
ANGOLA ALGERIA CAMEROON CHAD. CONGO EGYPT.. EQUATORIAL GUINEA GABON LIBYA. NIGERIA SOUTH AFRICA SUDAN TUNISIA OTHERS
Equatorial Guinea News 17-11
Thanks to its oil reserves, the tiny West African nation of Equatorial Guinea, home to just 500 000 people, has become Africa's rising economic star. Last year, it reported a staggering growth rate of about 65 % -- making it the fastest-expanding economy in Africa, if not the world.
Equatorial Guinea
-- previously unheard of by corporate
America
-- has become the fourth largest recipient of
US
foreign funding, after South Africa, Nigeria and Angola. Incredibly, Equatorial
Guinea's vast reserves of oil remained largely untapped until the mid-1990s.
But since 1996, the country's oil production has increased more than tenfold --
and i
Despite the country's
economic growth, its government has been criticised because little of the oil
boom's benefits have been passed on to the country's desperately poor. One
reason for this is that many oil contracts are structured so that oil firms take
an early share of the profits to help them recoup heavy investments in both
exploration and extraction.
But the government's share of oil revenues is increasing steadily -- and Manana
Ela insists that development projects are being implemented around the entire
country and not just in oil-rich areas.
The International Monetary Fund has called on Equatorial Guinea to implement better fiscal discipline and improve its transparency with independent external audits of the oil sector and full disclosure of details of government bank accounts abroad.