Forest rents (% of GDP) - Country Ranking - Africa

Definition: Forest rents are roundwood harvest times the product of average prices and a region-specific rental rate.

Source: Estimates based on sources and methods described in "The Changing Wealth of Nations: Measuring Sustainable Development in the New Millennium" (World Bank, 2011).

See also: Thematic map, Time series comparison

Find indicator:
Rank Country Value Year
1 Somalia 13.49 1990
2 Liberia 12.43 2019
3 Burundi 9.21 2019
4 Guinea-Bissau 8.61 2019
5 Central African Republic 8.35 2019
6 Dem. Rep. Congo 7.04 2019
7 Uganda 6.12 2019
8 Sierra Leone 5.97 2019
9 Mozambique 5.47 2019
10 Malawi 5.12 2019
11 Zambia 4.62 2019
12 Ethiopia 4.38 2019
13 Guinea 4.11 2019
14 Burkina Faso 4.03 2019
15 Niger 3.84 2019
16 Madagascar 3.66 2019
17 Chad 3.34 2019
18 Rwanda 3.18 2019
19 Congo 3.18 2019
20 Togo 3.18 2019
21 Lesotho 3.05 2019
22 Ghana 2.86 2019
23 Eswatini 2.86 2019
24 Eritrea 2.33 2011
25 The Gambia 2.32 2019
26 Cameroon 2.29 2019
27 Sudan 2.24 2019
28 Gabon 1.99 2019
29 Benin 1.92 2019
30 Tanzania 1.82 2019
31 Mali 1.79 2019
32 Equatorial Guinea 1.79 2019
33 São Tomé and Principe 1.76 2019
34 Zimbabwe 1.65 2019
35 Senegal 1.28 2019
36 Comoros 1.23 2019
37 Côte d'Ivoire 1.10 2019
38 Mauritania 1.03 2019
39 Kenya 1.03 2019
40 Nigeria 0.81 2019
41 South Africa 0.64 2019
42 Namibia 0.50 2019
43 Angola 0.38 2019
44 Cabo Verde 0.31 2019
45 Djibouti 0.29 2019
46 Tunisia 0.26 2019
47 Botswana 0.21 2019
48 Morocco 0.15 2019
49 Egypt 0.15 2019
50 Algeria 0.12 2019
51 Seychelles 0.09 2019
52 Libya 0.07 2019
53 Mauritius 0.00 2019

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Development Relevance: Accounting for the contribution of natural resources to economic output is important in building an analytical framework for sustainable development. In some countries earnings from natural resources, especially from fossil fuels and minerals, account for a sizable share of GDP, and much of these earnings come in the form of economic rents - revenues above the cost of extracting the resources. Natural resources give rise to economic rents because they are not produced. For produced goods and services competitive forces expand supply until economic profits are driven to zero, but natural resources in fixed supply often command returns well in excess of their cost of production. Rents from nonrenewable resources - fossil fuels and minerals - as well as rents from overharvesting of forests indicate the liquidation of a country's capital stock. When countries use such rents to support current consumption rather than to invest in new capital to replace what is being used up, they are, in effect, borrowing against their future.

Limitations and Exceptions: This definition of economic rent differs from that used in the System of National Accounts, where rents are a form of property income, consisting of payments to landowners by a tenant for the use of the land or payments to the owners of subsoil assets by institutional units permitting them to extract subsoil deposits.

Statistical Concept and Methodology: The estimates of natural resources rents are calculated as the difference between the price of a commodity and the average cost of producing it. This is done by estimating the world price of units of specific commodities and subtracting estimates of average unit costs of extraction or harvesting costs (including a normal return on capital). These unit rents are then multiplied by the physical quantities countries extract or harvest to determine the rents for each commodity as a share of gross domestic product (GDP).

Aggregation method: Weighted average

Periodicity: Annual