jump to navigation

Africa’s middle class is dramatically smaller than we think October 30, 2015

Posted by OromianEconomist in Uncategorized.
Tags: , ,
add a comment

???????????ChinaAfrica

It is puzzling that Africa’s middle class remains small when wealth on the continent has grown quickly, more than doubling over the past 15 years to some $1.63 trillion. One reason is that Africa’s growth has not been distributed evenly—the continent’s richest, 0.2% of the population, control over 30% of the region’s wealth.

Source: Africa’s middle class is dramatically smaller than we think

The middle class in Africa October 27, 2015

Posted by OromianEconomist in Uncategorized.
Tags: , ,
add a comment

???????????population in multidimensional poverty

 

 

Africa: Why we are getting poorer when the official figures say we are getting richer http://wp.me/p1xhGr-7n

5whaudit

The current issue (October 24) issue of The Economist posed the puzzling question of why the middle class in Africa is so small after a decade in which economic growth has averaged more than 5% a year, about twice as fast as population growth. Two reasons are opined;
(1) The proceeds of economic growth are shared very unequally. In recent years inequality has increased alongside growth in most parts of Africa, and
(2) Poverty in many parts of Africa is so deep that even though incomes may have doubled for millions of people, they are now merely poor rather than extremely poor.

I wish to put forth a third reason. Most of the economic growth comes from the fabled FDI (Foreign Direct Investment) – not a bad thing (every country is jostling for it). Except that with little or no local value addition to the operations of the transnational corporations…

View original post 94 more words