Monday, 15 Jun 2026
  • My Feed
  • My Saves
  • History
  • Contact Us
Subscribe
The News Network Africa
  • Home
  • Opinion

    The Pressure to Look Rich Is Costing Young Africans Their Future

    By
    Hayley Sky

    Justice Served: The Conviction of Osinachi Nwachukwu’s Husband for Her Tragic Death.

    By
    Eric Mafundo

    Nollywood to Netflix: Africa’s Film & TV Revolution

    By
    Hayley Sky

    A Voice Silenced: The Case of the French-Algerian Writer Imprisoned Over Morocco Comments.

    By
    Eric Mafundo

    A Shift in Perspective: Why Some in the Global South Are Not Mourning USAID Budget Cuts.

    By
    Eric Mafundo

    Feel free to mix and match ideas or adjust them to better fit your target audience!

    By
    Correspondent
  • Politics
    Tunisian president sacks finance minister, names a judge as new minister

    Tunisian president sacks finance minister, names a judge as new minister

    By
    Correspondent
    US halts assistance to Somalia over claims food aid was illegally seized

    US halts assistance to Somalia over claims food aid was illegally seized

    By
    Hayley Sky
    Born to provide refuge from US racism, Liberia must not help enforce it now

    Born to provide refuge from US racism, Liberia must not help enforce it now

    By
    Hayley Sky
    Honoring a Legacy: The Final Farewell to Sam Nujoma, Africa’s Last Liberator.

    Honoring a Legacy: The Final Farewell to Sam Nujoma, Africa’s Last Liberator.

    By
    Eric Mafundo
    Habits of people who lack a life partner to lean on

    Habits of people who lack a life partner to lean on

    By
    Hayley Sky
    Drones Reshape the Battlefield: A New Era in Sudan’s Civil War.

    Drones Reshape the Battlefield: A New Era in Sudan’s Civil War.

    By
    Eric Mafundo
  • Business
    Will the next Pope be from Africa?

    Will the next Pope be from Africa?

    By
    Eric Mafundo
    “People need a break’: DRC conflict reignites dark memories of Congo wars.

    “People need a break’: DRC conflict reignites dark memories of Congo wars.

    By
    Eric Mafundo
    Uganda’s Strategic Deployment: Troops Deployed in Sudan to Secure Juba.

    Uganda’s Strategic Deployment: Troops Deployed in Sudan to Secure Juba.

    By
    Eric Mafundo
    British Boarding Schools in Nigeria: A Growing Trend Fueled by Demand and Desire.

    British Boarding Schools in Nigeria: A Growing Trend Fueled by Demand and Desire.

    By
    Eric Mafundo
    The Phala Phala Scandal: Why Cyril Ramaphosa’s Biggest Political Crisis Refuses to Go Away

    The Phala Phala Scandal: Why Cyril Ramaphosa’s Biggest Political Crisis Refuses to Go Away

    By
    Correspondent
    The Silent Crisis Costing Africa Billions: Why Young Professionals Are Leaving Their Dream Jobs

    The Silent Crisis Costing Africa Billions: Why Young Professionals Are Leaving Their Dream Jobs

    By
    Churchill Nkagumaho
  • Pages
    • Advertise with US

Archives

  • June 2026
  • May 2026
  • April 2026
  • March 2026
  • February 2026
  • January 2026
  • December 2025
  • November 2025
  • October 2025
  • September 2025
  • August 2025
  • May 2025
  • April 2025
  • March 2025
  • February 2025
  • January 2025
  • December 2024

Categories

  • Agriculture
  • Business
  • Culture
  • Health
  • Lifestyle
  • Minerals
  • News
  • Opinion
  • Politics
  • Technology
  • Travel
  • Uganda
  • 🔥
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Opinion
  • Culture
  • Travel
  • Minerals
  • Health
  • Technology
Font ResizerAa
The News Network AfricaThe News Network Africa
  • My Saves
  • My Feed
  • History
  • Travel
  • Opinion
  • Politics
  • Health
  • Technology
  • News
Search
  • Pages
    • Home
    • Advertise with Us
  • Personalized
    • My Feed
    • My Saves
    • History
  • Categories
    • News
    • Business
    • Minerals
    • Culture
    • Opinion
    • Politics
    • Agriculture
    • Health
    • Technology
    • Travel
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
© 2025 The News Network Africa. All Rights Reserved.
The News Network Africa > Blog > Business > How Uganda’s economy can withstand global turmoil
Business

How Uganda’s economy can withstand global turmoil

Hayley SkyChurchill Nkagumaho
Last updated: 11 February 2026 09:25
Hayley Sky
Churchill Nkagumaho
Share
How Uganda’s economy can withstand global turmoil
SHARE

By Bethuel Karanja

From Washington to Beijing, the global economic weather is turning unpredictable. Trade rules that once anchored international commerce are fraying under the strain of protectionism, geopolitical rivalry and economic nationalism.

- Advertisement -

For a small, open economy like Uganda’s deeply plugged into global commodity markets, capital flows and donor financing these global tremours are not abstract. They shape growth prospects, currency stability and fiscal choices at home.

The world economy is slowing. Global growth is projected at just 2.7 percent in 2026, weighed down by weak investment and long-running structural constraints.

- Advertisement -

The International Monetary Fund offers a more sanguine view, forecasting growth of 3.3 percent in 2026 and 3.2 percent in 2027, arguing that technology investment particularly artificial intelligence alongside supportive fiscal and monetary policies and private-sector adaptability, could offset the drag from trade fragmentation.

Implication for Uganda

Uganda, for now, appears to be defying the gloom. Economic growth is running above six percent, supported by strong coffee demand, rising diaspora remittances, elevated gold prices and sustained investment in the oil and gas sector.

- Advertisement -

This resilience has been reinforced by disciplined macroeconomic management. The Bank of Uganda has maintained price stability, keeping inflation among the lowest in Africa while limiting excessive foreign-exchange volatility. But resilience should not be confused with immunity.

Against a backdrop of intensifying geopolitical tensions and a retreat from multilateralism, the more relevant question is not whether Uganda is performing well today but how durable this performance will be, and what policy choices will determine the outcome.

The risks are evident. Uganda remains exposed to sudden US dollar volatility and global supply-chain disruptions. Compliance with the European Union’s new coffee traceability regulations poses near-term challenges for exporters. Structural constraints persist infrastructure gaps, a relatively high public-debt burden, climate-sensitive rain-fed agriculture, a high-cost business environment and stubbornly high youth unemployment.

All these factors will be up for discussion at the Stanbic Bank Uganda annual Economic Forum scheduled for February 12, 2026. This year’s theme Uganda’s Inflection Point: Competing in a Rewired Economy reflects a recognition that global shifts are no longer cyclical but structural.

In 2022, aggressive US Federal Reserve tightening strengthened the dollar and strained African sovereign balance sheets. Ghana defaulted. Uganda did not, underscoring the importance of debt composition and prudence.

In 2023, Western trade restrictions on Chinese exports triggered retaliatory controls on rare-earth minerals, revealing the fragility of global supply chains critical to technology, green energy and defence.

By 2024, Uganda was grappling with suspension from AGOA as the global system tilted decisively away from multilateralism toward unilateral and bloc-based arrangements an emerging paradigm likely to define 2026 and beyond.

Oil factor

Yet even then, analysts forecast that rising coffee output could support a multi-year strengthening of the Uganda shilling. The 2025 forum sharpened this narrative further, highlighting the fragmentation of the “global village” into competing regional blocs. For Uganda, this shift is not purely a threat.

Exporters are already exploiting opportunities under the African Continental Free Trade Area, underscoring the strategic importance of regional integration to achieve scale, lower costs and reduce vulnerability to distant markets.

Discussions at the summit will be enriched by insights from experts such as Jibran Qureishi, Head of Africa Research at Standard Bank Group, who will situate Uganda’s experience within broader continental and global trends helping policymakers and businesses alike navigate uncertainty while identifying opportunity.

One clear trend is the decline in Official Development Assistance, as traditional donors redirect resources to domestic priorities, including the protracted war in Ukraine. The implication is greater reliance on domestic borrowing.

To its credit, government has avoided costly Eurobond issuances, favouring concessional financing. Looking ahead, anticipated oil revenues could help narrow the fiscal deficit, which has widened to 7.5 percent of GDP from five percent three years ago.

Experts will weigh-in on what must fill the gap left by retreating donor funds: higher domestic savings, deeper capital markets, and stronger manufacturing and industrial capacity. When businesses thrive, tax revenues follow creating a virtuous cycle of investment and growth.

Crucially, growth must be inclusive. Supporting women, youth and farmers the bank’s favoured constituencies, and expanding formal entrepreneurship, is not social policy alone; it is economic strategy. Strong domestic linkages raise productivity, create jobs and anchor value addition.

Uganda’s Tenfold Growth Strategy to build a $500 billion economy through agro-industrialisation sets an ambitious direction. The harder task lies in execution.

Conversations that bring policymakers, financiers and producers into the same room help translate strategy into implementable action. As a subsidiary of Standard Bank Group, Africa’s largest lender by assets, Stanbic Bank believes that effective public-private partnerships will be central to unlocking Uganda’s next phase of growth.

In a world of fractured trade and heightened risk, coordination not complacency will determine whether Uganda merely weathers global chaos or converts it into opportunity.

Mr. Karanja is Head, Global Markets at Stanbic Bank Uganda

Email Us on editorial@nnafrica.com

Share This Article
Facebook Whatsapp Whatsapp Telegram Email Copy Link
Previous Article Bruno K Joins Loving Beyond, Bringing Fresh Drama to the Lule Dynasty Bruno K Joins Loving Beyond, Bringing Fresh Drama to the Lule Dynasty
Next Article NIRA says new IDs to go Live Next Month NIRA says new IDs to go Live Next Month

Latest Posts

Ebola Returns: Inside the Deadly Outbreak That Has Africa on High Alert
Ebola Returns: Inside the Deadly Outbreak That Has Africa on High Alert
Health
Why Africans Are Leaving South Africa in Fear: The Crisis Dividing a Continent
Why Africans Are Leaving South Africa in Fear: The Crisis Dividing a Continent
News Politics
Opinion Piece: Skills will determine the success of East Africa’s LNG ambitions
Opinion Piece: Skills will determine the success of East Africa’s LNG ambitions
Opinion
Djibouti: Where Africa Meets Arabia at the Gateway to the Red Sea
Djibouti: Where Africa Meets Arabia at the Gateway to the Red Sea
Culture News Travel

Opinions

The Silent Crisis Costing Africa Billions: Why Young Professionals Are Leaving Their Dream Jobs
The Silent Crisis Costing Africa Billions: Why Young Professionals Are Leaving Their Dream Jobs
Opinion
What if everything you have right now is everything you once dreamed of?
What if everything you have right now is everything you once dreamed of?
Opinion
Maxwell Gomera: It is time to give Africans a stake in African growth
Maxwell Gomera: It is time to give Africans a stake in African growth
Opinion
Kenyan Activist Boniface Mwangi Freed in Tanzania: A Win for Free Speech and Human Rights.
Kenyan Activist Boniface Mwangi Freed in Tanzania: A Win for Free Speech and Human Rights.
Opinion

You Might Also Like

Rains scarce in Ivory Coast cocoa regions last week
AgricultureBusinessTechnology

Rains scarce in Ivory Coast cocoa regions last week

By
Churchill Nkagumaho
Africa’s Top 100 Banks 2025: the full list and our analysis
Business

Africa’s Top 100 Banks 2025: the full list and our analysis

By
Hayley Sky
Sexual abuse scandal – John Smyth, Jeremy Gauntlett and the shame of the Anglican Church
Business

Sexual abuse scandal – John Smyth, Jeremy Gauntlett and the shame of the Anglican Church

By
nna
Coffee Prices Stay at Record Despite Drop in Market for Beans
Business

Coffee Prices Stay at Record Despite Drop in Market for Beans

By
Hayley Sky
The News Network Africa
X-twitter Facebook Rss

About US


The News Network Africa: Your instant connection to breaking stories and live updates. Stay informed with our real-time coverage across minerals, culture, politics, business, tech, entertainment, and more. Your reliable source for 24/7 news.

Top Categories
  • News
  • Opinion
  • Politics
  • Tech
  • Health
  • Travel
Usefull Links
  • Advertise with Us
  • Complaint
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy
  • Submit a Tip

© The News Network Africa. All Rights Reserved.

Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?