in

Egypt Tops Africa’s Investment Destination, Nigeria Drop To 14

Egypt Tops Africa’s Investment Destination, Nigeria Drop To 14


Egypt remains the number one nation as Nigeria drops to number 14 on the investment destination chart, aso naija reports.

This is according to a report by RMB titled, ‘Where to Invest in Africa 2021.’

According to RMB, a division of FirstRand Bank Limited, the ranking is based on countries operating environments.

RMB Africa Economist, Daniel Kavishe, said the pandemic ushered a new world and a new approach to this year’s list.

Kavishe said, “We created a new set of rankings that incorporated some of the unavoidable COVID-19-induced challenges, of which the operating environment score was one.”

According to him, fiscal scores are important indicators of how governments respond to COVID-19.

He said, “The inclusion of a fiscal score in our rankings aimed to score governments’ fiscal positions and provided a basis from which investors can understand specific jurisdictions.

Although the pandemic brought devastation, it also enabled opportunities for reimagining policies and trade relationships.

 

Increasingly clear now is that home-grown strategies to tackle poverty, inequality and unemployment across Africa must be implemented. If not, all of Africa suffers.”

According to him, capital will flow naturally to economies offering a good mix of opportunity and ease of doing business.

According to the company, the top 10 African countries to invest in are Egypt, Morocco, South Africa, Rwanda; Botswana, Ghana, Mauritius, Côte d’Ivoire, Kenya and Tanzania.

The company ranked Nigeria outside the top 10 at number 14.

The company said, “The sheer size of Nigeria’s economy and large population base has undoubtedly aided the country’s economic environment and has led to an increase in investments in the economy over the past 10 years.

 

The country boasts significant hydrocarbon resources and considerable agricultural and mining potential. With fiscal support expected to increase and continue over the next few years, given both the coronavirus shock and oil price collapse, the economy is expected to grow but at a slow and steady pace.

One of the key tenets for its development will be the efforts that have been made to support small and medium enterprises through monetary policy reform. This should support the country’s efforts as it continues its expansion into sectors such as information technology.”

What do you think?

Written by Elizabeth O.

Oyinlola Elizabeth O. Is a prolific SEO Analyst/content writer who is based vastly on different beats/niches. She is also a metaphysical poet and a chemical scientist with improved knowledge in western modernization/persuasive
essay constructions. Elizabeth O. has helped different websites to generate google ranking
and AdSense.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Yahoo boys Cannot touch e-Naira App, It Is Hack-proof – CBN Says

Lagos Shuts Down Dowen College As Probe Begins