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A new survey released by Bloomberg has projected that Nigeria, China, the Philippines, Kenya, India and Indonesia will rank among the 20 fastest growing economies in world thisnyear.

This is coming after a projection earlier in the year by the CNN that Nigeria’s economy will be
the third fastest growing in 2015 after China and Qatar.

Other countries that made the list of 20 include Malaysia, Peru, Thailand, United Arab Emirates
(UAE), Kazakhstan, Colombia and Saudi Arabia.

Taiwan, Turkey, South Korea, Poland, Mexico, Ireland and Singapore also made the list.

According to Bloomberg, “Emerging markets in Asia and Africa still reign supreme: They’re at the top of global growth projections over the
next two years.

“The world is expected to grow 3.2 per cent in 2015 and 3.7 per cent next year after expanding 3.3 per cent in each of the past two years,” according to a Bloomberg survey of
economists.

“China, the Philippines, Kenya, India andnIndonesia, which together make up about 16 per cent of global gross domestic product, are
all forecast to grow more than 5 per cent inb2015.

“The euro area probably will expand just 1.2 per cent as European Central Bank President Mario Draghi deals with a fragile Greece and
embarks on a bond-purchase programme to stimulate the region’s growth.

“China still remains the fastest-growing G-20 nation, even though the Asian economy is no
longer expanding at the pace it did a few yearsbago.

“China’s economy grew 7.3 per cent in the fourth quarter of 2014 from a year earlier, andnis expected to slow to 7 per cent in 2015.

“To counter that slowdown, People’s Bank of China policy makers are boosting monetary stimulus. The central bank cut its benchmark interest rate in November for the first time since 2012. This month officials lowered by 50 basis points the deposit reserve ratio, which is the amount of reserves that banks need to keep on hand,” the survey said.

Continuing, it added that Nigeria, Africa’s largest economy, is projected to grow at 4.9 per cent, while Kenya will probably grow by six per cent.

“US growth forecasts for 2015 are coalescing around 3 per cent even as the dollar soars to its highest level in more than a decade.

“As growth picks up, the Federal Reserve is weighing whether to raise interest rates for the first time since 2006. Their benchmark federal funds rate has remained near zero since December 2008.”

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