Nigeria should act urgently to
develop policies to enhance its
economic recovery, the International
Monetary Fund has said.
Following a visit by fund officials, it said
the country’s economic backdrop
“remains challenging”.
Amine Mati, IMF senior resident
representative and mission chief for
Nigeria, said:
“Economic activity
contracted in the first quarter of the year
by 0.6%, mainly as maintenance
stoppages reduced oil production.
“However, following four quarters of
negative growth, the non-oil economy
grew by 0.6% on the back of a rebound in
manufacturing and
continued strong performance in
agriculture.”
He warned that preliminary data indicated
significant revenue shortfalls for the first
half of this year, with the interest-
payments-to-revenue ratio remaining high
at 40% and projected to increase further.
High domestic bond yields and tight
liquidity continued to crowd out private
sector credit.
Mati said: “Faced with these challenges,
the government has started implementing
[an]
economic recovery and growth
plan…however, near-term vulnerabilities
and risks to economic recovery and
macroeconomic and financial stability
remain elevated.”
Growth of 0.8% this year would be
insufficient to make a dent in reducing
unemployment and poverty, he added.
Mati concluded: “Acting on an appropriate
and coherent set of policies to enhance an
economic recovery remains urgent.”
develop policies to enhance its
economic recovery, the International
Monetary Fund has said.
Following a visit by fund officials, it said
the country’s economic backdrop
“remains challenging”.
Amine Mati, IMF senior resident
representative and mission chief for
Nigeria, said:
“Economic activity
contracted in the first quarter of the year
by 0.6%, mainly as maintenance
stoppages reduced oil production.
“However, following four quarters of
negative growth, the non-oil economy
grew by 0.6% on the back of a rebound in
manufacturing and
continued strong performance in
agriculture.”
He warned that preliminary data indicated
significant revenue shortfalls for the first
half of this year, with the interest-
payments-to-revenue ratio remaining high
at 40% and projected to increase further.
High domestic bond yields and tight
liquidity continued to crowd out private
sector credit.
Mati said: “Faced with these challenges,
the government has started implementing
[an]
economic recovery and growth
plan…however, near-term vulnerabilities
and risks to economic recovery and
macroeconomic and financial stability
remain elevated.”
Growth of 0.8% this year would be
insufficient to make a dent in reducing
unemployment and poverty, he added.
Mati concluded: “Acting on an appropriate
and coherent set of policies to enhance an
economic recovery remains urgent.”
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