A
NEW report published by New World Wealth has disclosed that the number
of Nigerians having about N160 million investable funds has risen to
15,700 as at last year end. It said that about $82 billion of the wealth
is held abroad.
According to the report “The number of people in
Nigeria with investable assets of at least $1 million will jump to
23,000 by 2017, after increasing by 44 percent over the past six years
to 15,700 in 2013.” The Johannesburg-based New World Wealth in a report
published, yesterday, added that about 26 per cent of their $82 billion
of wealth was held offshore last year, with the bulk of private-banking
funds deposited in the U.K., Switzerland and the Channel Islands.
Lagos,
Nigeria’s commercial capital is home to 9,500 millionaires, or 61 per
cent of Nigeria’s total. Next to Lagos the report said is oil industry
hub Port Harcourt with 1,300 and the capital Abuja with 600, according
to New World Wealth. The oil and gas industry was the source of 24 per
cent of this wealth.
Nigeria is home to five billionaires,
according to the report, including Africa’s richest man Aliko Dangote,
whose businesses range from cement to sugar. Dangote has a net worth of
$25.2 billion. The country has a population of 167 million and could
officially become Africa’s largest economy this year, overtaking South
Africa, which has an annual output of about $320bn.
Nigeria will
complete a recalculation of its GDP, which currently totals $295bn, in
the next few months. This rebasing, its first since 1990, will lead to
sectors that have boomed in the past decade, such as telecoms and
banking, being given more statistical weighting and likely increase the
size of the country’s economy by 30 per cent to 60 per cent.
However,
for all the kudos that will come with being Africa’s largest economy,
the reality will remain that more than half of Nigeria’s people live on
less than $2 a day and that despite the recent rapid growth of its
non-oil sector, it is overly dependent on the commodity, from which it
derives 70 per cent of government revenues and 90 per cent of export
earnings.
In recent months, Nigeria has been reminded of its
vulnerabilities. Its stock exchange, having climbed 40 per cent in 2013,
has dropped sharply and its currency has weakened because of a fall in
oil revenues and foreign portfolio inflows slowing as the US has unwound
its quantitative easing programme. The central bank warned in January
that “monetary policy is almost at its limits” in terms of keeping the
naira stable.