Uganda's GDP slightly slows down during COVID-19

Dec 04, 2020

"At the household level, incomes have fallen as a result of widespread firm closures, job losses within industry and services, particularly the urban informal sector."

The latest World Bank economic analysis for Uganda projects the economy to be contracted by up to 1% in 2020 due to COVID-19 disruptions to trade activities and production, down from 7.5% growth in 2019.

According to the Uganda Economic Update, investing in Uganda's Youth, real Gross Domestic Product (GDP) grew at only 2.9% in fiscal year 2019/20, less than half the 6.8% recorded in fiscal year 2018/19, while real GDP in per capita terms is likely to contract for the first time in a decade by about 4.5% in 2020.

An economic contraction is a decline in national output as measured by gross domestic product.

That includes a drop in real personal income, industrial production, and retail sales.

 It increases unemployment rates. Companies stop hiring to save money in the face of lower demand.

Toward the middle of a contraction, they start laying off workers, sending unemployment rates higher.

It's one of the four phases of the business cycle, also known as the boom and bust cycle.

In a statement issued on Friday, the World Bank says, "The COVID-19-related demand shock, together with tax and spending measures to manage the crisis, reduced revenues, increased current spending, and led to a significant widening of the fiscal deficit."

The World Bank adds, "The collapse in consumption and investment reduced imports and incomes earned by foreign investors, which narrowed the current account deficit. Meanwhile, higher coffee, maize and gold exports helped offset some of the losses in export revenues caused by the halt in international tourism."

It adds, "At the household level, incomes have fallen as a result of widespread firm closures, job losses within industry and services, particularly the urban informal sector.

Up to three million more people could fall into poverty on top of the 8.7 million already in poverty in 2016, increasing high levels of vulnerability and reversing the poverty gains of the last 15 years."

The World Bank explains, "This threatens to reverse the gains Uganda has realized from a gradual structural transformation that shifted labor from rural to urban areas and subsistence agriculture to industrial and service activities, and in the process supported the steady reduction in poverty over the past three decades."

It adds that the government has responded by deploying strong fiscal and monetary policies to support healthcare and vulnerable households, but social assistance has been limited with fewer than 2% of Ugandans receiving direct cash transfers.

"More worryingly, the pandemic may severely hamper human capital development and the country's chances of benefiting from its growing young and working-age population.

In addition to creating jobs for the rapidly growing population, a key challenge facing Uganda's development agenda is the delivery of basic education and health services for all," it notes.

Tony Thompson, the Country Manager, for World Bank says, "Uganda has a great opportunity to build back better from the COVID-19 crisis if investments in human capital and the youth are made a priority. Accelerating quality education and health service delivery quickly will ensure that its young people have access to the basic services they need to make the most of their potential." 

Uganda's population is set to increase in the next 20 years to around 74 million, up from an estimated 46 million and more than double to around 104 million by 2060.

But human capital development and opportunities for the youth are unequal.

"On average, a child born in Uganda today will only be 38 percent as productive when she grows up as she could be if she enjoyed complete education and full health as the World Bank's Human Capital Index (HCI) suggests," suggests the World Bank.

It says that to this end, the economic update makes several policy recommendations to enhance investments in the health and education sectors, including strengthening health promotion and disease prevention through multi-sectoral collaboration, and diversifying low-cost service delivery platforms through investments in remote learning, including distance education and online learning at the secondary level.

Richard Walker, co-author and Senior Economist World Bank says, "Uganda should strive to maintain debt sustainability - it is in an enviable position compared to many other countries.

To improve access to concessional financing, particularly from bilateral creditors, government will need to take a more balanced approach with respect to investments in infrastructure and the social sectors."

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