Standard Bank launches new Africa Trade Barometer index

The Africa Trade Barometer’s findings are derived from qualitative and quantitative intelligence gathered from 2,400 firms representing SMEs, large family businesses, corporates and multinationals across all 10 economies is analysed and then augmented with third-party sources including the World Bank, International Trade Center, and individual country central banks.
In Summary

Johannesburg-based Standard Bank has launched a new index that will monitor trade developments across the continent […]

Johannesburg-based Standard Bank has launched a new index that will monitor trade developments across the continent beginning with Angola, Ghana, Kenya, Mozambique, Namibia, Nigeria, South Africa, Uganda, Tanzania and Zambia. The ultimate goal is to develop the Africa Trade Barometer as the leading index for easy reference.

Philip Myburgh, Head of Trade and Africa-China at Standard Bank, said by having a presence in 20 African markets and supporting trade activities in many more, Standard Bank enjoys a uniquely privileged view of Africa, “especially its rapidly emerging enterprises heavily focused on domestic, cross-border and global trade.

Myburgh said trade is deeply rooted in Africa’s DNA and integral to its history and future development.  He said as Africa’s largest bank by assets and very much committed to Africa’s growth Standard Bank has a duty to, “leverage its privileged position, presence and insight to intelligently inform and grow the continent’s trade ecosystem.” he said.

The Barometer is to be published twice a year. It features comparative data on trade openness, access to finance, macroeconomic stability, infrastructure, foreign trade, governance, the economy and trade finance behaviour.

Findings are derived from qualitative and quantitative intelligence gathered from 2,400 firms representing SMEs, large family businesses, corporates and multinationals across all 10 economies is analyzed and then augmented with third-party sources including the World Bank, International Trade Center, and individual country central banks. The result “presents one of the most comprehensive views of actual trade as experienced on the ground by real African businesses,” Myburgh said.

Over the long term, rapidly growing markets in East and West Africa and the re-emergence of global growth post Covid-19, currently combine with the broadly ratified African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA), present considerable opportunity for Africa’s small, medium, and larger domestic businesses.

Food inflation in Africa as well as outright shortages of African staples like wheat underline the urgency of building much closer economic cooperation across the continent. Trade offers Africa the opportunity to offset supply-chain shocks while managing the worst effects of inflation, high interest rates and currency depreciation. Myburgh said, “Since insight is key to leveraging trade to build resilience, our Africa Trade Barometer couldn’t be launching at a better time.”

He said in a world of disrupted local and global supply chains – and on a continent with significant development and infrastructural challenges – businesses face a daunting array of both new and perennial risks. Understanding and resolving pain points as businesses leverage trade to drive growth in this complex risk and opportunity landscape, requires insight – ideally informed by an on-the-ground presence and proven capability across the continent.

Trends and analysis gleaned will also provide insight into the broader regions that the 10 study markets represent. Myburgh said this unique view of African trade will provide a valuable resource for businesspeople, students, governments, NGOs and investors considering the continent – as well as African entrepreneurs – to assess and leverage Africa’s considerable trade opportunity, currently estimated in the region of $70 billion annually.

He said, “We expect the Africa Trade Barometer to become the leading index of African trade trends, activities and developments as Africa’s small, medium and large businesses define the continent’s next stage of domestic growth and regional and global expansion.”

 

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