By Sarah McGregor
Hargeisa - Somaliland, a breakaway
territory in northern Somalia, has a gross domestic product of $1.4 billion
with a “high” income gap between rich and poor, according to the World Bank’s
first economic output estimate.
Somaliland’s GDP per
capita of $348 in 2012 ranked as the world’s fourth-lowest after Burundi, the
Democratic Republic of Congo and Malawi, the Washington-based lender said in an
e-mailed presentation released today in the capital, Hargeisa.
“A focus on how to address
inequality in Somaliland and ensure access to services for all, will be
important to secure progress for all,” the bank said, according to the
statement.
Somaliland, which has a
population of 3.5 million, declared independence from Somalia after the fall of
dictator Mohamed Siad Barre in 1991. No sovereign state has recognized the
region as an independent nation. Companies including London-based Genel Energy
Plc (GENL) and RAK Gas LLC of the United Arab Emirates are exploring for oil
and gas in the region.
Somaliland’s Gini
coefficient, a measure of the income gap, is 45.7 in rural areas compared to 27
in Ethiopia and 42.6 in urban centers against 37 in the neighboring country.
The index ranges from 0, which represents perfect equality, to 100, which
implies complete inequality, according to the bank.
The uneven distribution of
wealth is a “major challenge,” with 29 percent of households in urban areas and
38 percent in rural Somaliland living in poverty, according to a 2013 household
and enterprise survey carried out by the World Bank from January to March.
Livestock Contribution
The livestock industry
accounts for 30 percent of the economy, followed by trade at 20 percent, crop
production at 8 percent and real estate at 6 percent, the bank said.
The accuracy of the
estimates is hindered by a lack of data and difficulty in measuring output by
nomadic populations, and remittance and foreign aid flows are not captured, the
bank said. While there are no isolated figures for Somaliland, overseas workers
send home $1.2 billion to Somalia every year, while official development aid
totaled $150 million for Somaliland in 2012.
The country’s “low” level of domestic revenue, which at
8.5 percent of GDP is about half of the sub-Saharan African average, consists
largely of trade levies, while the country’s few “large businesses” pay
insufficient taxes, the bank said.
The region should review its tax regime, which charges
companies 10 percent of their profit, compared with 26 percent in Ethiopia and
28 percent in Kenya, according to the bank.
Half of government spending in the decade through 2012
has been spent on security, while health care and education expenditure has
been kept low, it said. The al-Qaeda-linked Islamist militant group al-Shabaab
has waged an insurgency against the Western-back government in Somalia since
2007 in a bid to impose Shariah law.
To contact the reporter on this story: Sarah McGregor in
Nairobi at smcgregor5@bloomberg.net
Source: businessweek.com
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