World Bank and IMF Endorse Nigeria’s New GDP Statistics

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The World Bank, International Monetary Fund (IMF) and African Development Bank have endorsed Nigeria’s new Gross Domestic Product (GDP) of approximately $509.9 billion which was released on Sunday. The rise in GDP places Nigeria as the country with the biggest economy in Africa.

Nigeria, Sunday became Africa’s largest economy, after a long overdue rebase calculation of its GDP almost doubled it to $500 billion, according to data from the West African country’s Bureau of Statistics.

“Nigeria has moved to be the largest economy by GDP size in Africa and has moved to be the 26th largest economy in the world,” finance minister Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala said.

 

Rebasing is done at least every three years by most countries as a way of ensuring a nation’s GDP statistics give the most up-to-date picture of an economy as possible. Unlike these other countries, Nigeria had not updated the components in its GDP base year since 1990.

Nigeria’s 24-year-long wait was said to have been caused by many factors, most importantly debt relief. A planned rebasing in 2010 was shelved to pursue debt relief from the Paris Club and multilateral lenders, as a review would have created a better economic image for Nigeria which would have made its case for relief from lenders a bad case.

 

The new calculation released by the bureau of statistics now includes previously uncounted industries such as Telecommunications, aviation, e-commerce, information technology, music, on-line sales, airlines and Nollywood film industry have now been factored in to give a better and more accurate picture.

The new figure ($509.9bn, according to Nigeria Bureau of Statistics) makes Nigeria the 26th largest economy in the world, and could see it replace South Africa as the continent’s only G20 member.

The economic growth is however not felt by the country’s masses. The World Bank in its most recent poverty survey reported that 61 percent of Nigeria’s 170 million people live on less than a dollar a day. Infrastructural inadequacy still reigns in Africa’s most populous nation bedevilled by poor governance, widespread corruption, rampant oil theft and a raging Islamist insurgency in the north.

According to Chief Statistician, Yemi Kale, figures should not be seen as an end in themselves but should be used to help the government shape policy for the future.