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recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-139182021-04-23T14:03:13Z African Development Indicators 2004 World Bank EXCHANGE RATES EXPORT PERFORMANCE CURRENT ACCOUNT BALANCES FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENTS HEAVILY INDEBTED POOR COUNTRIES DEBT SERVICE CONFLICT AREAS HIV/AIDS TAX ADMINISTRATION PER CAPITA CONSUMPTION AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITY ASSET MANAGEMENT ACCOUNTS LENDING PUBLIC SECTOR GRANTS CAPITAL FLOWS FOREST PRODUCTS INDUSTRIAL STRUCTURE METAL TRADE TOBACCO INDUSTRY MATERNAL MORTALITY DATA ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITIES MANUFACTURING SECTOR FOOD IMPORTS CAPITAL GOODS EXTERNAL DEBT ENVIRONMENTAL INDICATORS AMORTIZATION FOOD PRODUCTION CEREAL PRODUCTS ENERGY PROJECTS ROADSIDE IMPROVEMENT AIR TRANSPORT EMPLOYMENT RATES WAGE LEVELS DONOR COORDINATION POVERTY MITIGATION STRATEGIES URBANIZATION ACCESS TO HEALTH CARE DEVELOPMENT INDICATORS This year's edition of the World Bank publication, African Development Indicators (ADI) 2004, depicts a diverse picture of development in Africa, with several countries making remarkable progress and others lagging seriously behind. ADI 2004 presents data for more than 500 indicators of development for 53 countries. Thirteen Sub-Saharan African (SSA) countries averaged more than 5 percent growth for the period 1995-2002, but many others saw their economies contract, usually as a result of severe civil conflict and adverse weather conditions. The region's economic growth slowed in 2002 to 2.8 percent, slightly down from 2.9 percent in 2001. Net foreign direct investment flows continued on a rising trend and reached $8.9 billion in 2002. These continued to be heavily concentrated in oil exporting countries and South Africa. The increase in official aid to the region fell far below the levels required to put a significant dent on poverty or achieve the MDGs. Debt relief is playing a larger role in Africa's resource picture, as total debt service relief reached $43 billion in fiscal year 2003, at a time when, as the book notes, "pro-poor expenditures had begun to increase in most of the countries". Gross enrollment in primary schools recovered to 87 percent, up from 80 percent in 1980. The increase contributed to a drop in illiteracy rates from 47 percent in 1997 to 37 percent in 2002. Tracking the HIV/AIDS pandemic, the book reveals that almost 30 million Africans are infected and eleven million children have been orphaned. In 2001 alone, 2.2 million AIDS-related deaths were recorded on the continent. Bearing the diverse performance in mind, the publication notes that Africa urgently needs rich nations to deliver on their promises of more generous aid and wider trade opportunities to reverse the exacting cruelty of disease and poverty on the continent. Civil wars, the rapid spread of HIV/AIDS, anemic aid, persistent low growth rates and weak commodity prices, threaten gains of the recent years in overall poverty alleviation and may jeopardize Africa's chances of attaining some of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) by 2015. 2013-06-13T18:51:52Z 2013-06-13T18:51:52Z 2004 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2004/01/3337622/african-development-indicators-2004 0-8213-5720-4 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/13918 English en_US CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank Washington, DC Publications & Research :: Publication Publications & Research :: World Development Indicators Africa Africa
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
en_US
topic EXCHANGE RATES
EXPORT PERFORMANCE
CURRENT ACCOUNT BALANCES
FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENTS
HEAVILY INDEBTED POOR COUNTRIES
DEBT SERVICE
CONFLICT AREAS
HIV/AIDS
TAX ADMINISTRATION
PER CAPITA CONSUMPTION
AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITY
ASSET MANAGEMENT ACCOUNTS
LENDING
PUBLIC SECTOR
GRANTS
CAPITAL FLOWS
FOREST PRODUCTS
INDUSTRIAL STRUCTURE
METAL TRADE
TOBACCO INDUSTRY
MATERNAL MORTALITY DATA
ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITIES
MANUFACTURING SECTOR
FOOD IMPORTS
CAPITAL GOODS
EXTERNAL DEBT
ENVIRONMENTAL INDICATORS
AMORTIZATION
FOOD PRODUCTION
CEREAL PRODUCTS
ENERGY PROJECTS
ROADSIDE IMPROVEMENT
AIR TRANSPORT
EMPLOYMENT RATES
WAGE LEVELS
DONOR COORDINATION
POVERTY MITIGATION STRATEGIES
URBANIZATION
ACCESS TO HEALTH CARE DEVELOPMENT INDICATORS
spellingShingle EXCHANGE RATES
EXPORT PERFORMANCE
CURRENT ACCOUNT BALANCES
FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENTS
HEAVILY INDEBTED POOR COUNTRIES
DEBT SERVICE
CONFLICT AREAS
HIV/AIDS
TAX ADMINISTRATION
PER CAPITA CONSUMPTION
AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITY
ASSET MANAGEMENT ACCOUNTS
LENDING
PUBLIC SECTOR
GRANTS
CAPITAL FLOWS
FOREST PRODUCTS
INDUSTRIAL STRUCTURE
METAL TRADE
TOBACCO INDUSTRY
MATERNAL MORTALITY DATA
ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITIES
MANUFACTURING SECTOR
FOOD IMPORTS
CAPITAL GOODS
EXTERNAL DEBT
ENVIRONMENTAL INDICATORS
AMORTIZATION
FOOD PRODUCTION
CEREAL PRODUCTS
ENERGY PROJECTS
ROADSIDE IMPROVEMENT
AIR TRANSPORT
EMPLOYMENT RATES
WAGE LEVELS
DONOR COORDINATION
POVERTY MITIGATION STRATEGIES
URBANIZATION
ACCESS TO HEALTH CARE DEVELOPMENT INDICATORS
World Bank
African Development Indicators 2004
geographic_facet Africa
Africa
description This year's edition of the World Bank publication, African Development Indicators (ADI) 2004, depicts a diverse picture of development in Africa, with several countries making remarkable progress and others lagging seriously behind. ADI 2004 presents data for more than 500 indicators of development for 53 countries. Thirteen Sub-Saharan African (SSA) countries averaged more than 5 percent growth for the period 1995-2002, but many others saw their economies contract, usually as a result of severe civil conflict and adverse weather conditions. The region's economic growth slowed in 2002 to 2.8 percent, slightly down from 2.9 percent in 2001. Net foreign direct investment flows continued on a rising trend and reached $8.9 billion in 2002. These continued to be heavily concentrated in oil exporting countries and South Africa. The increase in official aid to the region fell far below the levels required to put a significant dent on poverty or achieve the MDGs. Debt relief is playing a larger role in Africa's resource picture, as total debt service relief reached $43 billion in fiscal year 2003, at a time when, as the book notes, "pro-poor expenditures had begun to increase in most of the countries". Gross enrollment in primary schools recovered to 87 percent, up from 80 percent in 1980. The increase contributed to a drop in illiteracy rates from 47 percent in 1997 to 37 percent in 2002. Tracking the HIV/AIDS pandemic, the book reveals that almost 30 million Africans are infected and eleven million children have been orphaned. In 2001 alone, 2.2 million AIDS-related deaths were recorded on the continent. Bearing the diverse performance in mind, the publication notes that Africa urgently needs rich nations to deliver on their promises of more generous aid and wider trade opportunities to reverse the exacting cruelty of disease and poverty on the continent. Civil wars, the rapid spread of HIV/AIDS, anemic aid, persistent low growth rates and weak commodity prices, threaten gains of the recent years in overall poverty alleviation and may jeopardize Africa's chances of attaining some of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) by 2015.
format Publications & Research :: Publication
author World Bank
author_facet World Bank
author_sort World Bank
title African Development Indicators 2004
title_short African Development Indicators 2004
title_full African Development Indicators 2004
title_fullStr African Development Indicators 2004
title_full_unstemmed African Development Indicators 2004
title_sort african development indicators 2004
publisher Washington, DC
publishDate 2013
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2004/01/3337622/african-development-indicators-2004
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/13918
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