Accra,
the capital of Ghana, recently hosted the 2022 annual meetings of the African
Development Bank (AfDB) from May 23rd to 27th, 2022. The forum, entitled: “Achieving
climate resilience and a just energy transition for Africa”, marked a return to
in-person sessions after two years of virtual meetings. The gathering provided
an opportunity for the AfDB to release its growth forecasts for the continent.
The annual meetings of the African
Development Bank (AfDB) coincided with the release of the bank’s yearly growth
forecasts for economies on the continent. The forecast entitled, ‘2022 Economic
Outlook Report’, released on May 25th, reviewed the impact of the pandemic on
different sectors of Africa’s economy before outlining the principal trends
that could impact 2022.
AfDB predicted Sub-Saharan Africa’s
GDP growth to be around 3.8 per cent in 2022 with Ghana’s economy expected to
grow by 5.3 per cent. Ghana, which is one of the largest economies on the
continent, is gradually bouncing back from the effects of the COVID-19
pandemic. The country recorded a 5 per cent increase in GDP for 2021, up
significantly from the sluggish development of circa 0.4 per cent recorded in
2020.
The AfDB attributed last year’s growth
rate to the country’s COVID-19 pandemic ‘Alleviation and Revitalisation of
Enterprises Support Programme’. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the
World Bank predicted growth for 2022 to be around 5.2 per cent and 5.5 per cent
respectively. According to experts, this was a sign of the renewed dynamism of
Ghana's economy, driven by an increase in the private sector’s active economic
participation, particularly in the services and agriculture sectors.
Agriculture as a key contributor
to Ghana’s GDP growth rate
Ghana’s economic growth in 2021 was
largely driven by the services and agriculture sectors, which contributed 9.4
and 8.4 per cent respectively to the country’s GDP in 2021. The agricultural
sector has been one of Ghana’s government development agendas. The government
launched various programmes including Ghana’s ‘Agricultural Sector Investment
Program’, which aims to provide a framework for the long-term engagement and
financing of investments in the agricultural sector.
Other projects include the
Modernisation of Agriculture in Ghana’s programme or the recently launched
‘Ghana Shea Landscape Emission Reductions Project’. Ghana’s Shea farming
attracted a lot of investment in recent years from private businesses such as
Prang Agro Resources, a subsidiary of Agri Resources Group (the agricultural
arm of Monaco Resources Group ). The company, also present in other strategic
locations in West Africa and a member of the Global Shea Alliance, is a key contributor
to the ongoing momentum towards a more sustainable production of Shea butter,
whose market potential is expected to hit about $3 billion by 2027.
Cocoa cultivation, which represents a
central part of the country's export resources, has also benefited from
numerous investments and interventions including the implementation of a joint
initiative between Ghana and Côte d'Ivoire.
Ghana currently enjoys political
stability under the governance of the ruling party, the New Patriotic Party. It
is expected that the Russia-Ukraine conflict, along with rising trends in
global commodity prices, particularly oil and gold, which constitute the
country’s major exports, will support Ghana's exports and boost the country’s
earnings. The 2022 African Economic Outlook by AfDB proposed a series of policy
recommendations to build back better and engender resilient economies in
Africa, reduce poverty and increase Africa’s GDP.
Source: modernghana
