Banks have now taken the role of providing regular economic
updates to fill the yawning gaps caused by delayed government reports.
Government’s
slow pace in releasing economic data has been blamed for inaccurate
information that investors get. The only timely data are inflation
figures.
“We usually allow a lag of
between four and five months to give the mainstream market institutions
time to announce their results before we compile and that is probably
why some people may view ours (data) as slow but I can assure you that
we are always precise and accurate,” said Mr Zachary Mwangi, Director
General, Kenya National Bureau of Statistics.
Last
week, two banks, CFC Stanbic and Barclays, stepped in to provide crucial
economic data that the country’s business community can rely on to make
informed decisions as they wait release of official data by the Sate
agency.
“Africa’s investment
potential is extremely strong. However, there is still the lack of
credible market data. Improving this can be vital in demonstrating the
region’s investment potential,” StanChart Africa CEO Ms Diana Layfield
said.
LACKING CAPACITY
“Standard
Chartered’s ground-breaking indicators will help to fill this gap by
providing relevant, credible and real-time data from leading African
markets.”
The bank will be publishing indicators for Nigeria, Ghana and Kenya.
Barclays
Bank provided crucial data last Friday with its 174-paged African
Market Guide 2015. The research analysed all the African countries by
looking at their policy environments, trade, foreign markets, money
markets and external debt snapshots. It also gave the countries’
economic outlook for the year.
Barclays
Africa’s head of macroeconomic research, Jeff Gable said accurate data
is essential for economic planning and better service provisions by
governments. He however says gathering the information is not only a
huge task but requires capacity that many governments may not have.
“You
will struggle in Africa to find statistical agencies with appropriate
staffing to give data that is sufficient, accurate, available and
timely. This is across small and larger economies. The challenges exist
mainly because most of these countries have very large informal
sectors,” Mr Gable told Smart Company.
“The need for timely and accurate data is however crucial for any country to carry out meaningful planning.’’
He
says the recent rebasing of three major economies on the continent
leading to significant leaps in their economic outlooks “is enough to
paint a picture that most governments have either used wrong
methodologies or relied on wrong information over time”.
Nigeria’s
economy shot up 89 per cent after rebasing while Ghana’s jumped by 62
per cent. Kenya’s rebasing pushed it to a middle income status after its
Gross Domestic Product grew by 25 per cent in
“Nigeria
last year declared the biggest economy (in Africa), is an extreme
example because rebasing GDP essentially means you are revising dynamics
over a certain period. You can only measure what is there. In 1991,
Nigeria had no mobile phones so there was no way you could even include
them in the survey,” explained Mr Gable.
AUTHENTIC METHODOLOGY
“There was no Nollywood for example. When you rebase you are simply counting better.”
CFC
Stanbic Bank also released yet another indicator survey on Wednesday.
The bank partnered with global financial information service provider,
Markit to release the Purchasing manager Indicator (PMI).
The
survey, which will be available every third day of the month, provides
business outlook of the country by measuring private sector operating
conditions. The survey examines five aspects: New orders (30 per cent),
output (25 per cent), employment (20 per cent), suppliers’ delivery
times (15 per cent) and stocks of the purchases (10 per cent).
Markit
economist Mr Philip Lake said the data is gathered through interviews
based on business experiences for the previous month.
So
far, six countries in Africa have embraced the report that provides an
economic outlook for businessmen, banks, foreign investors and policy
makers.
Mr Mwangi said while KNBS is
the official source of government data, other institutions can release
theirs as long as they use “authentic methodologies to give reliable
information”.
“Not only KNBS has the
monopoly of giving data information but we are the official source with
the most elaborate and quantitative data. Others may use data based on
perception and largely qualitative methods,” Mr Mwangi says.
Standard
Chartered Head of Africa Research Razia Khan, says while the continent
is rapidly growing, poor data makes it hard to know by how much.
“China’s
customs data sheds some light on Africa’s growth, showing that
Africa-China trade ballooned to $210 billion last year from $5-7 billion
at the end of the 1990s.
TRANSFORM THE SPACE
Lending
to the private sector in Africa has also surged, with private-sector
credit growth more than doubling in real terms between 2000 and
2010,” noted the economic researcher.
“Such
data points aside, little is known about the true magnitude of Africa’s
growth surge. Data quality in most Sub-Saharan African economies is
weak. In many instances, the official data is too out-of-date to tell us
much that is useful.”
She says better data exists for the private sector, “though it is more ‘micro’ in scale and less accessible”.
Khan
says institutions like banks have a good idea of the direction of
growth by taking into account loan trends to identify the sectors that
are gaining ground and those that are “fading in relevance,” concludes
Ms Khan in her article How fast is Africa really growing?
“Independent,
apolitical and transparent data has been a substantial hurdle in many
African economies. However, technology and private sector indicators –
when properly deployed – can transform this space.”
THE NUMBERS
25
Percentage by which Kenya’s economy grew after rebasing
89
Percentage by which Nigeria’s economy jumped after rebasing
62
Percentage by which Ghana’s economy rose after rebasing
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