Nigeria,
Africa's top economy, has been battered by low oil prices hammering government
revenues ©Pius Utomi Ekpei (AFP)
|
According to official figures, the US$647.1 million worth of capital imported into Nigeria in the second quarter represented a "fall of 75.73%" compared to 2015. |
Nigeria’s economy
nosedived into a recession official data revealed Wednesday with oil production
hammered by militant attacks on pipelines and foreign investment at a “record”
low.
AFP
report continues:
Output
in the three months to the end of June was -2.06 percent with the oil sector
reporting a double-digit decline following a wave of attacks by rebels in the
oil-producing south.
The
slowdown was recorded across many sectors in a sign that Africa's largest
economy is wrestling with deeper structural issues than just the low price of
crude.
Foreign
investors, wary of the Nigerian government's controversial currency peg,
avoided putting money into the country leading to a "record" decline
in capital importation, reported Nigeria's National Bureau of Statistics.
The US$647.1 million worth of capital imported into Nigeria in the second quarter
represented a "fall of 75.73 per cent" compared to 2015.
"This
provisional figure would be the lowest level of capital imported into the
economy on record, and would also represent the largest year on year
decrease," said the statistics agency.
"There
was considerable uncertainty surrounding future exchange rate policy which may
have deterred investors," added the statistics agency.
Nigerian
President Muhammadu Buhari's government finally devalued the naira in June
after upholding the currency peg for months, yet experts say the negative
impact of the controversial monetary policy will still be felt in months to
come.
"It's
really, really grim," John Ashbourne, Africa economist at research firm
Capital Economics, told AFP.
"I
think people underestimated the degree to which the oil sector would
contract," said Ashbourne, speaking from London.
"Investors
want to see some direction from Buhari, there is a sense that the policies they
have implemented so far aren't working," Ashbourne said.
"Nigeria
is very dependent on foreign investment to improve the infrastructure and get
the economy back on track, we need investor confidence," he said,
"people are staying away because they don't have any faith that things are
turning around."
This
year Nigeria's Gross Domestic Product could contract by 1.8 per cent, according
to the International Monetary Fund.
Nigeria’s Current
Economy Worst In 29 Years – NBS
Daily
Post Nigeria reports that the Gross Domestic Product, GDP, report from the
National Bureau of Statistics, NBS, says Nigeria is in its worst economic
recession in 29 years.
The
report is claiming that Nigeria’s economy in the second quarter of 2016, shrank
by 2.06 percent to record its lowest growth rate in almost 30 years.
According
to a statement on its website, NBS said Nigeria’s economy in the first quarter
of 2016, contrasted by 0.36 percent to hit its lowest point in 25 years.
The
statement reads partly, “In the Second Quarter of 2016, the nation’s Gross
Domestic Product (GDP) declined by -2.06% (year-on-year) in real terms. This
was lower by 1.70% points from the growth rate of –0.36% recorded in the
preceding quarter, and also lower by 4.41% points from the growth rate of 2.35%
recorded in the corresponding quarter of 2015.
“Quarter on quarter, real GDP increased by 0.82% During the quarter, nominal GDP was ₦23,483,954.78 million (in nominal terms) at basic prices. This was 2.73% higher than the Second Quarter 2015 value of ₦22,859,153.01 million. This growth was lower than the rate recorded in the Second Quarter of 2015 by 2.44% points.”
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