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Nigeria vs. South Africa: Economic Rivalry Shifts to Soccer Pitch

Nigeria vs South Africa: Economic Rivalry Shifts to Soccer Pitch

(Bloomberg) -- Nigeria meets South Africa in Cairo tonight in the quarter-finals of the Africa Cup of Nations, the continent’s premier soccer tournament. It may not generate as much global hype as Argentina-Brazil or England-Germany, but the rivalry goes well beyond the sports field.

Just ask business people in Lagos or Johannesburg: “Who has Africa’s biggest economy?” and you’re likely to fuel the competitive fires.

Nigeria vs. South Africa: Economic Rivalry Shifts to Soccer Pitch

The answer is more complicated than it sounds, and comes down to what exchange rate you use. South Africa’s gross domestic product was $368 billion last year, about the same as Israel’s.

Nigeria’s output was $420 billion, but that’s only if you use the central bank’s official exchange rate of 306 naira per dollar. Africa’s largest oil producer has multiple rates and almost all investors have to use a weaker one of around 360 when they trade the currency. Using that, Nigeria is second -- at $359 billion.

On the field, Nigeria sits 27 places higher than South Africa’s 72nd on the official world rankings.

Nigeria vs. South Africa: Economic Rivalry Shifts to Soccer Pitch

The size of Nigeria’s population -- more than three times South Africa’s -- may help keep the West African country competitive. The United Nations projects that by 2050 only India and China will have more people.

And projections show Nigeria’s economy will grow faster. South Africa’s GDP will expand by 1.5% annually between now and 2021 and Nigeria’s by 2.2%, according to the International Monetary Fund.

Of course, economic size doesn’t necessarily make for soccer success. Neither Nigeria nor South Africa is expected to win the tournament. U.K. bookmaker William Hill Plc has Nigeria down as the third favorite with odds of 5/1, which is an implied probability of 17%. South Africa’s odds are much longer at 17/1.

The favorite, at 7/4, is Senegal, an economy of just $24 billion.

--With assistance from Rene Vollgraaff.

To contact the reporters on this story: Paul Wallace in Lagos at pwallace25@bloomberg.net;Anthony Osae-Brown in Lagos at aosaebrown2@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Dana El Baltaji at delbaltaji@bloomberg.net, Gordon Bell, Vernon Wessels

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