zy_ZY
Alemania
Argelia
Argentina
Australia
Austria


COFACE WEST AFRICA BENIN
47-48 Quartier Guinkomey
7565 Cotonou 01

Tel./Fax: + 229 21 31 65 89
e-mail: commercial_bn@coface.com

Benín
Brasil
Bulgaria

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

Cell.: +226 70 28 30 68
e-mail: coface_westafrica@coface.com
Office manager: djeneba_ouedraogo@coface.com
Managing director: philippe_hoeblich@coface.com
Burkina Faso
Bélgica


COFACE SERVICES WEST AFRICA CAMEROON

Imm. BICEC - 4ème étage
Avenue de Gaulle Bonanjo
BP 18342 Douala
Tel.: +237 33 42 51 53
Fax.: +237 33 42 00 96

Camerún
Canadá
Chile
China
Colombia


COFACE SERVICES KOREA CO LTD
Kyobo Life Insurance Bldg. 9F
1 Jongno 1-ga, Jongno-gu
Seoul 110-714
Tel.:+82 (0)2 2088 7401 
Fax.:+82 (0)2 2088 7474
e-mail: jinhak_ryu@coface.com

Corea del Sur
Costa Rica

COFACE SICR COTE D'IVOIRE
2 Cocody Plateaux
Lot n°85 Ilot 9
18 Abidjan
Tel.:+ 225 22 41 49 68
Fax.:+ 225 22 41 48 49
Costa de Marfil
Croacia
Dinamarca
Ecuador
Egipto
Emiratos Árabes Unidos
Eslovaquia
Eslovenia
España
Estados Unidos
Estonia
Federación Rusa
Francia



COFACE GABON SERVICES
Immeuble DIAMANT
2è étage
BP 1070
Libreville
Tel. : + 241 05 03 69 05
Fax : + 241 76 13 50
Email : coface_westafrica@coface.com

Gabón



COFACE GHANA

Ghana
Hong Kong
Hungría
India
Irlanda
Israel
Italia
Japón
Letonia
Lituania
Luxemburgo

COFACE SERVICES MALAYSIA SDN BHD
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
e-mail:
enquiries@coface.com.my
Malasia



COFACE WEST AFRICA MALI
Imm. Dramane Kouma
Av Cheick Zahed
BP E 4770 Bamako
Tel./Fax : +22 32 29 26 45

Malí
Marruecos
Méjico

COFACE NORWAY
Postboks 2006 Vika
0125 Oslo

Noruega
Países Bajos
Perú
Polonia
Portugal
Reino Unido
República Checa
Rumanía


COFACE SICR SENEGAL

43, rue Albert Sarraut
Immeuble AGS Parchappe
BP 12454 Dakar
Tel: +221 33 823 69 92
Fax.: +221 33 842 08 87

Senegal
Serbia
Singapur
Sudáfrica
Suecia
Suiza


COFACE HOLDING (THAILAND) CO LTD
622 Emporium Tower, 22th Floor
Sukhumvit 24, 
Klongtoey
10110 Bangkok
Tel.: +66 (02) 664 89 89
Fax.: +66 (02) 664 89 98
e-mail: marketing_thailand@coface.com

Tailandia
Taiwán


COFACE WEST AFRICA TOGO
22, Boulevard de la Paix
Immeuble ERAD
Quartier Super TACO
BP 899 Lomé
Tel./Fax: +228 220 89 58

Togo
Turquía
Ucrania

COFACE VIETNAM SERVICES

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

Sudan


Population 33.51 million

GDP 51.583 US$ billion

@rating
countryD

Business climate
assessmentD

Sudan Download or print this country file Bookmark and share



Major macro economic indicators
 20102011*2012(e)2013(f)
GDP growth (%)
3.5

-3.3

-11.1

-0.6

Inflation (yearly average) (%)

13.1

18.3

28.6

17

Budget balance (% GDP) *

 -0.4

-1.3

-3.7

-3.2

Current account balance (% GDP)

-2.1

-0.5

-7.4

-6.5

Public debt (% GDP)

72

76

98.8

111.4

 
(e) Estimate (f) Forecast **Concerning the unified country until the 1st half of 2011 but only Sudan in the second half

STRENGTHS

  • Member of the African Union and of COMESA (Community Market for Eastern and Southern Africa)
  • Strategic position between the Middle East and West Africa
  • Relative stabilisation thanks to oil deal with South Sudan


WEAKNESSES

  • Loss of share in oil revenues with South Sudan’s independence
  • Unsustainable foreign debt
  • Bank sector in great trouble
  • Lack of infrastructure investment
  • Major governance shortcomings
  • Insecurity (especially on border with South Sudan)
  • High unemployment (especially amongst young people) and poverty



Risk assessment

 

Recession will ease in 2013

In 2012, growth was hit by the adverse effects of South Sudan’s independence (declared in July 2011) as the latter owns three quarters of oil wealth. In 2013, the country is expected to benefit from the oil deal (August 2012) with South Sudan enabling oil production and exports to restart. Nevertheless, high inflation and the government’s three-year austerity programme (adopted in June 2012) should depress private and public consumption. As for investment, this is due to remain limited because of financing constraints and a risky business climate (considerable insecurity resulting from border tensions). On a positive note, external demand for the country’s gold resources will help sustain gold output. On the supply side, apart from mining, services could benefit from a slight rebound if the oil deal with South Sudan is implemented and kept to.
Meanwhile, inflation, resulting from Central Bank decisions to monetise the public deficit and devalue the currency (decided in June 2012), is likely to slow but will remain very high as many food products are imported.


Country’s precarious financial position

The independence of South Sudan triggered a steep decline in trade, which had previously been driven by the oil sector. In 2013, if the oil deal with South Sudan lasts, Sudan could benefit from a recovery in oil exports. Even if the deal is suspended, the country should be able to reduce its trade deficit thanks to increased gold exports (less than 10% of total exports before the secession and now about 50%), especially since the size of the population effectively fell due to the secession, the need for imports of goods (foodstuffs, capital goods) is expected to slow. Nevertheless, imports of services and repatriation of profits by foreign companies will continue to put pressure on the current account balance. In this context, the current account deficit will remain high and FDIs, dissuaded by the political tensions, will be insufficient to cover it. Sudan is therefore likely to borrow further even though its external debt level is already unsustainable. Sudan should not be able to benefit from debt relief this year (HIPC initiative) given, in particular, the indictment of President al-Bashir by the International Criminal Court on charges of war crimes.  

South Sudan’s independence also impacted adversely on public finances: drop in revenue resulting from loss of oil income (which previously represented 50% of government revenues). However, the government’s austerity programme is expected to mitigate some of this loss, over the longer term, but this will be at the cost of depressed domestic consumption. This is because VAT and many other taxes will rise under the programme, and there will also be a gradual cut in subsidies (petrol, food like sugar) until by 2014 they are abolished completely. Several expenditure items, not considered as a priority, will also be cut, except those relating to social security.

Meanwhile, the weaknesses of the banking sector, especially regarding the high proportion of non-performing loans, will be exacerbated by the country’s financial and economic difficulties, which are pushing the banks to harden and limit lending to the private sector.


Ongoing political tensions putting pressure on business environment

After South Sudan (predominantly Christian and animist) was declared independent on 9 July 2011, relations with (Muslim) Sudan deteriorated rapidly due to border disputes between the two entities (especially over the Abyei oilfields). The suspension of oil production in the South in January 2012, following Sudan’s confiscation of barrels of South Sudan’s oil transiting through the North, heightened tensions leading to the occupation of the Heglig oil region by South Sudanese troops for several days. Currently, oil talks have started again but the border issues have still not been settled. This could undermine the agreement on restarting oil production in South Sudan and tip the region into violence, especially as the leaders of both countries are themselves having to deal with strong internal political (rebel groups) and social (fuelled by poverty) tensions. Finally, this context is increasingly putting off foreign investment and aid.


Consult risk assesments by country

img-haut.gif
Country risk map