Angola GDP revised due to oil decline trend
The updates of Angola’s GDP
growth, reviewed on September 20 by the consulting company Fitch Solutions,
have now been made public, and from the expected 2.8% growth, the country is
now expected to have a 1.5% GDP growth this year given the growing tendency for
the declining trend witnessed in oil production.
“We have now updated our
estimates of Angolan GDP growth to 1.5% in 2018, a representative difference
from the previous 2.8% we had anticipated, and we expect GDP to grow by 2.3% in
2019, instead of the previous 2.6% estimate, whereas for 2020 we’ll estimate it
to hit 2.6%, which is higher than the previous estimate of 2.2% for that year.”
Fitch Solutions announced.
On a memo sent to investors, to
which the Portuguese news agency Lusa had access, some other Fitch analysts
from the consulting company, which have no ties to the analysis in question,
have said that “although Angola will be most likely out of the recession trend
for the next few quarters, the economic recovery will be weaker than expected
previously, mostly due to the decline in oil production in the country.”
The government had estimated GDP
growth to arrive at a 2.2% threshold, in comparison to the 4.6% estimate they’d
announced previously, whereas the IMF predicted GDP to get to 2.3% this year.
Private consumption and public
investment are adding up to the economy and “they shall make the economic
growth move positively in the following years, with great potential coming from
foreign investment and international financial aid,” said the analysts,
referring to a programme being negotiated with the International Monetary Fund
which will add €1.5bn to the state’s treasury.
However, they alert that “in the
long-term, the high exposure of Angola to the volatility of the oil sector will
put the country under pressure and could induce the GDP growth estimates to go
lower.”
The decreasing trend in GDP
estimations emerged after “the announcement, by the Office for National
Statistics, of data that shows the GDP had decreased by 2.2% in the first
quarter of the year, after it had already registered a negative growth of 2.6%
in 2016 and 2.5% in 2017,” the analysts also noted.
Data has been updated also to
accompany the changes in terms of estimates of oil production, which Fitch
announced would go down over the next few years.
“A big increase in production is
no longer expected, given that the oil wells ready for exploitation will not be
as much as desired,” they concluded, stating that production is expected to go
down by 1.9%.
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