Plataforma de conocimientos sobre agricultura familiar

Africa in the global agricultural economy in 2030 and 2050

Africa has managed to maintain a favorable environment for growth and poverty reduction in the face of the series of global economic crises in the past couple decades. Part of this is due to Africa’s level of isolation from the global economy, but it is also testament to the resilience of African economies even if they are not experiencing the extraordinary growth seen in South and East Asia (AfDB, OECD, and UNDP 2015). Per capita gross domestic product (GDP) grew at a solid 2 percent per year in the decade leading up to 2012 across all of Africa, with western Africa leading at more than 4 percent growth (ReSAKSS database 2015). This growth has put the average per capita GDP for all of Africa at the threshold of middle-income classification according to the World Bank’s World Development Indicators. Eastern and central Africa lag behind a bit with many low-income nations, while the northern and southern regions are mostly represented by stronger middle-income economies.

Title of publication: Beyond a middle income Africa: Transforming African economies for sustained growth with rising employment and incomes.
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Autor: Timothy B. Sulser
Otros autores: Daniel Mason-D’croz, Shahnila Islam, Sherman Robinson, Keith D. Wiebe, Mark W. Rosegrant
Organización: International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI)
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Año: 2015
ISBN: 978-0-89629-892-7
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Cobertura geográfica: África, Comunidad Económica y Monetaria de África Central (CEMAC), Mercado Común para África Oriental y Meridional (COMESA), East African Community (EAC), Comunidad Económica del África Central (CEAC), Comunidad Económica de los Estados del África Occidental (CEDEAO), Autoridad Intergubernamental sobre el Desarrollo (IGAD), Comunidad para el Desarrollo del África Austral (SADC)
Tipo: Parte de un libro
Idioma utilizado para los contenidos: English
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