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Rebasing will boost Nigeria’s GDP by 40 pct…REUTERS

The nation’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) figures is expected to shoot up by around 40 percent in the second quarter this year, when the country … Continue reading Rebasing will boost Nigeria’s GDP by 40 pct…REUTERS


The nation’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) figures is expected to shoot up by around 40 percent in the second quarter this year, when the country changes the base year for its calculation to 2009, from its current 1990, a source has told Reuters.

The recalculation will enable Nigeria to join the ranks of middle-income countries and put it much closer in size to South Africa, the continent’s most developed economy.

According to the source, the calculations had “taken into consideration fluctuations, availability and consistency in the data in choosing the new base year, which will be 2009,” and that it will be applied from the second quarter of 2012.

Most governments overhaul gross domestic product calculations every few years to reflect changes in output and consumption, such as mobile phones and the Internet. Since Nigeria has not done so since 1990, analysts had expected a large jump. Nobody had put a number on it until today.

The source said the recalculation would add about 40 percent to Nigeria’s GDP. An increase of that magnitude would boost Nigeria’s roughly $250 billion economy to around $350 billion.

That brings it very close to South Africa’s currently $385 billion economy. And, with a growth rate of around 7 percent a year, compared with 3 percent in South Africa, Nigeria may eventually overtake its rival to seize the top spot.

That would most likely boost interest in stocks of consumer goods companies that are looking to unlock the potential of Africa’s most populous country and its 160 million consumers.

It will also improve nation’s debt to GDP ratio, currently at around 16 percent.

But Nigeria’s tax revenues, seen as woeful for a country of this size, will look even smaller. Tax revenue figures are not published but they are suspected to be extremely low, with 95 percent of government revenues coming from oil output.

The national accounts had been reclassified to reflect IMF’s ISIC 4 standards, the source said, making it easier to compare the country’s GDP with peers.