Inclusive Africa

AuthorLuca Errico, Goran Amidzic, and Alexander Massara
PositionPrepared by , , and of the IMF's Stattics Department.

Data Spotlight

Africa has been among the world’s fastest growing regions during the past decade—the result of a prolonged commodities boom, favorable demographics, good economic policies, and generally improved political stability. Along with that economic growth came an increase in financial services to a growing number of Africans. Although major challenges to financial access remain, the relationship between the growth in per capita GDP and in access to depository services of commercial banks is striking.Â

Admittedly this process of financial inclusion started from a low base—and there is a huge difference in development across countries. But among all the world’s regions, from 2004 to 2011 Africa had the largest increase in access to depository services (as measured by the number of deposit accounts per 1,000 adults). Africa has caught up to the Middle East and central Asia in access to depository services, and the gap between Africa and the rest of the world is slowly narrowing.

The number of branches of other types of financial intermediaries (which gather funds from savers and lend them to borrowers) also grew in the region during 2004–11. Those intermediaries include credit unions, financial cooperatives, microfinance institutions, rural banks, savings banks, money market mutual funds, investment companies, finance companies, and leasing companies.Â

Overall, although there are differences not only across countries but also within countries...

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