On November 5, 2010, Ghana Statistical Services announced
that it was revising its GDP estimates upwards by over 60 per cent, suggesting
that that in the previous GDP estimates about US$13 billion worth’s of economic
activity had been missed.
As a result, Ghana was suddenly upgraded from a low
to lower-middle-income country. In response to this change, Todd Moss, the
development scholar and blogger at the Center of Global Development in
Washington DC exclaimed: ‘Boy, we
really don’t know anything!’
Shanta Devarajan – The World Bank’s Chief Economist for
Africa – struck a more dramatic tone. In an address to a conference organized
by Statistics South Africa, he called the current state of affairs ‘Africa’s
statistical tragedy’.
How good are these numbers?
All of the central questions in development revolve around
the measure of the production and consumption of goods and services. This is
expressed in an aggregate composite metric called the Gross Domestic Product
(GDP) which is used to rank and rate the wealth and progress of nations. It is
the most widely used measure of economic activity, yet little is known about
how this metric is produced and misused in debates about African economic
development.
For a number of years now I have been trying to answer the
question: How good are these numbers? The short answer is that the numbers are
poor. This is just not a matter of technical accuracy – the arbitrariness of
the quantification process produces observations with very large errors and
levels of uncertainty. This ‘numbers game’ has taken on a dangerously
misleading air of accuracy, and the resulting figures are used to make critical
decisions that allocate scarce resources. International development actors are
making judgments based on erroneous statistics. Governments are not able to
make informed decisions because existing data are too weak or the data they
need do not exist.
What happened in Ghana?
How could the country be among the poorest in the world one
day, and find itself amongst aspiring middle income countries the next?
To grasp this chain of events, a basic understanding of
national accounting is necessary. GDP is typically calculated as a sum of the
‘value added’ of the production of goods and services in all sectors of the
economy. In order to compare one year’s value added with another, and
thus get an idea of whether the economy is expanding or contracting, a new set
of sums for all the sectors are computed. In order for these two amounts to be
comparable, they are expressed in constant prices. The easiest way of doing
this, particularly if data are sparse, which they are at most African
statistical offices, is to generate ‘base year’ estimate for future level
estimates.
When picking a ‘base year’ the statistical office chooses a
year when it has more information on the economy than normally available; such
as data from a household, agricultural or industrial survey. The information
from these survey instruments is added to the normally available administrative
data to form a new GDP estimate. This new total is then weighted by sectors,
thereafter other indicators and proxies are used to calculate new annual
estimates.
The importance of ‘base year’
The ‘base year’ is very important in three respects.
Firstly, the GDP estimates will be expressed in constant prices for the base
year. Second, the index number applies, so that a sector that was very
economically important in the base year will continue to appear very important
despite structural changes that may have occurred since the last base year.
Conversely, sectors that were unimportant or not even
existing will barely have an impact on the official GDP statistics. Finally, the
data sources and the use of proxies are set in the base year. Even when new
information is becoming available, national accountants may be unwilling or
unable to add this data to the GDP series. Thus, when the base year is out of
date, the GDP series is becoming an increasingly reliable guide to interpreting
real economic change. The IMF statistical division recommends a change of base
year every fifth year.
In the case of Ghana, their previous base year was made in
1993. Quite obviously, the structure of the economy has changed radically since
then, partly due to the introduction of new technologies, such as the mobile
phone and partly due to economic policy, such as the continued liberalisation
and importance of non-state delivery of services such as in tertiary education.
Through some sample surveys and availability of administrative data, such as
those derived from Value Added Taxation, the statistical office was
increasingly aware that their estimates were underestimating the size of the
Ghanaian economy. Ghana Statistical Services therefore requested the services
of the IMF as early as in 2002, which contracted a consultant to undertake the
rebasing and revision of GDP estimates in the country.
What about the comparisons with other countries? How
should we compare the income and growth of Ghana with Nigeria, Kenya or other
economies in the region? The lack of comparability of data and methods in
national accounting practices in Sub-Saharan Africa is disturbing. According to
my own survey, only ten of these countries have a base year that is less than a
decade old, when I compared the statistics available from the World Bank and
those published by the national statistical agencies that actually compile the
GDP statistics, there was an alarming level of discrepancy. A comparison of the
data published in other sources further added support to the conclusion that
with the current uneven application of methods and poor availability of data,
any ranking of countries according to GDP levels is misleading.
Nigerian revision pending
Meanwhile, in Nigeria an upward revision is pending. Their
base year for the national accounts, 1990, is even more outdated than that of
Ghana. According to reports from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS),
Nigeria plans to change the base year for its gross domestic product (GDP) to
2008. It has been boldly announced that this could lead to a “huge jump”
in GDP figures.
This radically challenges our current understanding of
economic development in Nigeria and in Africa. According to the World
Development Indicators’ most recent data, the total GDP in current $US in 2010
was above 200 billion. Nigerian GDP, before the predicted revision, already
accounts for 18 percent of Sub-Saharan Africa’s total (about 1,200 billion
$US). The reports in the media, from the IMF and the NBS all indicate that
Nigerian GDP will increase at least as much as in the recent case in Ghana.
Let us be conservative and assume that the GDP in Nigeria
merely doubles following the revision. It will alone mean that the GDP for the
whole region increased more than 15 percent. The value of the increase accrues
to nothing less than 40 economies roughly the size of Malawi’s. The knowledge
that currently there are 40 ‘Malawis’ unaccounted for in the Nigerian economy
should raise a few eyebrows.
It is a real tragedy that the statistical capacities of
Sub-Saharan African economies are in such a poor state. African development
statistics tell us less than we would like to think about income, poverty and
growth in Sub-Saharan Africa. One of the most urgent challenges in
African economic development is to devise a strategy for improving statistical
capacity. This system currently causes more confusion than enlightenment.
However, governments, international organizations and independent analysts do
need these development statistics to track and monitor efforts at improving
living conditions on the African continent.
Poor numbers are too important to be dismissed as just that.
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