The recent escalation of conflict in the Middle East has triggered significant global economic disruptions, with Africa once again experiencing disproportionate spillover effects. According to a joint position by the African Development Bank, African Union Commission, United Nations Development Programme, and United Nations Economic Commission for Africa, the continent faces rising energy prices, weakening currencies, and growing food insecurity.
While the report presents a compelling narrative of vulnerability and policy urgency, an economist’s critique requires a deeper interrogation of causality, policy feasibility, and structural assumptions.
Transmission Channels: External Shock or Structural Weakness?
The report emphasizes the rapid transmission of shocks—particularly through oil, food, and fertiliser markets. Indeed, a 50% surge in global oil prices and disruptions in fertiliser supply chains are significant.
However, an economist would argue that:
- Africa’s vulnerability is not solely exogenous.
The severity of the impact reflects long-standing structural weaknesses—heavy import dependence, limited industrialisation, and shallow financial markets. - The depreciation of 29 African currencies is framed as a consequence of the crisis, but this overlooks pre-existing macroeconomic fragility,
including:
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- High external debt exposure
- Weak export diversification
- Limited foreign exchange reserves
Thus, the conflict acts more as a stress test than a root cause.
Currency Depreciation and Debt Dynamics
The report correctly notes that weakening currencies increase the burden of servicing external debt.
From an economic standpoint:
- This reflects a classic “original sin” problem—African economies borrow in foreign currencies but earn largely in local currencies.
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Currency depreciation leads to:
- Higher debt servicing costs
- Imported inflation
- Fiscal tightening pressures
However, the report underplays policy trade-offs:
- Should governments defend currencies using reserves?
- Or allow depreciation to restore external balance?
These are not merely technical decisions but involve distributional consequences, especially for low-income households.
Food and Fertiliser Shock: Short-Term Crisis vs Policy Failure
The disruption of ammonia and urea supplies during the planting season is presented as an acute crisis.
While valid, an economist would highlight:
- Africa’s chronic underinvestment in agricultural productivity
- Heavy reliance on imported inputs rather than domestic fertiliser production
- Weak intra-African supply chains despite frameworks like the African Continental Free Trade Area
Thus, the current food insecurity risk is not just cyclical but structural and policy-induced.

Evaluation of Policy Recommendations
The report outlines three horizons: immediate, medium-term, and long-term responses.
While comprehensive, several concerns arise:
a. Immediate Measures
- Subsidising fuel and food may stabilise households but risks:
- Worsening fiscal deficits
- Creating inefficiencies and leakages
- Without proper targeting, such measures often benefit urban elites more than the poor
b. Medium-Term Reforms
- Strengthening regional trade under AfCFTA is economically sound
- However, implementation challenges persist:
- Non-tariff barriers
- Infrastructure deficits
- Political resistance
Economically, integration benefits are long-term and unevenly distributed, not immediate solutions.
c. Long-Term Structural Reforms
- Calls for domestic resource mobilisation and financial self-reliance are valid
- Yet, they lack specificity:
- How should tax systems be reformed in largely informal economies?
- How can capital markets deepen without macroeconomic stability?
The proposed African Financing Stability Mechanism is promising but remains institutionally underdeveloped.
The Political Economy Constraint
A key omission in the report is the role of political economy:
- Policy implementation in many African countries is constrained by:
- Governance challenges
- Weak institutions
- Rent-seeking behavior
Economic prescriptions without considering these realities risk being overly optimistic.
Rethinking “Resilience”
The report frequently invokes “resilience,” but from an economist’s perspective, this concept requires clarification:
- True resilience involves:
- Diversified production structures
- Strong fiscal buffers
- Credible monetary policy frameworks
- Current recommendations lean toward reactive resilience (shock absorption), rather than transformational resilience (structural change).
Conclusion
The Middle East conflict has undeniably intensified economic pressures on Africa, particularly through energy, currency, and food channels.
However, an economist’s critique reveals that:
- The crisis is less a standalone shock and more an amplifier of existing vulnerabilities
- Policy recommendations, while directionally sound, often lack operational clarity and political feasibility
- Long-term resilience will require deep structural transformation, not just coordinated crisis response
Ultimately, Africa’s recurring exposure to external shocks underscores a fundamental economic reality: sustainable resilience cannot be imported—it must be built domestically through structural reform, institutional strength, and economic diversification.
