Value added, banking (current US$) - National accounts - Basic Inds. and Nat. Accts - African Development Indicators



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Value added in banking is defined as the value of output of the banking industry less the value of intermediate consumption (intermediate inputs). Banking is a subset of services, comprising financial intermediation (ISIC 65-67). Data are in current U.S. dollars. Source: World Bank national accounts data, and OECD National Accounts data files.
Value added, banking (current US$) - National accounts - Basic Inds. and Nat. Accts - African Development Indicators (Most Recent Data)

Rank

Country

Value

1Africa (2008)113,554,374,777
2Sub-Saharan Africa (2008)83,091,432,063
3South Africa (2008)51,522,609,852
4Egypt (2001)5,398,203,556
5Morocco (2007)4,448,730,469
6Kenya (2008)1,833,121,237
7Botswana (2008)1,190,794,380
8Mauritius (2008)808,010,493
9Zambia (2006)512,812,665
10Tanzania (2006)469,984,823
11Ethiopia (2008)466,720,148
12Senegal (2008)400,372,968
13Mozambique (2007)361,820,956
14Namibia (2008)289,594,451
15Ghana (1990)240,310,481
16Burkina Faso (2006)89,923,973
17Djibouti (2006)89,822,249
18Democratic Republic of the Congo (1989)75,633,553
19Swaziland (2008)75,178,642
20Sierra Leone (2003)71,786,277
21Madagascar (2008)71,752,220
22Lesotho (2008)63,062,532
23Gabon (2008)54,070,216
24Malawi (1978)51,318,823
25Eritrea (2007)38,851,492
26Comoros (2005)18,142,352
27Liberia (2007)17,888,912
28Seychelles (1985)7,835,354
29Somalia (1990)3,824,754
30Sao Tome and Principe (2005)2,489,203
31Cape Verde (1991)2,282,657
32Mauritania (2005)0
33Guinea (2008)0
34Sudan (2008)0
35Uganda (1996)0
Country Comparison Graph