The latest report by PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) on the Nigeria’s
future has projected that country’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) may hit
$1.45 trillion by 2030 if corruption is reduced and effective policies
are implemented.
At biennial growth rates of five and seven per
cent till 2030, the report estimates that Nigeria’s GDP could be $530
billion higher if corruption is reduced to levels comparable to
Malaysia, while arguing that national policies should be guided not only
by improvements in GDP but also a broader measure of development
through the Human Development Index (HDI).
The report added that
translating economic growth into real improvements in the lives of the
average citizen poses a real challenge for policy makers, noting that
three critical levers need to be improved to enable Nigeria reach its
socio-economic targets which are measured by a high human development
status.
The report identified the levers to include, improving the
ease of doing business, enhanced labour productivity and reduction of
the overall level of corruption perception.
Arguing its case, the
report notes: “Despite strong economic growth at a CAGR of 5.3 per
centpost-rebasing, Nigeria has been plagued with the jobless growth
phenomenon as employment growth has only averaged 1.3 per cent.
“However,
growth has not been broad based with persistent incidences of high
poverty, unemployment and underemployment. Official unemployment rose
from 6.0 per cent in 2011 to 8.2 per cent in 2015, with a growing number
of youths massively underemployed at 18.3 per cent of the labour force.
Though growth in the Nigerian economy has been driven by more
labour-intensive sectors such as agriculture and services, income
opportunities have been limited due to low productivity levels and thus
has not resulted in improved living standards for Nigeria’s growing
population, hence, the need for developmental measures beyond GDP.
Advisory
Partner and Chief Economist, PwC Nigeria, Dr. Andrew S. Nevin in his
reaction said: “This research draws on a more direct and measurable
approach to tracking improvement in human development. Using qualitative
analysis, academic reviews and country case studies, we identified
three critical levers that need to be improved for the average Nigerian
to feel the impact of any growth in the economy.”
Progress across
the three levers the report highlights, could result in a significant
improvement in Nigeria’s HDI score thereby attaining a high human
development status by 2030.
Specifically, PwC posits that Nigeria
should target to improve Ease of Doing Business ranking through a higher
Distance to Frontier score of 61 by 2030 (45 as at 2015).
Similarly,
Labour productively currently at $3.61/hour should be improved to
$12.05/hour by 2030 while Corruption Perception Index (CPI) score should
be improved from 26 in 2015 to 34 by 2030.
“Translating economic
growth into real improvements in the lives of the average citizen poses a
real challenge for policy makers. Tracking progress across these three
levers has the potential to boost the attention on HDI as priority in
the public agenda.
“An analysis of these levers can identify areas
requiring policy attention and specific strategies targeted at
improving overall wellbeing can be formulated”, Nevin added.
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