The Rwandan economy is performing well, thanks to a strong government and anti-corruption stance, and beating some developed European countries.

 


Rwandan President Paul Kagame

Ask any expat about Rwanda and its bloody genocide is likely to feature strongly, rather than the fact it has one of the world’s best performing economies.

Young Rwandese,Remy Ugirase Mujigiti, proud of his country development and its international partnership.

Rwanda, like many African nations, suffers from a tarnished reputation prompted by war or civil unrest that took place decades ago. But many of these countries have been quietly rebuilding their economies while opening themselves up to foreign investment and manpower.

Credit card giant Visa recently chose Rwanda to carry out a pilot programme to test its mobile phone banking service. A large multinational company like Visa could have chosen any country in the world, so its decision to pick a small African nation highlights Rwanda’s growing importance.

Gordon Cooper, head of emerging market solutions for Visa, said: “The economy has grown eight per cent every year for the past five years, making it one of the fastest growing economies in the world. It has a stable government and has taken a strong stance against corruption.”

As a result, Rwanda has Africa’s third-best ranking in Transparency International’s annual index of the perception of corruption. It is listed number 50 out of 174 countries, which are ranked from least to most corrupt.

Resource: The telegraph.co.uk

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