IMF: Sub-Saharan Africa Needs Growth Reset as Region Trails Others in Governance and Business Reforms

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The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has said that Nigeria and other Sub-Saharan African countries are falling behind other developing regions, especially in governance, business regulation, and market openness. In a new blog post, the IMF noted that these gaps are most severe in fragile and conflict-affected states and oil exporters, but they are not permanent.

The report pointed to Rwanda and Benin Republic as examples of countries that have cut red tape and adopted digital tools to make doing business easier. It also stressed that reforming state-owned enterprises, particularly in energy and transport, is a key priority. When tariffs stay below cost-recovery levels, cash flow weakens, maintenance is delayed, and investment stalls.

“The result is a familiar tax on growth: unreliable and expensive services for firms and households,” the IMF said. It added that better reform efforts use four ingredients: map stakeholders, align prices with costs, define social goals clearly, and explain how any savings will be used.

At current growth rates, per capita income in Sub-Saharan Africa would take roughly half a century to double. Citing its latest Regional Economic Outlook for the region, the IMF said implementing well-designed structural reforms could lift output by around 20 per cent within a decade.

“The point is not reform for reform’s sake. It is to shift the growth model from one led mainly by the state to one driven more by private investment, productivity, and jobs,” the post stated.

Despite strong performance in a handful of countries including Benin, Côte d’Ivoire, Ethiopia, Rwanda, and Uganda, growth across the region has been too weak to deliver meaningful income convergence. Over the past three years, real GDP per capita grew by about 1.4 per cent a year, compared with about 3.4 per cent in emerging markets and developing economies overall.

Past growth spurts, often fueled by commodity booms or inefficient public investment, faded fast. They did not trigger the sustained private investment needed to keep growth going. Labour productivity has been nearly flat for three decades.

“The public sector-led growth model is now spent. With debt high, borrowing costly, and aid falling, the state can no longer be the main engine of growth. The region needs more private investment, backed by broad, business-friendly reforms,” the IMF said.

The blog post noted that choosing and designing reforms is only half the job. Implementing them is usually harder because benefits often arrive slowly, sometimes beyond an electoral cycle, while vested interests resist change. “Political feasibility matters as much as technical design,” it added.

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