Is Black population growth a WEAKNESS? – Africa set for growth in 2021, but poverty and debt will continue to rise
(005320.38-:E-003569.93:N-HO:R-SU:C-30:V)
Video & Audio: Race War: Boers Vs Zulus: The Battle of Blood River
16th December is the single most important day of the year for the Whites of South Africa, especially the Boers. It commemorates a fascinating day wherein the Christians believe they struck a deal with God and that God came through for them.
[The real question is why poverty and debt will continue to rise even if the economy expands. I am wondering whether the unspoken fact might not be that the Black population is growing rapidly and therefore, the economic growth is SLOWER than the Black population growth. This is something I've been pondering for a long time. Is the population growth the real "driver" of poverty for Blacks? Whites are intimidated by Black population growth by thinking that vast numbers of Blacks are a source of STRENGTH, and Jews love this because they think in terms of business and markets. But could it, in reality be a type of weakness? It is a matter that I've pondered deeply for long and I think it can be a huge weakness under certain conditions. Of course there are other factors also, inherent to these people, which cause them to fail where others would succeed, however that is a discussion for another day. The point is that poverty and debt will increase DESPITE a growth in the economy. Jan]
Abidjan – Africa’s economy should return to growth in aggregate across the continent in 2021 after a coronavirus recession, the African Development Bank said on Friday, while warning that poverty and public debt would continue to rise.
The 2.1-percent contraction of the pan-African economy in 2020 was the first recession in half a century, but should give way to expansion of 3.4 percent this year, the AfDB said in the 2021 edition of its African Economic Outlook report.
At 3.1 percent, the International Monetary Fund’s forecast was less optimistic than the AfDB, whose mission is to fund investment in African countries and offer advice and technical assistance to development.
The development bank predicted the strongest rebound for economies like Morocco, Tunisia and Mauritius that depend on tourism, at 6.2 percent – although their GDP fell the furthest last year.
Meanwhile oil and raw materials exporters like Algeria, Nigeria, Angola and South Africa should enjoy growth around three percent, and the continent’s most diversified economies like Ethiopia and Ivory Coast rise by 4.1 percent, having already suffered a softer 2020 blow.
The AfDB report also highlighted that 39 million more people could slip below the extreme poverty threshold of $1.90 (R28) per day this year, up from an estimated 30 million last year.
A total of 465 million people in Africa could be affected by extreme poverty, one-third of the continent’s population, in a setback after two decades of steady reductions.
Meanwhile "the pandemic shock and ensuing economic crisis have had direct implications for budgetary balances and debt burdens," the AfDB warned.
Deficits roughly doubled last year, to around 8.4 percent of GDP, while the average debt-to-GDP ratio on the continent is expected to surge by between 10 and 15 percentage points, to around 70 percent.
By December, 14 of 38 countries analysed for debt sustainability were judged "in high risk of debt distress", with 16 seen as moderate risk and just two at low risk.
"Serious debt challenges might be looming, and disorderly defaults and lengthy resolutions could become a major obstacle to Africa’s progress toward prosperity," AfDB president Akinwumi Adesina wrote in the report.
"We need to address Africa’s debt and development finance challenges, in partnership with the international community" and with private creditors, he added.
But Adesina also urged leaders to enact "bold governance reforms to eliminate all forms of leakages in public resources, improve domestic resource mobilisation, and enhance transparency".
Agence France-Presse
Ten Years After Apartheid (1994-2004): The Raw Facts
This is an article I wrote in 2004, exactly 10 years after hideous Black rule descended upon us. In here are lots of statistics and short bullet points showing the nightmare that South Africa had descended to under Black Communist rule.