Adjusted net savings, including particulate emission damage (% of GNI) - Country Ranking - Africa

Definition: Adjusted net savings are equal to net national savings plus education expenditure and minus energy depletion, mineral depletion, net forest depletion, and carbon dioxide and particulate emissions damage.

Source: World Bank staff estimates based on sources and methods described in "The Changing Wealth of Nations 2018: Building a Sustainable Future" (Lange et al 2018).

See also: Thematic map, Time series comparison

Find indicator:
Rank Country Value Year
1 Sudan 37.34 2019
2 Libya 34.02 2008
3 Cabo Verde 24.31 2019
4 Zambia 23.74 2019
5 Tanzania 20.90 2017
6 Algeria 20.40 2019
7 Djibouti 20.19 2018
8 Ethiopia 20.05 2018
9 Gabon 19.42 2015
10 Morocco 19.27 2019
11 Mauritania 19.21 2019
12 Botswana 16.04 2019
13 Senegal 14.84 2018
14 Niger 12.77 2019
15 Ghana 12.50 2019
16 Dem. Rep. Congo 12.03 2019
17 Côte d'Ivoire 11.94 2018
18 Togo 9.57 2018
19 Uganda 8.91 2019
20 Mauritius 8.64 2019
21 Lesotho 8.51 2019
22 Tunisia 8.20 2019
23 Benin 8.16 2019
24 Madagascar 6.89 2019
25 Burkina Faso 6.71 2019
26 Eswatini 6.12 2019
27 Egypt 5.02 2019
28 Central African Republic 4.98 1994
29 Chad 4.59 1994
30 Mali 4.21 2018
31 Malawi 4.07 2019
32 Comoros 3.70 2019
33 Nigeria 3.67 2019
34 Cameroon 3.50 2019
35 Guinea-Bissau 2.04 2018
36 Rwanda 0.85 2019
37 South Africa -0.75 2019
38 Eritrea -1.11 2000
39 Namibia -3.31 2019
40 Mozambique -3.37 2019
41 The Gambia -4.36 2018
42 Kenya -5.03 2019
43 Congo -5.89 2016
44 Angola -6.85 2019
45 Guinea -7.91 2019
46 Sierra Leone -13.80 2019
47 Zimbabwe -14.12 2017
48 Burundi -18.52 2018
49 Liberia -75.41 2019

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Development Relevance: How wealth changes over time is critical to understanding a country’s prospects for sustainable development. Adjusted Net Saving (ANS) was developed as an indicator to approximate the change in wealth—based on simple economic theory in which savings equals investment, and investment equals the change in wealth. ANS measures gross national savings, adjusted for gains (spending on education) and losses (consumption of fixed capital, depletion of subsoil assets and forests, pollution damages). When ANS is negative, it may indicate that wealth is being run down; when ANS is positive, it may indicate that wealth is growing.

Limitations and Exceptions: The exercise treats public education expenditures as an addition to savings. However, because of the wide variability in the effectiveness of public education expenditures, these figures cannot be construed as the value of investments in human capital. A current expenditure of $1 on education does not necessarily yield $1 of human capital. The calculation should also consider private education expenditure, but data are not available for a large number of countries. While extensive, the accounting of natural resource depletion and pollution costs still has some gaps. Key estimates missing on the resource side include the value of fossil water extracted from aquifers, net depletion of fish stocks, and depletion and degradation of soils. Important pollutants affecting human health and economic assets are also excluded.

Statistical Concept and Methodology: Adjusted net savings are derived from standard national accounting measures of gross savings by making four adjustments. First, estimates of fixed capital consumption of produced assets are deducted to obtain net savings. Second, current public expenditures on education are added to net savings (in standard national accounting these expenditures are treated as consumption). Third, estimates of the depletion of a variety of natural resources are deducted to reflect the decline in asset values associated with their extraction and harvest. And fourth, deductions are made for damages from carbon dioxide emissions and local pollution. Estimates of resource depletion are based on the "change in real wealth" method described in Hamilton and Ruta (2008), which estimates depletion as the ratio between the total value of the resource and the remaining reserve lifetime. The total value of the resource is the present value of current and future rents from resource extractions. An economic rent represents an excess return to a given factor of production. Natural resources give rise to rents because they are not produced; in contrast, for produced goods and services competitive forces will expand supply until economic profits are driven to zero. For each type of resource and each country, unit resource rents are derived by taking the difference between prices and the average unit extraction or harvest costs (including a “normal” return on capital). Unit rents are then multiplied by the physical quantity extracted or harvested to arrive at total rent. To estimate the value of the resource, rents are assumed to be constant over the life of the resource (the El Serafy approach), and the present value of the rent flow is calculated using a 4 percent discount rate.

Aggregation method: Weighted average

Periodicity: Annual