Value added, banking (current LCU) - 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 local currency. Source: World Bank national accounts data, and OECD National Accounts data files.
Value added, banking (current LCU) - National accounts - Basic Inds. and Nat. Accts - African Development Indicators (Most Recent Data)

Rank

Country

Value

1Zambia (2006)1,847,699,963,907
2Tanzania (2006)588,374,000,000
3South Africa (2008)425,149,119,716
4Senegal (2008)180,351,014,117
5Sierra Leone (2003)168,547,000,000
6Madagascar (2008)129,039,192,500
7Kenya (2008)126,806,711,501
8Burkina Faso (2006)47,020,347,392
9Morocco (2007)36,444,000,000
10Sao Tome and Principe (2005)26,281,000,000
11Gabon (2008)24,213,183,588
12Mauritius (2008)23,214,141,474
13Egypt (2001)19,833,000,000
14Djibouti (2006)15,963,300,000
15Mozambique (2007)9,356,121,041
16Botswana (2008)8,057,704,161
17Somalia (1990)7,252,000,768
18Comoros (2005)7,177,132,600
19Ethiopia (2008)4,327,333,730
20Namibia (2008)2,389,154,218
21Liberia (2007)1,096,093,040
22Swaziland (2008)620,223,797
23Eritrea (2007)597,341,682
24Lesotho (2008)521,684,794
25Cape Verde (1991)163,000,000
26Seychelles (1985)55,900,000
27Malawi (1978)43,300,000
28Ghana (1990)7,842,100
29Democratic Republic of the Congo (1989)0.1
30Mauritania (2005)0
31Guinea (2008)0
32Sudan (2008)0
33Uganda (1996)0
Country Comparison Graph