Nigeria’s GDP per capita is same as Somalia

Hilmaam

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VIP
So can you explain how there is 32 billion mobile money transactions a year? or is that not realistic?



Sure thing, but i will be a bit busy the next few days will see if i can squeeze sometime in to post it.
no its not realistic at all its way off base. its like me taking the 155 million transaction per month and saying our population really not 18 million its actually 75 million. there are 50 million plus hidden people running around. you're using the data completely wrong

Approximately 155 million transactions, worth $2.7 billion, are recorded per month. (from 2018 report)
 
no its not realistic at all its way off base. its like me taking the 155 million transaction per month and saying our population really not 18 million its actually 75 million. there are 50 million plus hidden people running around. you're using the data completely wrong

Approximately 155 million transactions, worth $2.7 billion, are recorded per month. (from 2018 report)

What a ridiculously false analogy lmaaoo

Transactions does not correlate with the population size. Mobile transactions reflect economic activity, not the number of people. Each person or business might make several transactions in a month, so the number of transactions doesn't directly tell you how many people are involved.

The 36% of GDP from mobile transactions is significant, but it's still only part of the picture. GDP includes many other factors (like agriculture, livestock, services, trade etc.), and the mobile money sector, while large, doesn't capture the entire scope of economic production. The rest of the 64% of GDP that is. Money transfers alone do not increase GDP only the production of real value does. If a business sells a product, only the final sale value is counted, NOT every payment transfer along the way.

So there is no way mobile transactions alone can be valued at more than 3x times the official estimate of GDP. And have similar transaction volume to economies with 90-100 billion in GDP (Ghana & Kenya)
 
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no its not realistic at all its way off base. its like me taking the 155 million transaction per month and saying our population really not 18 million its actually 75 million. there are 50 million plus hidden people running around. you're using the data completely wrong

Approximately 155 million transactions, worth $2.7 billion, are recorded per month. (from 2018 report)
Yeah I'm sorry but that analogy makes no sense. It's possible there are errors in the accuracy of tracking transactions. But where actually tracking money circulation. It's a one to one comparison not some approximation
 

Hilmaam

✌️
VIP
What a ridiculously false analogy lmaaoo

Transactions does not correlate with the population size. Mobile transactions reflect economic activity, not the number of people. Each person or business might make several transactions in a month, so the number of transactions doesn't directly tell you how many people are involved.

The 36% of GDP from mobile transactions is significant, but it's still only part of the picture. GDP includes many other factors (like agriculture, livestock, services, trade etc.), and the mobile money sector, while large, doesn't capture the entire scope of economic production. The rest of the 64% of GDP that is. Money transfers alone do not increase GDP only the production of real value does. If a business sells a product, only the final sale value is counted, NOT every payment transfer along the way.

So there is no way mobile transactions alone can be valued at more than 3x times the official estimate of GDP. And have similar transaction volume to economies with 90-100 billion in GDP (Ghana & Kenya)
you cracked the case there is hidden 80 billion dollars floating around in somalia. 540 billion missing since 2018 how did we get it so wrong
Einstein GIF
 

Hilmaam

✌️
VIP
Yeah I'm sorry but that analogy makes no sense. It's possible there are errors in the accuracy of tracking transactions. But where actually tracking money circulation. It's a one to one comparison not some approximation
my point is using unrelated numbers to draw conclusions. gdp is not money moving through mobil phones which is same money being counted many times over.
 
you cracked the case there is hidden 80 billion dollars floating around in somalia. 540 billion missing since 2018 how did we get it so wrong
Einstein GIF

It's not really hidden, its just not counted.

And why are acting like i am suggesting something ridicilous or outlandish when you legitimately have economies like Kenya, Nigeria and Ghana that increased their GDP by 60-80% even by counting the missing economic activity

It happens.
 
my point is using unrelated numbers to draw conclusions. gdp is not money moving through mobil phones which is same money being counted many times over.

It's not unrelated at all. Mobile money transactions reflect real economic activity, meaning they directly contribute to GDP. So, mobile money transactions are a direct part of GDP calculations. NOT separate from GDP.. GDP is a measure of yearly economic production, which aligns with mobile money transaction volumes. . Somalia’s GDP and economic output is driven by real industries like trade, logistics , livestock/agricultural exports, real estate/construction, telecom and fin tech/banking, and other services. Mobile money transactions capture these real business activities, NOT just repeated personal transfers.

And the way it works is that they measure it using ''valued added' methods meaning money transfers alone do not increase GDP only the production of real value does. If a business sells a product, only the final sale value is counted, NOT every payment transfer along the way.

It's like what i say enters the ear and exits the other side.
 
my point is using unrelated numbers to draw conclusions. gdp is not money moving through mobil phones which is same money being counted many times over.
If this was true then by your logic we would see 50 or 60 trillion dollars worth of transactions in the united states. But thats not what we see instead what we get is something like 9 or 10 trillion .
 
It's not really hidden, its just not counted.

And why are acting like i am suggesting something ridicilous or outlandish when you legitimately have economies like Kenya, Nigeria and Ghana that increased their GDP by 60-80% even by counting the missing economic activity

It happens.
How does Somalia compare to Nigeria and Ghana when comparing the informal data?
 
How does Somalia compare to Nigeria and Ghana when comparing the informal data?

Somalia is more comparable to Kenya in many respects when it comes to informality 83%. But i explained it here:
Nigeria and Ghana’s informal sectors account for over 50% of their economies, yet both have large GDPs ($500B and $82B respectively).

The Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) has an economy with 85% informality, yet its GDP is $65 billion.

Kenya's informal economy is ~80% of employment, yet its GDP is still $91 billion.

Somalia on the other hand 90% of their economy is informal, employs 90% of people and yet only 10% of its economy is formal so you use it to guestimate its economy to be 10 billion? How does that make sense?

So it's not farfetched for Somalia to increase their official GDP numbers by 9x if they do the same rebasing and capture informal activity.

Somalia’s GDP is supremely undervalued by global financial institutions because they use outdated models that fail to account for the cashless economy and informal sector.

Somalia's economic output in terms retail/trade, livestock/agricultural exports, telecom sector, transport, real estate/construction, energy and mobile banking system all operate on a massive scale.
 

Hilmaam

✌️
VIP
It's not unrelated at all. Mobile money transactions reflect real economic activity, meaning they directly contribute to GDP. So, mobile money transactions are a direct part of GDP calculations. NOT separate from GDP.. GDP is a measure of yearly economic production, which aligns with mobile money transaction volumes. . Somalia’s GDP and economic output is driven by real industries like trade, logistics , livestock/agricultural exports, real estate/construction, telecom and fin tech/banking, and other services. Mobile money transactions capture these real business activities, NOT just repeated personal transfers.

And the way it works is that they measure it using ''valued added' methods meaning money transfers alone do not increase GDP only the production of real value does. If a business sells a product, only the final sale value is counted, NOT every payment transfer along the way.

It's like what i say enters the ear and exits the other side.

If this was true then by your logic we would see 50 or 60 trillion dollars worth of transactions in the united states. But thats not what we see instead what we get is something like 9 or 10 trillion .
your understanding of gdp and macroeconomics is very little. no point continuing this as I'm not interested in reposting same formulas and data . 90 billion is laughable im retarded for even entertaining this conversation
 
your understanding of gdp and macroeconomics is very little. no point continuing this as I'm not interested in reposting same formulas and data . 90 billion is laughable im retarded for even entertaining this conversation

You want to see yourself as retarded, then go right ahead. Maybe it's suppressed feelings. Kidding.

Well known economists widely say that that certain economies in Africa in reality have 3x the size of official GDP due to the informal sector and i actually explained to you how they calculated/measure the value of transactions, it's not repeat transfers but if you want to pretend to know more then go right ahead.

Many assume Somalia survives on remittances and aid, but remittances make up just 6% of mobile money transactions ($1.92 billion out of $32 billion). According to the World Bank and UN. This suggests local business activity is much larger than previously thought.

Somalia has a highly informal, cash-less economy that isn’t fully captured in official GDP statistics.

The Somali National Bureau of Statistics (SNBS) relies on limited formal sector data, missing much of unregistered trade, livestock exports, and services.

For example the livestock trade is a multi-billion-dollar industry, but much of it happens outside formal banking systems, making it underreported.

The SBS say all of this here:

Read '' The availability of data for informal enterprises is far lower than for the formal sector, so the information that could be collected by SNBS would be much more limited''
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No, Nigeria is collapsing. Somalia is still the same. They were at 3000+ gdp per capita 10 years ago, but one retarded president later and its all gone.

This is why African "democracy" is so dangerous. The people chimp out and elect a retard and 20 years of development is reversed.
Democracy? What it really means is that western ngos have access and the resources to estabcontrol over your country .
Democracy just makes it wasier and comfortable because they already perfected how to pervert democracy , they have 100s of years of practice in their own countries.

Dealing with a dictator or god forbid a full system of government and it can get hard and cost more than the budget allocated to do their job.

Nigeria is not independent, most countries in the world are not independent but colonies in all but name.
Even developed countries are not sovereign, Japan cannot follow its national interest and must align with US policies , just like Germany.
The only independent countries used to be just
China, India, Iran, Russia, Venezuela, North Korea and Eritrea.
Last year they were joined by 3 new african countries , mali, Burkina Faso and Niger.

Nigeria is not independent and cannot really develop without sovereignty
 
your understanding of gdp and macroeconomics is very little. no point continuing this as I'm not interested in reposting same formulas and data . 90 billion is laughable im retarded for even entertaining this conversation
I don't think it's 90 billion but I wouldn't be surprised if was 2 possible even 4 times as high as it is now. The idea that mobile transactions are being counted several times makes little to no sense. Do you legitimately think that people are so dumb they can't account for this. You won't find a single country where transactions are several times the gdp like you assume is the case for Somalia. The only logical conclusion is that somalia is not an exception and that mobile transactions are not several times the gdp.
 
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