
Coca-Cola Pledges $1 Billion Investment in Nigeria
Coca-Cola has announced plans to invest $1 billion in its Nigerian operations over the next five years.
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The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has released its July 2025 update on the global economy. For Africa, the outlook is cautiously optimistic.
Despite global headwinds, Sub-Saharan Africa is set to post stronger-than-expected growth.
This presents a clear signal to business executives and investors that the region’s economic fundamentals remain intact.
According to the IMF:
Sub-Saharan Africa’s GDP is expected to grow by 4.0% in 2025 (revised upward by 0.2 percentage points from April 2025).
Growth will further accelerate to 4.3% in 2026 (up by 0.1 percentage point).
These revisions add $3.6 billion in output to the region’s economy in 2025 alone.
Compared to global projections:
World GDP is forecast at 3.0% in 2025 and 3.1% in 2026.
Emerging markets and developing economies are projected to grow at 4.1% in 2025 and 4.0% in 2026.
Sub-Saharan Africa’s growth exceeds the global average and remains among the strongest regional performers.
2023: 2.9%
2024: 3.4%
2025: 3.4% (+0.4% revision)
2026: 3.2% (+0.5% revision)
2023: 0.8%
2024: 0.5%
2025: 1.0% (no revision)
2026: 1.3% (no revision)
Nigeria’s upward revision reflects improving fundamentals and possible benefits from global capital flows and energy demand.
South Africa’s flat revision indicates continued structural constraints but shows moderate progress.
Global firms are accelerating trade flows due to tariff uncertainty.
The world trade volume has been revised up by 0.9 percentage points for 2025, benefiting export-oriented regions like Africa.
The US dollar has depreciated considerably, easing import costs for African economies.
Capital inflows to emerging markets have resumed, supported by falling interest rates and lower global inflation.
Consumer price inflation in emerging markets and developing economies is projected at:
5.4% in 2025
4.5% in 2026
These levels are falling, providing monetary policy space for African central banks.
Tariff Risks: The IMF notes that if US tariffs revert to levels proposed earlier this year (up to 50% on key commodities like copper), global growth could drop by 0.2 percentage points.
Geopolitical Tensions: Escalation in the Middle East or Ukraine could increase energy prices and disrupt trade.
Inventory Overhang: Global stockpiling in early 2025 could reduce demand for imports later in the year.
Fiscal Stress: Global fiscal deficits remain high. A sudden increase in long-term interest rates could restrict financing conditions for African economies.
Find more on the World Economic Outlook Update, July 2025 Here
Coca-Cola has announced plans to invest $1 billion in its Nigerian operations over the next five years.
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