Economists Fear Impact Of China’s Slow Growth For Africa

International Business Times

Published Apr 26, 2014 05:26PM ET

Economists Fear Impact Of China’s Slow Growth For Africa

By Kathleen Caulderwood - Africa’s rising economic star is in danger of burning out from even a modest contraction in China’s economy as that country’s demand for natural resources decreases, warns the International Monetary Fund.

After a meteoric rise for most of the past decade, China’s economic growth rate has cooled off to a modest 7.4 percent in the first quarter of this year and officials have tightened fiscal policy, which could make investments abroad less appealing.

The economies of many sub-Saharan countries are expected to rise, but their dependence on Chinese trade could be a stumbling block in the future, notes the IMF in its Regional Economic Outlook for Sub-Saharan Africa, which was released on Thursday.

“Growth in the BRICs, notably China, has fueled growth in sub-Saharan Africa through high commodity prices and investment inflows,” the report reads, adding that “the rebalancing of China’s growth toward relatively more reliance on consumption and less on investment are likely to reduce demand and lower prices for commodities, especially for industrial inputs such as copper and iron ore.”

Trade between China and Africa has increased 5.6 percent year over year to hit $201 billion in 2013, according to figures released from the Chinese Ministry of Commerce, reported Xinhua. And on Wednesday executives from Standard Chartered Bank told Chinese and African officials that they expect China-Africa trade volume to hit $280 billion by 2015.