Nigeria is preparing to change the method of calculating its gross domestic product (GDP) to include new sectors of activity, including informal, hidden or illegal ones, the national statistical office (NBS) announced on Thursday.
A new calculation. Nigeria, which is struggling to recover from the crisis following the Covid pandemic, has once again become the fourth economy in Africa in terms of GDP, according to the International Monetary Fund (IMF), behind South Africa, Egypt and Algeria, after being the first from 2014 to 2022.
From now on, however, it is preparing to integrate new sectors of activity into its GDP calculation, including certain areas that are illegal in the country but which count in the real economy, such as prostitution.
“reflect changing economic realities”
The new method of calculation, expected during the year, aims to reflect the evolution of economic realities and 2019 will serve as a base year, explained Moses Waniko, senior official of the NBS, during a presentation in Lagos. “We expect the size of the economy to be larger,” he said.
New sectors must be taken into account such as the digital economy, health, social funds, pensions, refineries, mines and quarries and individual employers, but also “covering illegal and hidden activities”, according to the presentation .
-“Certain economic activities have no legal basis, such as prostitution,” explained Moses Waniko. However, “these actors earn an income and sometimes live better than those in the formal sector. Ultimately, these incomes impact the formal economy,” he added.
A jump of 89% in 2014
The last time Nigeria revised the calculation of GDP was in 2014 and at the time, this aggregate measuring economic activity jumped by 89%. Logically, the modification of the calculation of GDP will also change certain ratios such as income per capita, tax levies compared to GDP or the debt, which stood at 18.5% of GDP in September but could appear less significant with a higher GDP. .
Nigeria (227 million inhabitants, and 410 million expected in 2050, according to the UN) is currently going through one of the worst economic crises in decades. It is Africa’s leading oil producer. However, the contribution of the oil sector to the national economy has reduced, going from third to fifth place, and supplanted by the real estate sector which becomes the third largest contributor, behind agriculture and trade.