• Latest
Op-Ed: Impact of vaccine famine on Africa’s economic growth

Op-Ed: Impact of vaccine famine on Africa’s economic growth

4 years ago
US President Donald Trump gestures while speaking during the signing ceremony of the Board of Peace at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.

Trump sidelines Africa in new world order

22 hours ago
Lt Gen Muhoozi Kainerugaba, Uganda’s military chief and son of President Yoweri Museveni, pictured during an official engagement

Uganda military says 30 killed after vote

22 hours ago
Guinea’s transitional leader waves to supporters during a public appearance following the country’s return to constitutional rule.

AU backs Guinea’s return after coup rule

23 hours ago
Panel discussion at Africa Collective Davos 2026 featuring Afreximbank’s Ekene Uzor speaking on digital trade infrastructure during the World Economic Forum

Afreximbank flags Africa’s digital trade gap at Davos

23 hours ago
Africa Briefing Magazine: November-December 2025

Africa Briefing Magazine: January-February 2026

1 day ago
President John Dramani Mahama speaking at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, during discussions on the Accra Reset initiative.

Mahama warns Africa must reset at Davos

1 day ago
Guinea-Bissau’s transitional president Major-General Horta Inta-a salutes during an official ceremony following the military coup that halted the country’s elections

Guinea-Bissau sets election date after military coup

2 days ago
Supporters gather around a campaign banner of Ugandan opposition leader Bobi Wine during post-election unrest following President Museveni’s re-election

Bobi Wine in hiding as Uganda crackdown deepens

2 days ago
Vice President Jane Naana Opoku-Agyemang and Foreign Minister Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa inspect Osagyefo Kwame Nkrumah’s former residence in Conakry, Guinea

Ghana opens talks to preserve Nkrumah’s Guinea home

2 days ago
GoldBod CEO Sammy Gyamfi shakes hands with Gold Coast Refinery executives during the signing of Ghana’s gold refining agreement in Accra.

Why Ghana’s GoldBod refinery deal matters

2 days ago
Nigeria’s finance minister Wale Edun speaking during a panel session at the World Economic Forum in Davos 2026.

Wale Edun warns trade rifts threaten Nigeria

2 days ago
Young Angolan professionals and students wearing conference badges pose together during a youth development and skills training event in Angola.

Op-ed: Angola’s youth are its true wealth

2 days ago
  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Media Kit
  • Policies and Terms
Saturday, January 24, 2026
  • Login
  • Register
Africa Briefing
Data & Research Solutions
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Business & Economy
  • News
  • Energy
  • Politics
    • Africa Abroad
  • Technology
  • Magazine
Subscribe for More
Africa Briefing
No Result
View All Result
Home Business & Economy

Op-Ed: Impact of vaccine famine on Africa’s economic growth

by Editorial Staff
4 years ago
in Business & Economy
Reading Time: 5 mins read
0 0
A A
0
Op-Ed: Impact of vaccine famine on Africa’s economic growth
0
SHARES
0
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on XShare on WhatsApp

WE are about to start a third year of living with Covid-19.

The world’s humanity and solidarity are now at its further test – and yet the implications of the absence of solidarity keep us all in the boat of mutations, lockdowns, quarantines and delayed SDGs – denied prosperity for all.

2021 has unearthed a new expression of global inequity: ‘vaccine nationalism’ – which itself competes high with socioeconomic downturns, jobless growth, the climate crisis, and rising poverty.

As the pandemic ravages on, with Omicron on the scene, the futility of hoarding takes centre stage as even the heavy supply of boosters in advanced economies has not shielded them from the vicious cycle of pandemic-living.

While about 60 per cent of the population in the US and 76 per cent in Canada are fully vaccinated, in Africa – a continent that is home to 1.3 billion people – the number barely reaches eight percent.

Many have argued that vaccines’ short shelf life, hesitancy and logistic challenges weigh in. Granted. But the main issue remains the absence of global solidarity – where the rich hoard and the weaker economies deal with vaccine famine – awaiting their turn…

Vaccine Inequality is also manifest in vaccine affordability. For high-income countries to vaccinate 70 per cent of their population it will take raising their health care spending by 0.8 percent. Lower-income countries must increase health care spending by over 50 per cent, on average — to do the same.

Vaccines delayed is development denied. Estimates show that vaccine delays cost Africa up to $14bn in lost productivity each month and make recovery more challenging – and drag out the first-in-a-generation recession the continent is facing.

African governments have responded quickly to contain the spread of the virus – but success is overshadowed by the pandemic’s socioeconomic consequences. In 2019, Africa was witnessing record growth numbers in various sectors — like tourism, where Africa had the second-fastest-growing tourism sector in the world, contributing 8.5 per cent of the continent’s GDP.

However, with the pandemic, tourism has come to a standstill, and the continent recorded a 2.1 percent decline in economic growth in 2020. Other accompanying challenges have included general exchange rates depreciations, food insecurity and increased job losses.

Vaccine delays will cost sub-Saharan Africa three percent of the region’s forecast GDP in 2022-25. UNDP research reveals that recovery rates are strongly correlated to capacity to vaccinate – with a $7.93bn increase in global GDP for every million people vaccinated.

Low-income countries that are severely impacted by the pandemic do not have the fiscal and financial leeway available to wealthy countries. They risk enduring the pandemic longer if they do not gain early access to Covid-19 vaccines.

This places an inordinate burden on national budgets at a time when the pandemic has decimated fiscal revenues and when higher spending is needed from governments to protect their people and cushion the socioeconomic shock caused by the pandemic.

There is a risk of seeing African countries’ budget deficit widens and it is urgent for us to support countries in developing alternative financing sources. Vaccine famine is putting millions at risk of infection, constraining economic productivity and jeopardising socioeconomic progress.

The key question today is: Can the world afford such blatant inequality in the face of a pandemic that is sparing no region?

The path to recovery will remain long and uncertain unless we take urgent measures to overhaul the current system of vaccine production, distribution, and financing. Below are some ideas on how to get there fast – building on a consensus that emerged from the recently concluded African Economic Conference in Sal, Cabo Verde.

Development financing in Africa requires an out-of-the-box architecture: Africa will need an additional $425bn in external funding between now and 2025 to fully recover from the pandemic. It is daunting, but not impossible. It is equivalent to the amount African countries lose to illicit financial flows over a five-year period.

Economic governance and creativity can be applied: by, for instance, re-directing investments by pension funds, sovereign wealth funds, and similar institutions.

Leveraging the continent’s natural resources is urgent: Africa’s financial presence in the international system does not reflect its real wealth. Better management and use of extractive industries are critical. Resources like energy, oil, natural gas, coal, and uranium are worth between $13-14.5 trillion and $1.7 trillion of potential wealth.

Further resources can be harnessed from production in six key sectors: agriculture, water, fisheries, forestry, tourism and human capital. Mobilisation of these resources requires governments to seriously address deficiencies in banking and governance systems to stem illicit financial flows out of the continent.

Central banks have a key role to play in unlocking idle resources and channelling them into productive investments. Over $1 trillion of excess reserves could be used to finance Africa’s development.

International finance systems could be reviewed to become more equitable: Concessional financing should consider countries’ multidimensional vulnerabilities beyond what is reflected in their income levels.

The allocation of a record amount of $650bn SDR issued by the IMF to its country members in August 2021 is a step in the right direction. But more can be done to better support countries that need financing the most. Africa only received $21bn of SDRs from the total envelope. Such international mechanisms could be reviewed to redress current inequalities.

Reforming Africa’s financial system: The Covid-19 pandemic has highlighted the critical role that financial systems have to play in supporting Africa’s development. Improvements in the quality, quantity and efficiency of financial systems are crucial for Africa’s sustainable development.

More effective financial systems across the continent can promote resource mobilisation and better allocation of savings to productive investments by shifting incentives for the banking system toward the core functions and advancing financial inclusion for individuals and microenterprises.

Digital innovations are a game-changer for Africa’s development financing: Financial systems that harness digital technologies and free and fair competition will be fundamental in revitalising African economies. The pandemic has proven that digital technologies present enormous opportunities for Africa.

They stimulate innovation, economic growth, and job creation in critical economic sectors by allowing better interconnection of African markets with the rest of the world. They can also increase market access and financing for the marginalised population usually excluded by the formal financial systems.

However, digitisation also has the potential to exacerbate inequalities and we must ensure that the means are sufficiently inclusive for no one to be left behind.

Sustainable financing will be key: African financial institutions have a role to play in enabling Africa to transform the advantages of its natural resources, by leveraging blue-carbon markets and green financing mechanisms.

Climate risk-sensitive investment, de-risking, impact investment, environmentally sustainable projects, sustainable energy investment are among critical issues for sustainable financing development.

Thus, the financial sector has a key role to play in re-orienting investments towards more sustainable technologies and businesses and fostering low-carbon, climate-resilient, and circular economies.

Boosting intra-African trade is a gateway to recovery: The transformative power of the AfCFTA must be brought to bear in servicing the needs of 1.3 billion people.

If effectively implemented, the AfCFTA will accelerate the continent’s path towards structural economic transformation through value – addition – based industrialisation of both goods and services.

Investment in trade facilitation reforms and using Regulations as a Stimulus will bring even greater dividends, saving governments money inefficiencies while placing billions directly in the hands of intra-African women and youth-led exporting enterprises.

2022 must be a year where collective global action prioritise vaccine equity and ensure a shot for all. Omicron has reminded us that there is just no other way to build forward better.

Ahunna Eziakonwa is UN Assistant Secretary-General, UNDP Assistant Administrator and Director, Regional Bureau for Africa.

This article was first published in the Business Daily

ShareTweetSend
Editorial Staff

Editorial Staff

Related Posts

Panel discussion at Africa Collective Davos 2026 featuring Afreximbank’s Ekene Uzor speaking on digital trade infrastructure during the World Economic Forum

Afreximbank flags Africa’s digital trade gap at Davos

by Editorial Staff
January 23, 2026
0

Keypoints: Afreximbank says digital infrastructure underpins Africa’s trade ambitions Shared systems seen as critical to making AfCFTA operational Payments, data...

GoldBod CEO Sammy Gyamfi shakes hands with Gold Coast Refinery executives during the signing of Ghana’s gold refining agreement in Accra.

Why Ghana’s GoldBod refinery deal matters

by Editorial Staff
January 22, 2026
0

Keypoints: Ghana will refine up to one tonne of gold weekly State secures 15 percent free carried interest Analysts welcome...

Nigeria’s finance minister Wale Edun speaking during a panel session at the World Economic Forum in Davos 2026.

Wale Edun warns trade rifts threaten Nigeria

by Editorial Staff
January 22, 2026
0

Keypoints: Wale Edun warns global trade fragmentation threatens Nigeria Government prioritises investment over new borrowing Tax and revenue reforms target...

Young Angolan professionals and students wearing conference badges pose together during a youth development and skills training event in Angola.

Op-ed: Angola’s youth are its true wealth

by Editorial Staff
January 22, 2026
0

Keypoints: Angola’s youth bulge is its biggest untapped economic asset Skills shortages continue to limit domestic opportunity Targeted training can...

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
WhatsApp chat screen showing missed call messages feature, with a user recording a voice note after an unanswered call

WhatsApp rolls out missed call messages

December 14, 2025
Composite image showing the wreckage of vehicles after a fatal road crash in Ogun State, Nigeria, alongside an explanatory diagram illustrating seating positions inside an SUV.

Fatal Nigeria crash leaves Anthony Joshua injured

December 29, 2025
Africa Briefing Magazine: November-December 2025

Africa Briefing Magazine: November-December 2025

November 21, 2025
Hilton Worldwide announces first hotel opening in Chad

Hilton Worldwide announces first hotel opening in Chad

0
Vodafone reveals strong growth in M-Pesa transactions as it launches service in Ghana

Vodafone reveals strong growth in M-Pesa transactions as it launches service in Ghana

0
West African hotels boost security after Burkina attack

West African hotels boost security after Burkina attack

0
US President Donald Trump gestures while speaking during the signing ceremony of the Board of Peace at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.

Trump sidelines Africa in new world order

January 23, 2026
Lt Gen Muhoozi Kainerugaba, Uganda’s military chief and son of President Yoweri Museveni, pictured during an official engagement

Uganda military says 30 killed after vote

January 23, 2026
Guinea’s transitional leader waves to supporters during a public appearance following the country’s return to constitutional rule.

AU backs Guinea’s return after coup rule

January 23, 2026
Africa Briefing

© 2025 Africa Briefing

Quick Links

  • Home
  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Policies and Terms

Stay Connected

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms bellow to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Business & Economy
  • Energy
  • Magazine
  • News
  • Politics
    • Africa Abroad
  • Technology
  • Advertise
  • Media Kit

© 2025 Africa Briefing

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.
Are you sure want to unlock this post?
Unlock left : 0
Are you sure want to cancel subscription?
-
00:00
00:00

Queue

Update Required Flash plugin
-
00:00
00:00