Quantcast
Channel: economic – para,,en,pasuri,,en,Fuqizimin e njerëzve të jenë të vetë-mjaftueshme me anë të informacionit të biznesit duke përvetësuar pasuri të qëndrueshme,,en,RSS,,en,VALUTA MONITOR,,en,shtëpi,,en,Rreth Cash,,en,Consultancy / Na Hire,,en,Kontakti / Hire mua,,en,Politika e privatësisë,,en,Politika rimbursimi,,en,Submit Post mysafir,,en,prill,,en,Ndikimi ksenofob në Biznes,,en,Socio-ekonomike,,en,Një rebus në Afrikën e Jugut,,en,Posto në Buzz Google,,en,SumoMe,,pt,Sulmet mbi të huajt nga qytetarët socio-ekonomikisht privuar,,en,shtrydhur nga realitetet e migracionit globale,,en,janë një padi ndaj qeverisë,,en,shkruan Susan Booysen,,en,Johannesburg,,en,Qeveria ishte duke u mbajtur peng këtë javë - të kapur në një rrokje në mes të ksenofobisë moralisht i pambrojtshëm,,en,migrimi global dhe duke pranuar se ndjenjat e partisë në bazë kundër të huajve,,en,në masë të madhe të Afrikës,,en,kanë rrënjët në ëndërr dented e demokracisë,,en,Një përshkallëzim i ksenofobisë vazhdueshme që nga viti,,en,më tepër se një shpërthim të ri,,en 4 Wealth
Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 2

EBOLA: Devastating Economic Impact in West Africa and Mark Zuckerberg’s Relieve $25m Donation

$
0
0

Devastating Economic Impact in West Africa

As the death toll from the Ebola virus outbreak in West Africa continues to rise, experts are also concerned about the long-term effects the disease will have on the already fragile markets and economies of Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea, which have suffered the most damage.

15400186156_4562634b39_z

“We are at a dangerous moment,” wrote World Bank President Jim Yong Kim and Harvard University Professor Paul Farmer, in a weekend editorial in the Washington Post. “Tens of thousands of lives, the future of the region and hard-won economic and health gains for millions hang in the balance.”

The United Nations World Food Program and Food and Agriculture Organization announced on Tuesday that it had approved 65,000 metric tons of food assistance to the nearly 1.3 million people affected by the outbreak in the past three months.

“Set against the backdrop of already high levels of poverty and limited social service capacities, the impact of the [Ebola] outbreak is having acute repercussions on the food security of affected populations,” the report says, citing reduced food trade, rising prices and lower domestic harvests.

“The areas with high incidences of [Ebola] are among the most productive regions of Liberia and Sierra Leone,” the report says. This has created a labor shortage and will likely result in low levels of production on cash crops such as palm oil, cocoa and rubber. “Such a decline in both food and cash crop production would severely impact household incomes, thus reducing purchasing power and inhibiting food access,”a “special alert” from the U.N agency says.

So far, more than 1,500 people have died from Ebola, and public health officials have started to restrict movement of people and establish quarantine zones. While these measures may help stop the fatal virus from spreading, economists fear what it will mean for the region’s economy, which is highly dependent on agriculture.

“Although necessary, these restrictions have resulted in food security concerns that curtailed the movement of goods and services, including food items, leading to panic buying, food shortages, and significant price hikes,” the report says.

Earlier this year, analysts predicted good harvests thanks to rainfall levels in most parts of these countries. But as harvest season approaches, workers in these areas are far from their typical routines, which will aggravate already high food prices.

World Health Organization (WHO) Assistant Director General Bruce Aylward holds up a graph charting the number of cases of Ebola in West Africa, during a press briefing on WHO's strategy to combat Ebola, at the United Nations headquarters in Geneva August 28, 2014. The Ebola outbreak in West Africa has killed more than 1,552 people out of 3,069 known cases in four countries and "continues to accelerate." REUTERS/Pierre Albouy

World Health Organization (WHO) Assistant Director General Bruce Aylward holds up a graph charting the number of cases of Ebola in West Africa, during a press briefing on WHO’s strategy to combat Ebola, at the United Nations headquarters in Geneva August 28, 2014. The Ebola outbreak in West Africa has killed more than 1,552 people out of 3,069 known cases in four countries and “continues to accelerate.” REUTERS/Pierre Albouy

U.N. data shows that nearly 80 percent of household income is spent on food in some cases, which means the price increase could seriously affect people’s access to the necessities. In Liberia, për shembull, the price of the staple food cassava increased up to 150 percent in just the first two weeks of August, according to U.N. data.

Ndërkohë, Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone are highly reliant on foreign trade to satisfy domestic consumption. As borders close and currencies continue to tumble, the outlook for the future isn’t bright.

“The Ebola outbreak is having an acute macroeconomic and social impact on three already fragile countries in West Africa,” the International Monetary Fund’s communications director, Gerry Rice, told reporters last week.

He said that IMF researchers were working to prepare an economic assessment, but what was already clear was that “growth is likely to slow sharply in all three cases, and significant financing needs are likely to rise.”

While the outbreak has also spread to countries such as Nigeria and Senegal, the three that have been most affected are also the most precarious economically. While Nigeria’s gross domestic product is $522.6 miliardë, the largest on the continent, Sierra Leone’s GDP is just $4.9 miliardë, Guinea’s is $6.2 miliardë and Liberia’s is just $2 miliardë, according to the World Bank.

“I think it is important to act quickly and ring-fence the crisis,” Amadou Sy, Africa economist at the Brookings Institute, said to International Business Times.

“My sense is that for sectors such as tourism, foreigners may not discriminate and countries even in other regions of Africa may be lumped together with the three West African countries.”

Tourist arrivals to sub-Saharan Africa have increased more than 300 percent since 1990 hitting 33.8 million visits in 2012, according to the World Bank, and the industry has become a major driving force for local economies.

Mining and minerals also play a major role in these countries, and could pose a risk if the outbreak is not stopped soon.

As far back as June, the mining company London Mining PLC (LON:LOND), which has operations in Sierra Leone, tha that it imposed restrictions on travel and would pull out those people who were able to work remotely. The company’s stock has fallen 66 percent since the outbreak began in March this year.

“Revenues are down, foreign exchange levels are down, markets are not functioning, airlines are not coming in, projects are being cancelled, business people have left — that is very, very damaging,” African Development Bank (AfDB) chief Donald Kaberuka told Reuters last week during a visit to Sierra Leone.

Mark Zuckerberg Donated 25 Million Dollars to Fight Ebola

Mark Zuckerberg and his wife Priscilla Chan will donate $25 million to the Centers for Disease Control Foundation, the Facebook founder announced Tuesday.

mark-zuckerberg-priscilla-chan his wife

mark-zuckerberg-priscilla-chan his wife

The Ebola outbreak in West Africa has infected at least 8,000 people and killed more than 4,000, making it by far the worst in history. The World Health Organization has estimated that at least $1 billion will be needed to stop it, so Zuckerberg’s donation will provided much-needed funds. But how will they be used?

“This significant contribution from Mark Zuckerberg and Dr. Priscilla Chan will help us rapidly advance the fight against Ebola,” CDC Director Tom Frieden said in a statement.

The gift “will provide flexible funding allowing [the] CDC to address the most pressing needs as the epidemic shifts and evolves,” explained CDC Foundation president Charles Stokes.

The money will go to the CDC Foundation’s Global Disaster Response Fund, “to help expeditiously address needs that are identified by CDC experts on the ground, and that could otherwise go unmet,” the statement said. Those needs include things like:

  • equipment for community care centers
  • training local staff
  • generators
  • vehicles to transport lab specimens
  • identifying Ebola cases and tracing their contacts
  • support for safe burials
  • translation services

More than 1,000 CDC staff have been involved in the Ebola response, dhe 150 will soon be on the ground in Liberia, Guinea, and Sierra Leone. Frieden has repeatedly emphasized that the only way to contain the outbreak is to get it under control in West Africa.

“It’s easy to say Ebola is still small compared to other diseases or that it’s mostly in other countries and won’t affect us,” Zuckerberg wrote, in explaining why they chose to make a donation. “But if we don’t get this under control soon, then it will spread and become an epidemic we have to deal with for decades to come.”

Burim: ibtimes.com and businessinsider.com

 


Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 2

Latest Images