World Bank: Nigeria Faces Fragile Economic Recovery in 2017

By Adedayo Akinwale in Abuja

The World Bank has revealed that Nigeria faces the prospect of fragile economic recovery in 2017 given the high degree of fragility and risks from future shocks to the oil price or further unrest in the Niger Delta region.

 The World Bank’s in its newly-released Bi-annual Economic Update, however, said Nigeria could build on the oil-driven economic recovery anticipated for it in 2017 by strengthening its macroeconomic policy framework and implementing the structural reforms needed to diversify the economy and break out of a boom and bust cycle. The bank’s Senior Communication Officer in Nigeria, Olufunke Olufon, disclosed this in a statement issued yesterday in Abuja.

It added that in 2016, Nigeria 

experienced its first full-year recession in 25 years, with global oil prices reached a 13-year low and oil production was crushed by vandalism and militant attacks in the Niger Delta, resulting in the severe contraction of oil GDP. 

The economic update highlighted that although the oil sector represented only 8.4 per cent of GDP in 2016, lower foreign exchange earnings from oil exports had spillover effects on non-oil sectors -industry and services -dependent on imports of inputs and raw materials, and overall real GDP contracted by 1.5 per cent.

 “On the upside, as the update highlights, the Nigerian government has recently launched an Economic Recovery and Growth Plan (ERGP) for 2017–2020 that contains critical reforms aimed at diversifying the economy to set it on a path toward sustained and inclusive growth over the medium- to long-term.

“The ERGP, if implemented successfully, would lead to expanded transportation infrastructure, the increased reliability of supply of power by restoring financial viability to the power sector, an improved business environment, improved educational attainment, strengthened public institutions, and improved transparency and anti-corruption,” it stated.

The economic update added that growth was forecast to return into positive territory in 2017, largely on the back of recovery in the oil sector as the government intensifies efforts to restore peace and stability in the Niger Delta, improve its Joint Venture (JV) relationships with international oil companies, while strong growth in the agricultural sector continues.

“However, given the risks associated with the oil sector, recovery is fraught with a high degree of fragility and risks; notably from future shocks to the oil price or further unrest in the Niger Delta, which is not yet fully stabilized, as well as from the incomplete implementation of new JV cash call arrangements,” it said.

The statement revealed further  that  economic update also contains a special chapter which summarises the findings of a forthcoming World Bank report, ‘Toward Sustainable Growth in Nigeria: Empirical Analysis and Policy Options’ which highlights that over the last four decades, Nigeria’s GDP growth rate has failed to keep pace with those of more developed economies, an experience common among commodity exporters.

“Oil has continued to dominate its growth pattern but the volatility of oil-dependent growth imposes welfare costs, which impede progress in social and economic development, as was very clear over the last year.”

World Bank emphasised that a cross-country analysis of the determinants of growth carried out for the report underscores the importance of sound macroeconomic management and stability for growth, while confirming that inflation, government consumption, and currency misalignment or over valuation are negatively correlated with growth.

It said oil and other natural resource rents can have a positive impact on growth when public institutions and governance are strong. 

The economic update also revealed that an analysis of the constraints to doing business and the impact of current trade policies highlights the need to improve access to finance, improve the reliability of power supply, and adjust trade policies to promote productivity growth.

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