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African ministers to review economic, social development

African ministers to meet in the capital city of Ethiopia to review the state of economic and social development in…

African ministers to meet in the capital city of Ethiopia to review the state of economic and social development in Africa, says the Economic Commission for Africa (ECA).The ECA Conference of African Ministers of Finance, Planning and Economic Development (CoM2023) will be held for a week, beginning March 15, 2023.

 

African ministers in charge of Finance, Planning and Economic Development will attend the CoM2023 which will convene under the theme, ‘Fostering recovery and transformation in Africa to reduce inequalities and vulnerabilities’.

 

“The Session will review the state of economic and social development in Africa as well as progress on regional integration,” the ECA announced.

 

CoM2023 will also be attended by representatives of member States, entities of the UN system, pan-African financial institutions, African academic and research institutions, development partners and intergovernmental organizations.

 

The session will deliberate on the development agenda of Africa on the back of a raft of economic and political challenges facing the continent.

ECA’s Acting Executive Secretary, Antonio Pedro, said global shocks are turning millions of vulnerable people into the continent’s new poor, reversing decades of progress, citing that the COVID-19 pandemic has pushed an additional 55 million Africans below the poverty line.

The high growth rates in the past two decades have reduced poverty levels in Africa with the share of the population living in extreme poverty decreasing from 55 to 35% between 2000 and 2019.

However, at least 667 million people on the continent still live in extreme poverty in 2022.

Even when growth rates were high in Africa, everyone did not benefit equally, said the acting executive secretary.

For example, between 2004 and 2019, the top 10% of wage earners received about 75% of total income, data from ECA shows

It further states that high inequality, along with high levels of poverty, creates a vicious cycle in which structural bottlenecks persist, rendering the population in Africa perennially vulnerable to both economic and non-economic shocks.

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