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Uganda GDP surges 8.5% in Q4 2025, strongest Since 2022

Construction leaps 19.4%, household spending jumps 20.1%
A general view shows the capital city of Kampala in Uganda
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Ugandaโ€™s economy posted its fastest quarterly expansion in more than three years, with real GDP rising 8.5% year-on-year in the three months to December 2025, up sharply from 5.4% a year earlier and 4.8% in the prior quarter.

The finance ministry attributed the acceleration to robust consumer demand and a construction boom tied to infrastructure and pre-election spending. Sectoral breakdowns from the Uganda Bureau of Statistics and trading-economics data paint a clear picture: industry grew 12.3% (led by construction at +19.4% and manufacturing at +8.9%), agriculture expanded 8.8% on strong cash-crop output (coffee and cocoa +12.6%), and services rose 6.2%.

On the expenditure side, final consumption surged 17.4%, driven almost entirely by a 20.1% jump in household spending, while gross fixed capital formation climbed 15.6%. Quarterly GDP itself accelerated to +4.0% from +1.9%.

Oil tailwinds on the horizon

The numbers arrive as the $5 billion-plus East African Crude Oil Pipeline (EACOP) hits 80% completion, with first commercial production now targeted for mid-2026 (July in some official statements). Government forecasts project Shs 2.2 trillion ($600 million) in initial oil revenues for FY2026/27, of which Shs 1.4 trillion ($370 million) is earmarked for the budget.

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That would mark Ugandaโ€™s first material hydrocarbon income and is already baked into medium-term projections: the central bank and IMF see full-year FY2025/26 growth at 6.5โ€“7.0%, rising toward 8%+ once oil ramps to 230,000 barrels per day by 2030. World Bank and S&P forecasts align, with the latter recently revising Ugandaโ€™s outlook to positive on โ€œstronger economic momentum.โ€

Critical questions on the data and distribution

Yet the headline 8.5% figure has drawn immediate scepticism on social media and from opposition voices, who call it โ€œmanipulatedโ€ or inflated by election-year spending under President Yoweri Museveniโ€™s long rule. Replies to the original Reuters Africa post labelled it โ€œNRM spending and buying voters,โ€ โ€œclassified mineralsโ€™ sales,โ€ or growth that โ€œexpands in dictator family pockets.โ€

Independent analysts note that while Uganda has averaged 6% annual growth for decades, gains have often been uneven. World Bank data show poverty declining but public debt rising to 51.3% of GDP in FY25, with domestic borrowing costs crowding out social spending. Fiscal deficits widened to 6.1% of GDP last year on a 23% spending surge. Critics argue official statistics may understate inequality and overstate broad-based gains, a recurring debate in Museveni-era reporting.

Investor and business implications

Upside for capital allocators:

  • Construction & infrastructure: The 19.4% sub-sector surge signals sustained demand for cement, steel, and engineering firms. Listed players on the Uganda Securities Exchange (USE) already up 2.3% in Q4 on local counters, stand to benefit.
  • Consumer & retail: 20.1% household spending growth points to opportunities in fast-moving consumer goods, real estate, and trade. Private-sector PMI hit 54.2 in February, its 13th straight expansion month.
  • Oil & energy services: EACOP and upstream projects (Tilenga, Kingfisher) are >70% complete; FDI inflows already reached $3.5 billion in the year to October 2025. Global majors (TotalEnergies, CNOOC) and local content players will see revenue ramps from mid-2026.
  • Macro tailwinds: Low inflation (core 4.0โ€“4.5% target), a stable shilling, and projected double-digit growth in FY2026/27 once oil flows could lift USD-denominated returns.

Downside risks to watch

  • Data and governance premium: Persistent distrust could deter offshore capital if post-election stability falters or if oil revenues are perceived as captured by elites.
  • Debt and crowding-out: High interest payments now consume 28% of tax revenue; any delay in oil cash flows (already pushed from 2025) would pressure the fiscal position.
  • Inequality drag: With 33% of households still in subsistence agriculture, consumption-led growth may prove less durable without broader job creation in manufacturing and services.
  • External shocks: Geopolitics, rainfall variability in agriculture, or global oil-demand slowdowns (per IEEFA scenarios) could trim long-term revenues by up to 50%.

Bottom line for global portfolios

Uganda offers one of East Africaโ€™s highest growth trajectories and a rare pre-production oil play, with clear entry points in construction, consumer staples, and energy infrastructure. Yet the 8.5% print, while impressive on the surface, demands scrutiny on sustainability and inclusivity.

Investors allocating now are essentially betting that oil revenues will translate into fiscal space and private-sector dynamism rather than further entrenching inequality.

Prudent due diligence on local partners, political risk hedging, and revenue-sharing mechanisms will separate winners from those caught in headline hype.

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