Close Menu
Aspire Market Guides
  • Home
  • Alternative Investments
  • Cryptocurrency
  • Economics
  • Equity Investments
  • Mutual Funds
  • Real Estate
  • Trading
What's Hot

Ukraine carries out strikes oil infrastructure, tanker in western Russia – VIDEO

May 30, 2026

Greece’s Former Finance Minister Varoufakis Says He Donated All 2,000 Bitcoin

May 30, 2026

Does Gold Fields (JSE:GFI) Deserve A Spot On Your Watchlist?

May 30, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending:
  • Ukraine carries out strikes oil infrastructure, tanker in western Russia – VIDEO
  • Greece’s Former Finance Minister Varoufakis Says He Donated All 2,000 Bitcoin
  • Does Gold Fields (JSE:GFI) Deserve A Spot On Your Watchlist?
  • EasyJet targeted for cut-price takeover as jet fuel costs soar
  • Federal Reserve Bank of New York’s Center for Microeconomic Data April 2026 Survey of Consumer Expectations Finds Short-Term Inflation Expectations Increase
  • Top 10 Stocks to Buy for Long Term
  • CoStar expands homebuilding data reach with $800M Zonda deal
  • NFT Marketplaces Shut Down: What Happens to Your NFTs in 2026?
  • From Debt Burden to Fatherhood: My 2025 Financial Journey
  • EasyJet in takeover sights of US private equity firm – The Times
Saturday, May 30
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Aspire Market Guides
  • Home
  • Alternative Investments
  • Cryptocurrency
  • Economics
  • Equity Investments
  • Mutual Funds
  • Real Estate
  • Trading
Aspire Market Guides
Home»Economics»Sub-Saharan Africa’s Best 10Y Growth Meets Middle East Test | The Kenyan Wallstreet
Economics

Sub-Saharan Africa’s Best 10Y Growth Meets Middle East Test | The Kenyan Wallstreet

By CharlotteApril 19, 20264 Mins Read
Share
Facebook Twitter Pinterest Email Copy Link


Sub-Saharan Africa delivered its strongest economic performance in over a decade in 2025, only for the momentum to be immediately disrupted by the Middle East conflict, which the International Monetary Fund (IMF) warns has placed hard-won stabilization gains under significant pressure heading into 2026.

  • •Regional GDP growth accelerated to 4.5% in 2025 from 4.2% in 2024, the fastest pace in ten years, with the expansion broad-based across resource-intensive, non-resource-intensive, fragile states, and low-income country groups.
  • •Growth exceeded 6% in ten economies, with Benin, Côte d’Ivoire, Ethiopia, Rwanda, and Uganda among the fastest-growing globally. Median inflation fell sharply to 3.4% at end-2025 from 4.8% at end-2024, the median fiscal deficit narrowed to 3.0% of GDP from 3.4%, median public debt fell to 53.1% of GDP from 57.2%, and the current account deficit narrowed to 3.8% of GDP from 4.2%.
  • •Eurobond issuances reached US$ 14 billion in 2025, with a further US$ 5.5 billion in the first two months of 2026; Ethiopia, Ghana, and Zambia made significant progress on sovereign debt restructuring over the course of the year.

The war in the Middle East has now clouded the outlook with oil, gas, and fertilizer prices rising sharply, shipping costs increasing, and trade being disrupted. Fuel availability has tightened in Ethiopia, Kenya, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Malawi, Sierra Leone, and Zambia, with pump price increases recorded in Kenya, Mali, Malawi, Nigeria, and Zimbabwe. In some economies, fuel supply disruptions are already affecting electricity generation, transport, and mining.

Tourism has weakened in Rwanda and Seychelles, while remittances face pressure in countries with large diaspora populations in the Gulf. Financial conditions have tightened, with higher risk premia and rising sovereign yields concentrated among fuel importers, intensifying exchange rate pressures in Ghana, Mozambique, and South Africa.

Regional growth is now projected at 4.3% in 2026, 0.3 percentage points below the pre-war forecast, with median inflation expected to rise to 5.0% by end-2026 from 3.4% at end-2025. Non-resource-intensive oil-importing economies face the sharpest deterioration, with current account deficits projected to worsen by approximately 1.4 percentage points of GDP. Oil exporters will benefit from stronger export revenues but remain exposed to volatility and procyclical policy risks. The median fiscal deficit is projected to widen to 3.2% of GDP in 2026 from 3.0% in 2025.

Sub-Saharan Africa 2026 GDP Growth Projections, IMF
The IMF’s severe downside scenario, which assumes a prolonged conflict and a risk-off episode, points to significantly worse outcomes. Regional output could decline by 0.6% in 2026 relative to the pre-war baseline, with oil-importing economies facing a 1.5 percentage point hit to real output in 2026 and a 2.8 percentage point contraction in 2027.

Regional inflation could jump by as much as 2.4 percentage points in 2026. A 20% increase in international food prices could push more than 20 million people into moderate or severe food insecurity, with two million children under five at risk of acute malnutrition at peak pass-through levels. Under this scenario, global growth would be reduced by 1.3 percentage points in 2026, a close call for a global recession, which has occurred only four times since 1980.

Kenya sits squarely in the most exposed category with the IMF cutting Kenya’s 2026 growth forecast to 4.5% from 4.9% and revising inflation up to 5.9% from 5.2%, citing higher energy costs, remittance risks, and export disruptions.

Kenya Annual GDP Growth & Forecast in 2026

Government debt is also projected to rise to 71.6% of GDP in 2026, well above the statutory debt anchor of 55% set under the Public Finance Management Amendment Act 2023, with the fiscal deficit projected at 6.4% of GDP. The government has until 2028 to return to the 55% threshold, a target that the IMF’s projections suggest is increasingly out of reach.

Kenya Debt to GDP Ratio
The IMF has urged central banks to keep inflation expectations anchored and avoid premature easing, while recommending targeted, time-bound fiscal support for vulnerable populations.

On the medium term, the Fund has called for accelerated reforms to shift the region toward private sector-led growth, noting that closing half the structural gap with emerging markets in governance, business regulation, and external sector reform could raise regional output by up to 20% over five to ten years.



Source link

Related Posts

Economics

Federal Reserve Bank of New York’s Center for Microeconomic Data April 2026 Survey of Consumer Expectations Finds Short-Term Inflation Expectations Increase

May 30, 2026
Economics

What Should Economists Do? Price Theory or Microeconomics?

May 30, 2026
Economics

American Eagle back in the black despite ‘macroeconomic uncertainty’

May 30, 2026
Economics

GDP downgrade reflects 'cloud' over US economy, market expert says – Yahoo Finance

May 30, 2026
Economics

Economic consequences of the war in Yemen: from macroeconomic shocks to microeconomic pain

May 29, 2026
Economics

CMA partnership – Durham University Business School

May 29, 2026
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Editors Picks

Ukraine carries out strikes oil infrastructure, tanker in western Russia – VIDEO

May 30, 2026

Greece’s Former Finance Minister Varoufakis Says He Donated All 2,000 Bitcoin

May 30, 2026

Does Gold Fields (JSE:GFI) Deserve A Spot On Your Watchlist?

May 30, 2026

EasyJet targeted for cut-price takeover as jet fuel costs soar

May 30, 2026
SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER

Get our latest downloads and information first. Complete the form below to subscribe to our weekly newsletter.


I consent to being contacted via telephone and/or email and I consent to my data being stored in accordance with European GDPR regulations and agree to the terms of use and privacy policy.

Featured

Bitcoin holds $70K support amid Middle East escalation and looming US PPI data

April 13, 2026

Mario Gabelli Stock Portfolio: Top 10 Stock Picks

April 11, 2026

Tikehau and Forte acquire five German residential properties from MEAG | News

May 6, 2026
Monthly Featured

Top 3 Cryptos to Buy Now: Moscow Exchange Lists Altcoin Indexes as

May 6, 2026

ADX Energy Boosts Cash Reserves Following Successful Equity Raise

April 30, 2026

Fixing the foundations: government fund to fix England’s bridges, flyovers and tunnels now open

April 15, 2026
Latest Posts

Ukraine carries out strikes oil infrastructure, tanker in western Russia – VIDEO

May 30, 2026

Greece’s Former Finance Minister Varoufakis Says He Donated All 2,000 Bitcoin

May 30, 2026

Does Gold Fields (JSE:GFI) Deserve A Spot On Your Watchlist?

May 30, 2026
SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER

Get our latest downloads and information first. Complete the form below to subscribe to our weekly newsletter.


I consent to being contacted via telephone and/or email and I consent to my data being stored in accordance with European GDPR regulations and agree to the terms of use and privacy policy.

© 2026 Aspire Market Guides.
  • Contact us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER

Get our latest downloads and information first.

Complete the form below to subscribe to our weekly newsletter.


I consent to being contacted via telephone and/or email and I consent to my data being stored in accordance with European GDPR regulations and agree to the terms of use and privacy policy.