Please enable JavaScript in your browser!!! This site doesn't work if JavaScript is disabled!!!
Balance
Welcome to Money Online Investment
Clean the beaches
Clean the beaches today for a better tomorrow!
Deevesh
Belle Mare
Negro cassava farm
Let us drive hunger away from our community through youth empowerment
Ol
Ekiti
Mombasa college
Locally and internationally recognized college operating since 1953
Head
Mombasa
tribuneforeign investment
tribuneforeign investment Nigeria is a middle-income, mixed economy and emerging market, with expanding manufacturing, financial, service, communications, technology and entertainment sectors. It is ranked as the 21st-largest economy in the world in terms of nominal GDP, and the 20th-largest in terms of purchasing power parity. It is the largest economy in Africa; its re-emergent manufacturing sector became the largest on the continent in 2013, and it produces a large proportion of goods and services for the West Africansubcontinent. In addition, the debt-to-GDP ratio is 11 percent, which is 8 percent below the 2012 ratio. Previously hindered by years of mismanagement, economic reforms of the past decade have put Nigeria back on track towards achieving its full economic potential. Nigerian GDP at purchasing power parity (PPP) has almost tripled from $170 billion in 2000 to $451 billion in 2012, although estimates of the size of the informal sector (which is not included in official figures) put the actual numbers closer to $630 billion. Correspondingly, the GDP per capita doubled from $1400 per person in 2000 to an estimated $2,800 per person in 2012 (again, with the inclusion of the informal sector, it is estimated that GDP per capita hovers around $3,900 per person). (Population increased from 120 million in 2000 to 160 million in 2010). These figures were to be revised upwards by as much as 80% when metrics were to be recalculated subsequent to the rebasing of its economy in April 2014.Although oil revenues contribute 2/3 of state revenues], oil only contributes about 9% to the GDP. Nigeria produces only about 2.7% of the world's oil supply (in comparison, Saudi Arabia produces 12.9%, Russia produces 12.7% and the United Statesproduces 8.6%).Although the petroleum sector is important, as government revenues still heavily rely on this sector, it remains a small part of the country's over all economy. The largely subsistence agricultural sector has not kept up with rapid population growth, and Nigeria, once a large net exporter of food, now imports some of its food products, though mechanization has led to a resurgence in manufacturing and exporting of food products, and the move towards food sufficiency. In 2006, Nigeria successfully convinced the Paris Club to let it buy back the bulk of its debts owed to them for a cash payment of roughly US$12 billion.According to a Citigroup report published in February 2011, Nigeria will get the highest GDP growth in the world between 2010 and 2050.
Rising sun montessori school
Education for the young ones from nursery to primary