What implications for Africa?
The Brexit: What
implications for Africa?
Investors in African markets panicked because many economies
(such as Angola, Nigeria, South Africa, and Zambia) were already reeling from
low commodity prices exacerbated by a sluggish global demand. In these
countries, Brexit added salt to the wounds of injured economies.
On what happens next, experts are uncertain, and African
governments may need to redefine their trade and diplomatic relations with a
post-Brexit Britain and Europe.
Trade and investment will be affected most by Brexit. Most of
the trade arrangements the UK has with African countries were negotiated
through the EU. This means the agreements will cease to apply or will have to
be renegotiated when the UK finally leaves the EU, a process that will take two
years from the time it officially informs the EU of its intention to pull
out.
It will be a difficult time for Africa, as the UK will no longer
shape and lead some of the most important initiatives on the African continent
that form the basis of co-operation between Europe and the continent. Trade
agreements often take considerable time to hash out, and the uncertainty of the
intervening period could complicate exports to the UK.
The emerging markets and frontier asset markets will be affected
too. South Africa, a former British colony and one of Africa’s advanced
economies, could be hard hit, among others.
In short, South Africa’s economy suffers whenever the British
economy slumps. Many South African companies are listed on both the
Johannesburg and London stock exchanges, and several South African banks depend
on British cash reserves. Since the country exports 10% of its wines to the UK,
for instance, the industry is already bracing for future losses.
Impact on trade
South Africa, the UK’s largest African trading partner, will
bear the brunt of Brexit.
When Brexit takes effect, considering that the UK is South
Africa’s eighth-largest import and export market in global terms, according to
2015 data, South Africa’s gross domestic product (GDP) could shrink by 0.1%,
setting the economy on a downward spiral, predict Raymond Parsons and Wilma
Viviers, professors at South Africa’s North-West University. “Slower economic
growth as a result of potentially weaker trade and investment ties with
traditional overseas markets means less job creation and yet higher
unemployment.”
Brexit will cost Britain’s GDP a cumulative drop of 2.75
percentage points in the coming 18 months, say Jan Hatzius and Sven Jari Stehn,
economists working with the investment bank Goldman Sachs.
Larry Fink, chairman of the world’s largest asset management
firm, BlackRock, predicts that the GDP could fall to as low as -1%, effectively
a recession, described by economists as two consecutive quarters of negative
growth. Analyst agree, noting that Brexit could lead to a slowdown in trade
with the EU, lower investor confidence and high unemployment.
This is not good news for South Africa and Britain’s other
African top trading partners, particularly Nigeria, Kenya and Egypt.
Nigeria
After South Africa, Nigeria is Britain’s second-largest African
market, with Kenya coming third.
Before Brexit, bilateral trade between Nigeria, Africa’s largest
economy, and Britain was worth about £6 billion ($7.9 billion), and had been
projected to reach £20 billion ($26.6 billion) by 2020. With Brexit, that
projection looks overly optimistic.
Nigeria is grappling with falling oil prices, its main income
source. Crude chemicals and allied materials make up almost a quarter of
Nigeria’s trade with Britain. A potential drop in oil demand coupled with low
oil prices could dim the Nigerian economy’s prospects for recovery.
Tunji Andrews, a Lagos-based economist, says Nigeria cannot rely
on the EU to make up for the shortfall in earnings if the British economy goes into
a recession.
The International Monetary Fund announced in July that Brexit
will likely plunge the Nigerian economy into a recession this year, shrinking
by 1.8% from the earlier 2.3% growth projection. British government
statistics show that foreign direct investments in Africa doubled between 2005
and 2014, from £20.8 billion ($27.6 billion) to £42.5 billion ($56.5 billion).
Kenya
Kenya, Britain’s third largest market in Africa, could witness
capital flight after Brexit, leading to falling exports. This would weaken the
Kenyan shilling and make imports more expensive for a country that has already
seen a 10% increase in import bills in the past five years.
Kenya’s lucrative cut flower industry, for which Britain is the
second-largest export market after the Netherlands, could suffer. A trade deal
on flower exports between the East African country and the EU was in the works
before Brexit.
If a trade deal between the East African Community and the EU is
stalled by Brexit, Kenya stands to lose billions of shillings, which could lead
to uncertainty for Kenyan exports.
Kenya will now have to negotiate separate deals with Britain and
the EU—a potentially difficult task. Without such deals, Kenya may lose up to 4
billion Kenyan shillings ($39 million) a month, predicts the Kenya Flowers
Association, which represents flower businesses in the country.
The direct impact on trade aside, Brexit is expected to affect
British development aid to Africa. Britain contributed about £409 million ($543
million), or 14.8%, to the European Development Fund (EDF)’s 2014 budget, which
the EU uses to support development in poor countries. Without Britain’s contribution,
the EDF will have less money, and this will affect EU-funded projects,
including road construction projects in countries like Tanzania.
Britain can directly finance projects in Africa through its
international aid programs, such as the Department for International
Development, but it can only support a small number of countries, says Kevin
Watkins, a Brookings Institution non-resident senior fellow.
$56.5
bn
British
FDI in Africa between 2005 to 2014.
A limping British economy with a potentially weakened currency
may not continue the current level of assistance to countries such as Ethiopia
and Sierra Leone that rely heavily on British aid. In 2014, for example,
Britain provided £238 million ($416 million) in aid to Sierra Leone, which was
6.8 %
of the country’s economy, according to the World Bank. That same year, Ethiopia received £322 million ($425 million), 0.8 % of Ethiopia’s economy.
of the country’s economy, according to the World Bank. That same year, Ethiopia received £322 million ($425 million), 0.8 % of Ethiopia’s economy.
Besides exports and international aid, a sluggish British
economy may slow remittances by the African diaspora in Britain. Remittances
provide a much-needed cash injection into African economies. In 2014, for
example, Nigerian immigrants in Britain remitted $3.7 billion, the most among
African immigrants.
Prospects for change
Despite fears that Brexit could dislocate African economies,
some experts see positive developments for countries like Libya and Zimbabwe,
currently under EU sanctions championed by Britain, according to The
Herald, a Zimbabwean daily. With Brexit, the EU might be encouraged
to review these sanctions and possibly re-engage with these countries.
“Britain will be able to focus more on our bilateral
relationships with Africa and with our traditional partners and to really look
at Africa for its needs rather than looking at it through the prism of the EU,
that is an outdated model that may have fit in the 1970s but is wholly
inappropriate now for the UK or a wholly inappropriate way to define the
UK-Africa relationship,” says James Duddridge, a former British minister for
Africa and a Brexit supporter, in an interview with Radio France
Internationale. Without the EU, he said, ties between Britain and Africa will
get stronger.
Earlier this year, Mr. Duddridge criticised the EU’s decision to
reduce funding for the African Union Mission in Somali (AMISOM), which is
helping to bring peace to that country. The decision was against Britain’s
wishes, he says, adding that Britain could in the future decide to deploy its
own troops to Somalia.
The good news is that Africa can actually seek assistance elsewhere.
Africa’s trade with Europe, estimated at €106 billion (US$116.6 billion) in
2016, has been eclipsed by China’s. Worth an estimated $300 billion, China is
Africa’s top trading partner currently.
The World Bank confirms that China became sub-Saharan Africa’s
“most important export partner” by 2013, accounting for 27% of the region’s
exports “compared with 23% for the EU and 21% for the US.” Although at 9%,
sub-Saharan Africa’s exports to India are the fastest-growing globally.
With China, the US, Brazil, India and others strengthening their
relations with Africa, the continent could look elsewhere if its ties with
Britain or the EU get complicated in a post-Brexit era.
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