BUSINESS

Nigeria, GDP and Economic Health

&NewLine;<p><strong><em>Dr Victor Adoji&comma; an Economist&comma; Strategic Global Communication Expert&comma; Governance Strategist and Impact Reinvestment Consultant&comma; in this piece&comma; obtained from his Facebook wall&comma; reflects on the history of GDP and its relevance in contemporary economic measurement<&sol;em><&sol;strong><&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p>For over half a century now&comma; there is arguably no other statistical and economic construct that has had a greater influence on the modern economy and the measurement of economic progress than the Gross Domestic Product &lpar;GDP&rpar;&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p>Changes in GDP has become the most widely accepted measure of a country’s economic progress&period; Gross Domestic Product plays a central role in judging the position of the economy of a country over time or relative to that of other countries&period; Conceptually&comma; GDP is the market value of all the finished goods and services produced within a geographic area &lpar;usually a country&rpar; in a given period &lpar;say a quarter or a year&rpar;&period; GDP is composed of goods and services produced for sale and includes some nonmarket production&comma; such as defense or education services provided by the government&period; GDP essentially summarizes total economic activity in a country&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p>Since its introduction in the aftermath of World War II and the Great Depression by Simon Kuznets&comma; a Russian-American Nobel laureate&comma; economist and statistician&comma; the Gross Domestic Product has become the ultimate measure of a country’s overall welfare&comma; a window into an economy’s soul&comma; the statistic to end all statistics&period; Its use spread rapidly&comma; becoming the defining indicator of the last century&period; The use of GDP globally as a measure of economic progress was further strengthened following its endorsement by the Bretton Woods Conference upon which the metric became a powerful tool in global politics&comma; economic relevance&comma; and diplomacy&period; This is so because the most important global governance institutions&comma; from the G8 to the G20&comma; are all based essentially on GDP credentials&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p>After over eighty years of usage and popularity&comma; there is an apparent and raging discontent with the Nobel-winning metric as a good measure of economic growth and development&period; In fact&comma; there are myriad of criticisms against the GDP&comma; some of which are from respected economists including Kuznets &lpar;1941&rpar;&comma; Galbraith &lpar;1958&rpar;&comma; Samuelson &lpar;1961&rpar;&comma; Mishan &lpar;1967&rpar;&comma; Nordhaus and Tobin &lpar;1972&rpar;&comma; Hueting &lpar;1974&rpar;&comma; Hirsch &lpar;1976&rpar;&comma; Sen &lpar;1976&rpar;&comma; Scitovsky &lpar;1976&rpar;&comma; Daly &lpar;1977&rpar;&comma; Hartwick &lpar;1990&rpar;&comma; Tinbergen and Hueting &lpar;1992&rpar;&comma; Weitzman and Löfgren &lpar;1997&rpar;&comma; Dasgupta and Mäler &lpar;2000&rpar;&comma; Dasgupta &lpar;2001&rpar;&comma; Layard &lpar;2005&rpar;&comma; and Fleurbaey &lpar;2009&rpar;&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p>It is instructive and interesting to note that the first critic of GDP as a measure of economic progress was Simon Kuznets &&num;8211&semi; the developer of the GDP concept &&num;8211&semi; who cautioned against equating GDP growth with economic or social well-being&period; According to him&comma; the welfare of a nation can scarcely be inferred from a measurement of national income&period; Kuznets’s caveat notwithstanding&comma; the Gross Domestic Product became an obsession for politicians and policy makers and a dominant mantra of policy making&period; Politicians&comma; economists&comma; business people&comma; and policy makers have been fascinated and enamored by GDP numbers which has become the sine qua non for economic progress¬ &&num;8211&semi; something it does not measure and was never intended to measure&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p>The debate on the limitations of GDP as a tool for measuring economic progress has never abated&period; The argument has always been whether GDP captures other important dimensions of development such as social and environmental as enunciated in the United Nations three pillars of post-2015 Sustainable Development Goals &lpar;SDGs&rpar;&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;&NewLine;<p><strong>NIGERIA AND HER GDP<&sol;strong><br>Following the rebasing of its Gross Domestic product &lpar;GDP&rpar; in 2014&comma; the Nigerian became the 26th largest in world&comma; officially becoming Africa’s largest economy&period; This singular feat especially the leap frogging South Africa and knocking her off the decades-long perch as the continent’s largest economy caught the attention of the world&comma; eliciting myriad interests&comma; analyses&comma; and commentaries and&comma; for many reasons&comma; rightly so&period; In fact&comma; no economic development in recent times has provoked media blitz across the globe&comma; and within the country like the outcome of Nigeria’s GDP rebasing&period; Some are curious on the sort of economic miracle that has happened to suddenly leapfrog the Nigerian economy to its new status&period; The foregoing debate has brought to the fore the significance of GDP as a measure of economic well-being and progress&period;<br>In the end&comma; a question begs for attention&colon; Is the Gross Domestic Product &lpar;GDP&rpar; an adequate measure of Nigeria’s &lpar;or any country for that matter&rpar; development and progress across many dimensions&quest;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

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