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Secteur 05, 1268, avenue Kwamé N'Krumah
01 BP 3240 Ouagadougou
Tel./Fax: +226 50 33 01 13

Cell.: +226 70 28 30 68
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Imm. BICEC - 4ème étage
Avenue de Gaulle Bonanjo
BP 18342 Douala
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Immeuble DIAMANT
2è étage
BP 1070
Libreville
Tel. : + 241 05 03 69 05
Fax : + 241 76 13 50
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18 Abidjan
Tel.:+ 225 22 41 49 68
Fax.:+ 225 22 41 48 49
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CP 17, Suite 1304 13th Floor,
Central Plaza, 34 Jalan Sultan Ismail
50250 Kuala Lumpur
Tel.:+60 (3)  2141 3380
Fax.:+60 (3) 2141 3381
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Av Cheick Zahed
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Postboks 2006 Vika
0125 Oslo

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43, rue Albert Sarraut
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BP 12454 Dakar
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Kyobo Life Insurance Bldg. 9F
1 Jongno 1-ga, Jongno-gu
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622 Emporium Tower, 22th Floor
Sukhumvit 24, 
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Fax.: +66 (02) 664 89 98
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Quartier Super TACO
BP 899 Lomé
Tel./Fax: +228 220 89 58

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Suite 1719, 17th floor, Gemadept Tower,
N°6, Le Thanh Ton Street, 1st District
Ho Chi Minh City
Tel: +84 8 62 556 928
Fax: +84 8 62 556 801
e-mail: coface_vietnam@coface.com 

Vietnam

Ivory Coast


Population 23.368 million

GDP 24.273 US$ billion

@rating
countryD

Business climate
assessmentC

Ivory Coast Download or print this country file Bookmark and share



Major macro economic indicators
 201020112012(e)2013(f)
GDP growth (%)
2.4

-4.7

8.1

6.2

Inflation (yearly average) (%)

1.4

4.9

2.0

2.5

Budget balance (% GDP)

-2.3

-5.7

-3.7

-1.9

Current account balance (% GDP)

2.0

1.6 

0.0

-0.2

Public debt (% GDP)

66.4

69.3

40.5

38.5

 
(e) Estimate (f) Forecast

STRENGTHS

  • Agricultural wealth, including cocoa, and diversification into hydrocarbons and ores
  • Processing industry and modernisation of port and road infrastructures
  • Further debt cancellation in June 2012 under HIPC and MDRI initiatives


WEAKNESSES

  • Fragile security context despite normalisation of the political situation
  • Economy dependent on developments in cocoa and oil prices
  • Weak investment and governance

Risk assessment

 

Rapid recovery in economic activity

The economy recovered quickly after the ending of the post-electoral crisis (December 2010 – April 2011) thanks to normalisation of the political situation, increased public spending and renewed international aid. There was a sharp upturn in activity in 2012, driven by infrastructure investment, particularly in transport, and by the telecommunications sector. The agricultural sector, however, is suffering from low prices and a smaller cocoa crop. Activity is expected to be stimulated in 2013 by foreign investment and by a construction boom. The economy is also likely to continue to diversify thanks to the start of operations in new oil wells and a new gold mine. However, demand from the eurozone (more than 40% of exports), given its weakness, will not play a leading role. The occurrence of a current account deficit is foreseeable due to the sharp increase in imports of goods and services resulting from the recovery of economic activity.
In the medium term, the government’s ambitious investment programme and the finalisation of key reforms in the cocoa and hydrocarbons sectors augur well for the prospects of an economic upsurge. But these also depend on pacification of the country and improvement in the population’s living conditions. Moreover, deficiencies in governance and in the fight against corruption are important obstacles to development.


Public accounts are improving and the country has been granted further debt cancellation

Fiscal results are improving thanks to the economic recovery and the progress made in tax collection, although spending, especially on wages, is trending upwards. After the IMF facilities and a temporary debt relief granted in 2011, in June 2012 the Ivory Coast reached the completion point of the Highly Indebted Poor Countries initiative, which opened the way to further easing of the bilateral and multilateral debt burden. The country also normalised its relations with private creditors, having again begun paying its 2010 eurobond coupons. However, the public debt profile is still vulnerable to external shocks (growth, borrowing conditions).


Although the political situation has returned to normal, the security situation has noticeably worsened since August 2012

Since the post-electoral crisis, the country has undergone a process of political normalisation. Legislative elections were held in December 2011, the first for over a decade, from which President Ouattara’s party emerged stronger, despite the boycott of the former ruling party. This party is trying to reconstruct itself after the arrest of its leader, the former president, Laurent Gbagbo, and his transfer to International Criminal Court in The Hague. The national reconciliation process is proving difficult to the extent that only members of the Gbagbo camp involved in human rights violations during the conflict have been charged. Moreover, there has been violence since July 2011 in the southwest of the country, attributed to pro-Gbagbo forces operating from neighbouring Liberia. In August 2012, the country experienced its most serious return of tension since the end of the post-electoral crisis, with the security forces coming under attack in Abidjan and its surrounds. There were further attacks in September, conducted this time from bases situated in Ghana, and in October, targeting a thermal power station near the capital.

 


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