The Economist explains
How Nigeria's economy grew by 89% overnight

ON SATURDAY, April 5th, South Africa was Africa's largest economy. The IMF put its GDP at $354 billion last year, well ahead of its closest rival for the crown, Nigeria. By Sunday afternoon that had changed. Nigeria's statistician-general announced that his country's GDP for 2013 had been revised from 42.4 trillion naira to 80.2 trillion naira ($509 billion). The estimated income of the average Nigerian went from less than $1,500 a year to $2,688 in a trice. How can an economy grow by almost 90% overnight?
Nigeria has a deserved reputation for corruption, so a sceptic might think the doubling of its economy a result of fiddling the numbers. In fact it is the old numbers that are dodgy. An economy's real growth rate is typically measured by reference to prices in a base year. In Nigeria the reference year for the old estimate of GDP was 1990. The IMF recommends that base years be updated at least every five years. Nigeria left it far too long; as a result, its old GDP figures were hopelessly inaccurate.
The new figures use 2010 as the base year. Why was the upgrade so big? To come up with an estimate of GDP, statisticians need to add together estimates of output from a sample of businesses in every part of the economy, from farming to service industries. The weight they give to each sector depends on its importance to the economy in the base year. A snapshot of Nigeria's economy in 1990 gave little or no weight to fast-growing parts of the economy such as mobile telephony or the movie industry. At the time the state-owned telephone company had a few hundred thousand customers. Today the country has 120m mobile-phone subscriptions. On the old 1990 figures, the telecoms sector was less than 1% of GDP; it is now almost 9% of GDP. Motion pictures had not shown up at all in the old figures, but the industry's size is now put at 1.4% of GDP. Nigeria's number-crunchers have improved the gathering of statistics in other ways. The old GDP figures were based on an estimate of output. The new figures are cross-checked against separate surveys of spending and income. The sample on which the data are based has increased from around 85,000 establishments to 850,000. Only businesses with a fixed location are included: the traders who weave precariously between the traffic are not captured. Even so, many small businesses are now part of the GDP picture.
Of course, Nigerians are no richer than they were on Saturday night. The majority of the country's 170m people live on less than a dollar a day. What the revised GDP figures show is that its economy is far more than just an oil enclave, exporting crude to pay for imported goods from richer countries. The oil industry's share of GDP is now put at just 14%, compared with 33% according to the old figures. Manufacturing is much larger than previously thought. Services are booming. It is still a tough place in which to do business. But any company or investor who wants exposure to Africa's fast-growing markets cannot afford to pass the continent's largest economy by.
- See more at: How Nigeria's economy grew by 89% overnight
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We face forward,...we face neither East or West: we face forward.......Kwame Nkrumah
We face forward,...we face neither East or West: we face forward.......Kwame Nkrumah
From: Okey Iheduru <okeyiheduru@gmail.com>
To: usaafricadialogue@googlegroups.com
Sent: Wednesday, 9 April 2014, 16:36
Subject: Re: USA Africa Dialogue Series - Re: Voodoo statistics
"Poverty Porn" can be as addictive and self-destructive as the real thing itself.
No self-respecting economist, including the "few of us Nigerians [who claim to] know a little about economics and statistics and how these figures are cooked up", would engage in this trashy talk if s/he truly understands the meaning and rationale for re-basing economic growth/GDP figures after 20 years. Few, if any of the hacks lampooning the Nigerian Finance Minister and Coordinating Minister of the Economy have even read or apprised themselves of the statistical methods and formal models used by the National Bureau for Statistics--in Nigeria and elsewhere--to arrive at their conclusions.
No government official has ever said Nigeria wasn't "poor" in the sense in which some of these arm-chair critics use that word. India today has more poor people than the whole world collectively had in 1960. Does that detract from the fact that India is a member of the BRICS today? When South Africa and Ghana re-based their economies it was o.k., but not so for Nigeria because we're addicted to this pervasive self-flagellation and pornographic portrayal of Nigeria. Ghana has more poor people today than she did in 1960; and Accra metro alone has three times more poor people today than it did in 2000. Does that detract from Ghana's economic ranking today.
It would help if everyone would please first go and revisit their "Ordinary" Level Economics lessons about "economic growth" and "gross domestic product" (GDP) before coming on to the public square to make statements that essentially differentiate between the educated and the uneducated.
Peace as always.
On Wed, Apr 9, 2014 at 2:13 AM, Tt Ogiri <ttogiri@gmail.com> wrote:
I love Ngozi, she is an intelligent woman, but has progressively joined the ranks and files of Nigerian leader who look us in the face and lie to us. That is under estimating our intelligence and it hurts. A few of us Nigerians know a little about economics and statistics and how these figures are cooked up. Nigeria is poor period!!! You can say whatever you want on your campaign trail, or when lobbying for another appointment. Fellow Nigerians, remember that Ngozi lives in an energy efficient house, with uninterrupted water supply, she has not taken a walk or even driven to any market in Abuja, road side, Wuse, or Ultramodern, in the last how many years. She lives the same life style here as she does in Washington DC, and she is paid very well, with other perks, to say what she says, and unfortunately she is not the only Nigerian doing this right among us. I just feel a little disappointment, because I have a higher expectation of women that I consider intelligent. God Bless Nigeria. Tt--
On Monday, April 7, 2014 10:07:05 PM UTC+1, jib...@gmail.com wrote:Poverty of Voodoo Statistics: Politicks and the Contribution of NollywoodJibrin Ibrahim, Deepening Democracy Column, Daily Trust, 7th April 2014Yesterday, our dear country Nigeria leap-frogged South Africa and became Africa's largest economy. We did this by changing the base line for calculating our GDP from 1990 to 2000. This rebasing boosted our economic growth by about 75%. The economy grew from $292 billion dollars to $510 billion in one day. By this statistical feat, we have progressed from the 37th to the 26rd largest economy in the world. The economy of South Africa is a mere $384 billion so let's all feel good; we are the greatest in Africa. My very warm congratulations to our Minister of Finance who made the announcement yesterday.The South Africans have upset our feelings by being members of G20 thereby stealing our position as the greatest African nation and now we can begin our revenge. The most painful was when the BRIC quickly developing countries, namely Brazil, Russia, India China were to be expanded by one, we all expected it would become BRINC with the edition of Nigeria. Instead, it became BRICS with the addition of South Africa. Now its settled, we have the largest African economy since 2 p.m. yesterday afternoon.Let me say up front that I do not think that we are falsifying facts, even if we are embellishing them a little bit. Most governments overhaul GDP calculations every five years to reflect changes in output and consumption and we have not done ours for over twenty years. When Ghana rebased its GDP in 2010, output jumped 60 percept and from one day to the next, Ghana became a middle-income country. For Nigeria, our government is hoping that being the continent's number one economy could prove an irresistible magnet for foreign investors. Under the leadership of Ngozi Okonjo Iweala, what we did was to update the contributions of new sectors of the economy. Nollywood come in very useful as the estimate of its annual contribution to the Nigerian economy jumped from $500 million to $7 billion, an incredible jump maybe, but why not, it's all about good fiction. Thanks to the rapid growth of the telecommunications sector, Nigeria has become Africa's biggest mobile market with an estimated 167 million subscriptions, according to the Nigerian Communications Commission.There is no doubt that Nigeria has been growing as a destination for foreign investors owing to the size of its consumer market and the increasing recovery of the capital market. Shoprite and Walmart are moving in massively into the country precisely because of the growth of the consumer market. The consumer industries such as Nestle, Heineken, Cadbury and Unilever are doing very well. Our own Dangote Cement has already made the transition from a Nigerian to an African giant. There is a credible narrative about the growth of the Nigerian economy. The problem with statistics however is that they only tell part of the story. In reality, the 75% growth of our economy that happened yesterday would not mean any change in the lives of ordinary Nigerians. We will continue to live without electricity supply and potable water. The potholes on our roads will not disappear. And the insecurity in the land will continue. Our economy is today apparently larger than that of Austria, Malaysia and Thailand.The real issue for me however is what does it really mean to say our economy is the largest in Africa. Nigeria remains a very poor country with almost 70% of the population living below the poverty line. No Nigerian city has potable water for up to 30% of inhabitants. South Africa has a population of 52 million people compared to Nigeria's 170 million. South Africa's GDP per capita is however $7,508 compared to $1,555 for Nigeria according to 2012 statistics. South Africa's electricity production is 40,000 megawatts and will double by 2025 to continue feeding its large industrial base while in Nigeria; we are currently struggling to produce 3,000 megawatts.Just last week, the World Bank President classified Nigeria among the world's five extreme poor countries. In a quick response, the Minister of Finance, Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, challenged the classification, which is based on the large number of poor people living in the country. She argued that using the number of poor people in a country, irrespective of the country's level of development, as the parameter to rate Nigeria among nations with high poverty levels, was wrong. She added that the phenomenon of large number of poor people was peculiar to middle-income countries, which Nigeria belonged. Citing the example of India, a middle-income country, which is one of the largest economies in the world like Nigeria, Dr. Okonjo-Iweala said the largest number of poor people in the world reside in India, China and other places. Nigeria, she concluded, was no exception, as the reality today was that most middle-income countries, including Brazil, have large number of poor people.For 100 million Nigerians living below the poverty line, what is the comfort of knowing that there are also lots of poor people in other developing countries such as Brazil and India? For Nigerians, the real problem is that they do not see the benefits of the 15 years of constant economic growth that we have had. Yes, it's true that they have seen more Nigerians join the Forbes list of the world's richest people but the Nigerian people know that their lives and livelihoods are worsening every day.This is where I have a problem with the positive spin Dr. Okonjo-Iweala is always giving the economy. Again last week, she announced with glee that "after two months of methodological work, the statisticians have come up with the data that 1.8 million people in the country enter the job market yearly. I am happy to tell you that last year we were able to create 1.6 million jobs. So we are getting close to the 1.8 million that enter the job market." She must be the only person in Nigeria to believe that we created 1.6 million jobs last year. What we do know is that the National Bureau of Statistics is under enormous pressure to produce positive economic spin. What we see with our eyes is the pathetic photographs of hundreds of thousands of young people desperately struggling for the Nigerian Immigration Service jobs and being killed in the process. She should take us seriously and show us where the jobs were created and who got them. In most countries, job statistics is not under the control of government and is done by independent bodies. Why do we have a situation in which government officials can tell us anything they want to on job creation? The new statistics may be true but voodoo too as all Africans know is a true science. Voodoo statistics can make us feel good but it's more important to address the problems of 100 million Nigerians living below the poverty line.
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Okey Iheduru, PhD
You can access some of my papers on the Social Science Research Network (SSRN) at: http://ssrn.com/author=2131462.
You can access some of my papers on the Social Science Research Network (SSRN) at: http://ssrn.com/author=2131462.
You received this message because you are subscribed to the "USA-Africa Dialogue Series" moderated by Toyin Falola, University of Texas at Austin.
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