
According to the World Bank's Global Economic Prospects and the Developing Countries, 1998/99, a variety of factors were involved in Africa's slowdown, including a resurgence of armed conflict and the effects of the El Niño weather phenomenon. But the dominant factor was the impact of the global economic crisis that began last year in East Asia, which buffeted Africa's vulnerable economies "through all three of the main transmission channels — private capital flows, terms of trade, and export market growth," says the report. However, if the Bank's assumptions about trends in the world economy are borne out, then 1999 should bring a resumption of positive growth, at around 3.2 per cent, rising further to 3.8 per cent in 2000 (see graph).
Much of the report is devoted to frankly analyzing the causes of the East Asian crisis and discussing how to better respond to such calamities in the future, including through the adoption of "more flexible macroeconomic policies," a point emphasized in the foreword by Mr. Joseph Stiglitz, the World Bank's Senior Vice-President for Development Economics and Chief Economist. According to the report, the origins of the crisis lay in both "institutional weaknesses in managing domestic financial liberalization and international capital market imperfections." It suggests that the initial international interventions — which emphasized high interest rates and spending cuts in exchange for financial bail-outs — actually may have worsened the downturn. APPOINTMENTSSecretary-General Kofi Annan has appointed Mr. Zéphirin Diabré (Burkina Faso) as Associate Administrator of the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) with effect from mid-January. Mr. Diabré replaces Mr. Rafeeuddin Ahmed (Pakistan), who is retiring.Currently economic advisor to the President of Burkina Faso, Mr. Diabré has served as a member of his country's parliament; Minister of Economy, Finance and Planning; and Minister of Trade, Industry and Mines. Mr. Annan has also appointed Mr. Ivor Richard Fung (Cameroon), as Director of the United Nations Regional Centre for Peace and Disarmament in Africa, which is based in Lomé, Togo. Prior to this appointment, Mr. Fung, who took up his new functions on 1 December, was Regional Manager for Peacebuilding and Governance with UNDP's Regional Bureau for Africa. |