The impact of the global financial crisis on the realisation of socio-economic rights in sub-Saharan Africa: An analysis based on the Millennium Development Goals framework and processes
Abstract/ Overview
The global financial crisis, which affected global trade and
investment, did not leave sub-Saharan Africa untouched. The region registered a
decline in economic growth in the period after the crisis and experienced ongoing
impacts. The article looks at these impacts, focusing on the realisation of socioeconomic rights in sub-Saharan Africa using the mechanism of the Millennium
Development Goals. It begins by describing the major actors that have played a
leading role in economic growth in the region, and the realisation of socioeconomic rights. It then focuses on the pre-crisis growth period of 2000 to 2007,
examining the drivers of growth in sub-Saharan Africa and how this growth
impacted the realisation of socio-economic rights. The article uses the
mechanism of the Millenium Development Goals framework and process to
measure the achievement of each goal within a high growth period. It finds that
while this growth created more resources for the realisation of socio-economic
rights, little progress was made in achieving the Millennium Development Goals
within that period: The socio-economic conditions of poor, vulnerable and
marginalised individuals and groups remained the same. The article then looks
at the effects of the global financial crisis on sub-Saharan African economies
after 2007, indicating that the crisis had an adverse impact on economic growth,
with growth declining to 5.5 per cent in 2008, 3.5 per cent in 2009 and then
rebounding slightly to 5.1 per cent between 2013 and 2014 and further to 5.8
per cent in 2015. It says that, although the reduction in economic growth had a
great impact on the availability of resources for the realisation of socioeconomic rights, an analysis of the MDG progress after the crisis does not show
a marked difference from the MDG progress prior to the crisis. The article
concludes that, even though the crisis had some impact on the realisation of
socio-economic rights, its impact would have been greatly lessened if these subSaharan African countries had shown political commitment and developed
proper mechanisms for the realisation of these rights
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