Based on gross domestic
product at the end of 2015 published by the International Monetary Fund, the
size of South Africa’s economy is $301 billion at the rand’s current exchange
rate, while Nigeria’s GDP is $296 billion.
South Africa’s economy
regained the position of Africa’s largest in dollar terms more than two years
after losing it to Nigeria as the value of the nations’ currencies moved in
opposite directions.
That’s after the rand
gained more than 16 percent against the dollar since the start of 2016, and Nigeria’s
naira lost more than a third of its value after the central bank removed a
currency peg in June.
Both nations face the risk
of a recession after contracting in the first quarter of the year. The Nigerian
economy shrank by 0.4 percent in the three months through March from a year
earlier amid low oil prices and output and shortage of foreign currency. That
curbed imports, including fuel. In South Africa, GDP contracted by 0.2 percent
from a year earlier as farming and mining output declined.
Alan Cameron, an economist
at Exotix Partners LLP, said: “More than the growth outlook, in the short term
the ranking of these economies is likely to be determined by exchange rate
movements.”
Although, Nigeria is
unlikely to be unseated as Africa’s largest economy in the long run, “the
momentum that took it there in the first place is now long gone.”
The South African rand
rallied as investors turned to emerging markets with liquid capital markets to
seek returns after Britain voted to leave the European Union on June 23, even
as the central bank forecast the economy won’t expand this year and the nation
risks losing its investment-grade credit rating. The ruling African National
Congress’s lowest support since 1994 in the Aug. 3 local government vote led to
further gains on speculation that it will pressure the party to introduce
economic reforms that will boost growth and cut unemployment.
In Nigeria, investors
didn’t flock to buy naira-based assets after authorities removed the peg of
197-199 naira per dollar. The Central Bank of Nigeria raised its benchmark
interest rate to a record in July to lure foreign money, even as the IMF
forecast the economy will contract 1.8 percent this year.
Nigeria was assessed as the
continent’s largest economy in April 2014 when authorities in the West African
nation overhauled their GDP data for the first time in two decades. The
recalculation saw the Nigerian economy in 2013 expand by three-quarters to an
estimated 80 trillion naira.
The rand weakened 0.4
percent to 13.3323 per dollar at 7:56 a.m. in Johannesburg on Thursday, ending
three days of gains. The naira dropped 0.4 percent to 321.50 per dollar,
heading for a record low on a closing basis.
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