Macroeconomic Risk Management in Nigeria : Dealing with External Shocks
The Nigerian economy is highly dependent on a number of external variables beyond the control of policymakers and domestic agents. Most important among those variables is the price of oil, which is highly uncertain and determined in fluctuating int...
Main Authors: | , , , , |
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Format: | Brief |
Language: | English |
Published: |
World Bank, Washington, DC
2012
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/1995/01/1615054/macroeconomic-risk-management-nigeria-dealing-external-shocks http://hdl.handle.net/10986/10003 |
Summary: | The Nigerian economy is highly dependent
on a number of external variables beyond the control of
policymakers and domestic agents. Most important among those
variables is the price of oil, which is highly uncertain and
determined in fluctuating international markets. With oil
accounting for more than 90 percent of Nigeria's
exports, 25 percent of its GDP, and 80 percent of its public
revenue, a fairly small price change can have a significant
impact. Largely because of changing oil prices, total
exports value increased tremendously between 1972 and 1980,
and then dueto a drop in world oil prices Nigerian exports
value dropped back to near 1972 levels in 1986. Clearly this
reliance on oil production for income generation has serious
implications for its economic policy management. At present,
Nigeria faces serious economic problems. To return to a path
of sustainable growth and of poverty reduction, the country
must address a number of critical issues, including
promoting fiscal transparency and fiscal discipline, and
returning to market-determined exchange and interest rates.
But managing the exposure to oil revenues and external debt
will also be important in establishing the foundations for
the sustainability of such policies, once they are adopted. |
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