Economy of Cameroon

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Template:CIA Script error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template other

File:ChrisTonaldo on his harvested coacoa.jpg
Cocoa Farm

The economy of Cameroon was one of the most prosperous in Africa for a quarter of a century after independence. The drop in commodity prices for its principal exportspetroleum, cocoa, coffee, and cotton – in the mid-1980s, combined with an overvalued currency and economic mismanagement, led to a decade-long recession. Real per capita GDP fell by more than 60% from 1986 to 1994. The current account and fiscal deficits widened, and foreign debt grew. Yet because of its oil reserves and favorable agricultural conditions, Cameroon still has one of the best-endowed primary commodity economies in sub-Saharan Africa.[1]

Agriculture

Script error: No such module "Unsubst". In 2024, Cameroon produced:

  • 19Script error: No such module "String".million tons of cassava (6th largest producer in the world);
  • 3.9Script error: No such module "String".million tonnes of plantain (3rd largest producer in the world, only behind Congo and Ghana);
  • 2.6Script error: No such module "String".million tons of palm oil (7th largest producer in the world);
  • 2.3Script error: No such module "String".million tons of maize;
  • 1.9Script error: No such module "String".million tons of taro (3rd largest producer in the world, second only to Nigeria and China);
  • 1.4Script error: No such module "String".million tons of sorghum;
  • 1.2Script error: No such module "String".million tons of banana;
  • 1.2Script error: No such module "String".million tons of sugarcane;
  • 1Script error: No such module "String".million tons of tomato (19th largest producer in the world);
  • 674,000 tonnes of yam (7th largest producer in the world);
  • 594,000 tons of peanut;
  • 410,000 tons of sweet potato;
  • 402,000 tons of beans;
  • 332,000 tons of rice;
  • 310,000 tons of pineapple;
  • 307,000 tons of cocoa (5th largest producer in the world, after Ivory Coast, Ghana, Indonesia and Nigeria);
  • 302,000 tons of potato;
  • 301,000 tons of onion;
  • 249,000 tons of cotton.

In addition to smaller productions of other agricultural products, such as coffee (33,000 tons) and natural rubber (55,000 tons).[2]

Finance and banking

Cameroon's financial system is the largest in the CEMAC region. Access to financial services is limited, particularly for SMEs. Aside from a traditional tendency for banks to prefer dealing with large, established companies, determining factors are also found in interest rates for loans to SMEs being capped at 15 percent and being heavily taxed. As of 2006, bank loans to SMEs hardly reached 15 percent of total outstanding loans (Molua, 2002).[1]

Around 25 percent of Cameroonians have access to a bank account(as of 2024). While the microfinance sector is consequently becoming increasingly important, its development is hampered by a loose regulatory and supervisory framework for microfinance institutions (MFIs). The banking sector is highly concentrated and dominated by foreign commercial banks. 6 out of the 11 largest commercial banks are foreign-owned, and the three largest banks hold more than 50 percent of total financial system assets. While foreign banks generally display good solvency ratios, small domestic banks are in a much weaker position. Their capitalization is well below the average of banks in the CEMAC region and their profits are close to 2 percent, compared to 20 percent for foreign banks in the country. This is partially explained by the high levels of non-performing loans, which reached 12 percent in 2007, leading to most banks holding large amounts of excess reserves as a percentage of deposits and large levels of unutilized liquidity.[3]

In 2018, Cameroon's financial system is being requested by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to increase its tax base to cover the losses from the North-West and South-West Cameroon's regions instabilities, the loss of oil revenue, the failure to deliver on port facilities, and the decline in oil production from mature oil fields.[4]

Climate finance

Template:Excerpt

Macro-economic trend

Cameroon became an oil-producing country in 1977. Claiming to want to make reserves for difficult times, the authorities manage "off-budget" oil revenues in total opacity (the funds are placed in Paris, Switzerland and New York accounts). Several billion dollars are thus diverted to the benefit of oil companies and regime officials. The influence of France and its 9,000 nationals in Cameroon remains considerable. African Affairs magazine noted in the early 1980s that they "continue to dominate almost all key sectors of the economy, much as they did before independence. French nationals control 55% of the modern sector of the Cameroonian economy and their control over the banking system is total.[5]

Recent signs, however, are encouraging. As of March 1998, Cameroon's fifth IMF program – a 3-year enhanced structural adjustment program approved in August 1997 – is on track. Cameroon has rescheduled its Paris Club debt at favorable terms. GDP has grown by about 5% a year beginning in 1995. There is cautious optimism that Cameroon is emerging from its long period of economic hardship.

File:2006Cameroonian exports.PNG
Cameroonian exports in 2006

The Enhanced Structural Adjustment Facility (ESAF) signed recently by the IMF and Government of Cameroon calls for greater macroeconomic planning and financial accountability; privatization of most of Cameroon's nearly 100 remaining non-financial parastatal enterprises; elimination of state marketing board monopolies on the export of cocoa, certain coffees, and cotton; privatization and price competition in the banking sector; implementation of the 1992 labor code; a vastly improved judicial system; and political liberalization to boost investment.

France is Cameroon's main trading partner and source of private investment and foreign aid. Cameroon has an investment guaranty agreement and a bilateral accord with the United States. USA investment in Cameroon is about $1 million, most of it in the oil sector. Inflation has been brought back under control. Cameroon aims at becoming emerging by 2035.

The government embarked upon a series of economic reform programs supported by the World Bank and International Monetary Fund (IMF) beginning in the late 1980s. Many of these measures have been painful; the government slashed civil service salaries by 65% in 1993. The CFA franc – the common currency of Cameroon and 13 other African states – was devalued by 50% in January 1994. The government failed to meet the conditions of the first four IMF programs.

This is a chart of trend of gross domestic product of Cameroon at market prices estimated by the International Monetary Fund with figures in millions of Central African CFA Francs.

File:Pineapple 'Victoria' with slice.jpg
Pineapple 'Victoria', grown in Cameroon
Year Gross Domestic Product US Dollar Exchange
1980 1,600,186 209.20 Francs
1985 4,355,977 471.12 Francs
1990 3,804,428 300.65 Francs
1995 4,686,286 518.62 Francs
2000 6,612,385 658.21 Francs
2005 8,959,279 527.29 Francs

The following table shows the main economic indicators in 1980–2022. Inflation below 5% is in green.[6]

Year GDP

(in Bil. US$PPP)

GDP per capita

(in US$ PPP)

GDP

(in Bil. US$nominal)

GDP growth

(real)

Inflation rate

(in Percent)

Government debt

(in % of GDP)

1980 11.1 1,263 8.85 Increase9.9% Template:IncreaseNegative7.7% n/a
1981 Increase14.3 Increase1,572 Increase10.03 Increase17.1% Template:IncreaseNegative7.5% n/a
1982 Increase16.3 Increase1,747 Decrease9.62 Increase7.6% Template:IncreaseNegative15.3% n/a
1983 Increase18.1 Increase1,887 Increase9.69 Increase6.8% Template:IncreaseNegative20.5% n/a
1984 Increase20.1 Increase2,047 Increase10.24 Increase7.5% Template:IncreaseNegative12.1% n/a
1985 Increase22.4 Increase2,223 Increase10.70 Increase8.1% Increase4.2% n/a
1986 Increase24.4 Increase2,357 Increase13.95 Increase6.8% Increase4.3% n/a
1987 Increase24.5 Decrease2,298 Increase16.15 Decrease-2.2% Increase2.8% n/a
1988 Decrease23.4 Decrease2,129 Increase16.40 Decrease-7.9% Increase1.7% n/a
1989 Decrease23.9 Decrease2,110 Decrease14.63 Decrease-1.8% Increase1.6% n/a
1990 Decrease23.2 Decrease1,992 Increase14.64 Decrease-6.2% Increase1.5% n/a
1991 Decrease23.1 Decrease1,922 Increase16.33 Decrease-3.8% Template:DecreasePositive-0.6% n/a
1992 Decrease22.9 Decrease1,850 Decrease14.96 Decrease-3.1% Increase1.9% n/a
1993 Decrease22.7 Decrease1,780 Increase15.61 Decrease-3.2% Template:DecreasePositive-3.7% n/a
1994 Decrease22.6 Decrease1,722 Decrease10.62 Decrease-2.5% Template:IncreaseNegative12.7% n/a
1995 Increase23.9 Increase1,766 Decrease10.08 Increase3.3% Template:IncreaseNegative25.8% n/a
1996 Increase25.5 Increase1,836 Increase11.23 Increase4.9% Increase3.9% n/a
1997 Increase27.3 Increase1,913 Increase11.35 Increase5.3% Increase4.8% n/a
1998 Increase29.0 Increase1,974 Decrease11.34 Increase4.9% Increase3.2% 68%
1999 Increase30.6 Increase2,026 Increase11.55 Increase4.1% Increase1.8% Steady68%
2000 Increase32.3 Increase2,084 Decrease10.25 Increase3.4% Increase1.2% Template:IncreaseNegative76%
2001 Increase34.2 Increase2,145 Increase10.95 Increase3.4% Increase4.5% Template:DecreasePositive62%
2002 Increase36.4 Increase2,224 Increase12.37 Increase4.8% Increase2.8% Template:DecreasePositive57%
2003 Increase38.9 Increase2,318 Increase15.94 Increase5.0% Increase0.6% Template:DecreasePositive52%
2004 Increase42.6 Increase2,469 Increase18.80 Increase6.6% Increase0.3% Steady52%
2005 Increase44.5 Increase2,509 Increase19.53 Increase1.2% Increase2.0% Template:DecreasePositive44%
2006 Increase47.5 Increase2,605 Increase20.91 Increase3.5% Increase4.9% Template:DecreasePositive18%
2007 Increase50.8 Increase2,710 Increase23.93 Increase4.1% Increase1.1% Template:DecreasePositive14%
2008 Increase53.2 Increase2,764 Increase27.71 Increase2.9% Template:IncreaseNegative5.3% Template:DecreasePositive11%
2009 Increase55.0 Increase2,777 Increase27.90 Increase2.6% Increase3.0% Steady11%
2010 Increase57.2 Increase2,814 Decrease27.53 Increase2.9% Increase1.3% Template:IncreaseNegative14%
2011 Increase60.5 Increase2,892 Increase30.63 Increase3.5% Increase3.0% Template:IncreaseNegative15%
2012 Increase63.6 Increase2,959 Decrease30.17 Increase4.5% Increase2.4% Template:IncreaseNegative15%
2013 Increase69.1 Increase3,130 Increase33.73 Increase5.0% Increase2.1% Template:IncreaseNegative17%
2014 Increase75.1 Increase3,313 Increase36.40 Increase5.8% Increase1.9% Template:IncreaseNegative21%
2015 Increase79.1 Increase3,396 Decrease32.21 Increase5.6% Increase2.7% Template:IncreaseNegative32%
2016 Increase84.4 Increase3,527 Increase33.81 Increase4.5% Increase0.9% Steady32%
2017 Increase90.0 Increase3,665 Increase36.09 Increase3.5% Increase0.6% Template:IncreaseNegative37%
2018 Increase95.9 Increase3,803 Increase39.99 Increase4.0% Increase1.1% Template:IncreaseNegative38%
2019 Increase101.0 Increase3,901 Increase39.67 Increase3.4% Increase2.5% Template:IncreaseNegative42%
2020 Increase102.7 Decrease3,870 Increase40.86 Increase0.5% Increase2.5% Template:IncreaseNegative45%
2021 Increase110.9 Increase4,073 Increase45.39 Increase3.6% Increase2.3% Template:IncreaseNegative46%
2022 Increase123.3 Increase4,419 Decrease44.32 Increase3.8% Increase4.6% Template:IncreaseNegative47%

Mining

Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote".

Gallery

See also

References

<templatestyles src="Reflist/styles.css" />

  1. a b Script error: No such module "Citation/CS1".
  2. Cameroon production in 2018, by FAO
  3. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  4. IMF.org
  5. Thomas Deltombe, Manuel Domergue, Jacob Tatsita, Kamerun !, La Découverte, 2019
  6. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".

Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".

External links

Template:Sister project

Script error: No such module "navbox". Script error: No such module "Navbox". Template:Cameroon topics