Business
PHCCIMA Boss Explains Slow Economic Growth
The President of Port
Harcourt Chamber of Commerce, Industry, Mines and Agriculture, (PHCCIMA), Engr Emeka Unachukwu has explained why Nigeria had to wait for 24 years to rebase her Gross Domestic Product (GDP) after experiencing the last one in 1990.
PHCCIMA President while speaking as guest lecturer in a presentation titled” Rebasing Nigeria’s GDP Growth-Impact, Opportunities and challenges,” at a business summit held in Abuja, disclosed that serious strategic economic considerations were considered by the minister of finance, Mrs Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala at the economic team to arrive at such conclusion.
According to him, the idea of rebase the Nigerian Economy was Shelved in 2000 in order to pursue debt relief from the Paris Club and multilateral lenders.
He said a revised GDP for the country would have pushed the economy into the category of the medium income economies, stressing that Nigeria’s decision not to rebase until 2014 got the country a discounted offer to pay $ 12 billion within one year instead of $ 30 billion with interest and compound to be paid in 33 years.
Explaining further, he said policy planning and efficient programme design among others were responsible for the decision stressing that the 2014 rebasing had enabled the country to obtain more accurate set of economic statistics that is a true reflection of current realities, for evidence based decision-making and accurate estimate of the size and structure of the economy.
According to Engr Unachukwu, it also enabled tools for strategic planning, engineered a better understanding of the structure of the economy especially the sectoral growth drivers.
He said the decision to rebase was premised on monitoring and Evaluation of policy impact and implementation and increased demand for accountability from citizens.
According to the PHCCIMA boss the rebased GDP value now worth $ 510 billion reflecting an increase in economic size to 89% and has comfortably positioned the country as the world’s 26th economy rising from its previous 36th position.
He said it indicates a rise in the country’s per capita GDP to $ 2,922 from previous $1,600 and makes the Nigeria economy 1.45 times larger than South Africa’s economy, and also 32% of all of Sub-Saharan Africa’s economy and 21.4% of Africa’s total economy.
He concluded by saying that the future of the country is bright and that the nation is opened to attract more business.
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