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Global Business: Growing Malawi

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Manage episode 165057960 series 1301621
Content provided by BBC and BBC Radio. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by BBC and BBC Radio or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Malawi, in Sub-Saharan Africa, is one of the world’s poorest countries with its GDP nearly at the bottom of the global league table. Successive governments have been riddled with corruption scandals, state-run services are in disarray and Malawi’s population is booming. It hit 17.6m this year, which the Finance Minister described as "scary" and is set to more than double over the next two decades.

If Malawi is struggling to feed its people now - how bad could things be in the future? It’s a ticking time bomb of poverty and starvation.

Malawi desperately needs economic growth yet despite hundreds of millions of dollars of donor money which has poured into the country for decades the overall the impact on the ground has been disappointing - poverty levels remain stubbornly high, education standards and job opportunities pitifully low.

But there is a rare piece of good news from Malawi: a new alliance between the private sector, a group of smallholder farmers and one of the country’s biggest international donors - the European Union, is helping to run a sustainable sugar cane business and turn lives around.

Could this new partnership with the private sector finally unlock Malawi’s potential for growth?

Reporter: Charlotte Ashton Producer: Jim Frank

  continue reading

472 episodes

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Global Business: Growing Malawi

The World of Business

960 subscribers

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Manage episode 165057960 series 1301621
Content provided by BBC and BBC Radio. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by BBC and BBC Radio or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Malawi, in Sub-Saharan Africa, is one of the world’s poorest countries with its GDP nearly at the bottom of the global league table. Successive governments have been riddled with corruption scandals, state-run services are in disarray and Malawi’s population is booming. It hit 17.6m this year, which the Finance Minister described as "scary" and is set to more than double over the next two decades.

If Malawi is struggling to feed its people now - how bad could things be in the future? It’s a ticking time bomb of poverty and starvation.

Malawi desperately needs economic growth yet despite hundreds of millions of dollars of donor money which has poured into the country for decades the overall the impact on the ground has been disappointing - poverty levels remain stubbornly high, education standards and job opportunities pitifully low.

But there is a rare piece of good news from Malawi: a new alliance between the private sector, a group of smallholder farmers and one of the country’s biggest international donors - the European Union, is helping to run a sustainable sugar cane business and turn lives around.

Could this new partnership with the private sector finally unlock Malawi’s potential for growth?

Reporter: Charlotte Ashton Producer: Jim Frank

  continue reading

472 episodes

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