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Africa
rising? Popular dissatisfaction with economic management despite a decade
of growth – Policy Brief No. 2 http://www.afrobarometer.org/files/documents/policy_brief/ab_r5_policybriefno2.pdf Download this document New findings from the Afrobarometer, based on surveys conducted in an unprecedented 34 African countries between October 2011 and June 2013, reveal widespread dissatisfaction with current economic conditions despite a decade of strong growth. Africans overwhelmingly reject their governments’ management of their economies, giving failing marks for job creation, improving the living standards of the poor, and narrowing the gaps between the rich and poor. Economic growth appears to benefit only a few, according to the ordinary people who participated in Afrobarometer’s surveys. Growing economies are not creating enough jobs, or making life significantly better for Africa’s poor. Glowing GDP growth figures might therefore offer little solace to people without jobs or those mired in poverty. Popular opinion is thus increasingly out of sync with the “Africa Rising” narrative that has been gaining traction among government officials and international investors. Key findings: Africa fising? Written off as “The Hopeless Continent” 13 years ago by The Economist, Africa has since confounded skeptics, becoming the world’s fastest growing region. Annual GDP growth on the continent averaged 4.8% over the past decade (2002-11), leading the publication to acknowledge its misdiagnosis in December 2011, this time tagging Africa as “The Hopeful Continent”. An abundance of upbeat macroeconomic statistics has made Africa a new darling of portfolio investors. This decisive shift in perceptions of Africa by the international investor community is a significant achievement. Stereotypes about a region or a continent can be difficult to change, even when they contradict measureable indicators, such as GDP growth, but the growing acceptance of the “Africa Rising” narrative represents just such a transformation. Yet to sustain this rising optimism, ordinary Africans must share in the benefits of growth along with those in boardrooms in global capitals. A growing, resurgent Africa should, first and foremost, benefit those that live in it. The Afrobarometer’s data on popular perceptions about the condition of national economies, and the effectiveness of governments’ efforts to manage them, reveal a wide gap in perceptions between ordinary Africans and the global economic community. In particular:
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