic: © United Nations
15 April 2020. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus holds a virtual briefing on the Covid-19 pandemic in Geneva. Pic: © United Nations

International rivalries and empire-building are shaping the response to the pandemic in Africa

Serial financial crises and political meddling have weakened the operations of the World Health Organisation for decades but the rivalries between the United States and China over the...

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Adesina Agonistes

Adesina Akinwumi. Pic: AfDB
Adesina Akinwumi. Pic: AfDB

The Bank president is being called to account for his highly personalised management by a group of dissident bank staff

With an execrable sense of timing, the African Development Bank, the continent's biggest financial institution, is consumed by a politicised battle over the future of its President, Adesina...



BLUE LINES
THE INSIDE VIEW

So far, Africa has not seen the death tolls that have become daily reality in Europe and North America, but the scale of the damage to its economies from the coronavirus pandemic is becoming clearer.

On 15 April, the International Monetary Fund forecast that Africa's economy will shrink by at least 1.6% in 2020, and its real income per head will fall by 3.9%. Earlier that day the Group of 20, pushed by France's President Emmanuel Macron, agreed to suspend some debt payments due from 7...

So far, Africa has not seen the death tolls that have become daily reality in Europe and North America, but the scale of the damage to its economies from the coronavirus pandemic is becoming clearer.

On 15 April, the International Monetary Fund forecast that Africa's economy will shrink by at least 1.6% in 2020, and its real income per head will fall by 3.9%. Earlier that day the Group of 20, pushed by France's President Emmanuel Macron, agreed to suspend some debt payments due from 77 of the poorest countries. It will cover US$12 billion of debt service, but the ministers insisted that deferred payments should be made between 2022 and 2024, along with interest accrued. This may just postpone unmanageable obligations if the IMF's forecasts of the pandemic's medium-term effects prove true.

The G-20 resisted calls to work with the UN on a coordinated response to the pandemic including a special forum on debt restructuring and finance in developing economies. Well ahead of the G-20, the IMF has cancelled debt payments from 25 countries over the next six months and allocated $100bn for emergency loans.

Staying apart from these initiatives are the commercial creditors due to collect some $8bn in service payments, say French officials, from 77 poor states over the next year. Banks say they are not planning any debt restructuring, warning that defaults would lock countries out of the market. Yet they will face more pressure to make concessions at the IMF and World Bank meeting on 17 April.

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No more heavy lifting

A disastrous attack on Chadian forces almost succeeded in breaking up the regional alliance against the jihadists

Chad was brought to the brink of giving up its regional role in fighting the Sahel jihadists after its armed forces fought battles with Boko Haram on a...


Farmers back on agenda

The government is taking steps to compensate expropriated farmers while trying to make sure that the farms of ZANU-PF bigwigs are not affected

Zimbabwe's land reform programme, which ended up largely benefitting senior members of the Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic Front (ZANU-PF), state security and army officers and their families, is...


Hard bargaining ahead on debt and public health

Inward-looking industrialised countries are making few concessions as pandemic bites harder across Africa

Backed by forecasts from the World Bank and UN agencies of a deep recession, African finance ministers are to push next week for a coordinated response on public...


Freight storm hits the port

Fulfilling the terms of China’s loans for the standard gauge railway is at the expense of Mombasa’s role in the national economy

If it wasn't for the drama that preceded it, the resignation of the Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) managing director, Daniel Manduku, at the end of March would have...


Rule by rivalry

The public is becoming used to the contest for supremacy between the President and his Vice-President as it turns into a war of attrition

President Emmerson Mnangagwa has been locked in a love-hate relationship with the military ever since he rose to power in the military coup of November 2017. Against the...


Unpopularity contest

More donors are planning to cuts funds as concerns grow over diminshing civil and human rights

Tanzania has fallen out with many of the countries making development assistance grants and concessional loans since President John Magufuli came to power, although funds for Covid-19 relief...


Oil behaving badly

The clean-up of Delta oil spills is still being held up by feuding politicians, bureaucrats and businesses as low oil prices hit public finances

As oil prices crash to an 18-year low in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic, weakening global demand, and a price war, President Muhammadu Buhari's spending plans are...



Pointers

State takes control

Lawmakers agreed to President Mokgweetsi Masisi's plan to extend a State of Emergency (SoE) from 28 days to 6 months over the coronavirus outbreak despite complaints that the...