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recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-105922021-04-23T14:02:51Z Nigeria - Country Assistance Evaluation World Bank ANTICORRUPTION CIVIL SERVICE CONFIDENCE CORRUPT CORRUPTION DEBT DEBT RELIEF DEMOCRACY ECONOMIC AND FINANCIAL CRIMES COMMISSION ECONOMIC REFORM FEDERAL GOVERNMENT FINANCIAL CRIMES FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT GENERATORS GOVERNMENT OFFICIALS INCOME INDIVIDUALS INFLATION INITIATIVE INSTITUTIONAL DEVELOPMENT INSTITUTIONAL REFORMS INSTITUTIONAL STRUCTURE LEADERSHIP LIMITED LOCAL GOVERNMENT LOCAL GOVERNMENTS MACROECONOMIC STABILITY MANAGERS MILITARY REGIME PARTNERSHIP POVERTY REDUCTION PRIVATIZATION PROCUREMENT PROGRAMS REDUCING POVERTY SERVICE DELIVERY SEVERANCE PAYMENTS SOCIAL INDICATORS SOCIAL SERVICES STATE GOVERNMENTS TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE TRANSPARENCY TRANSPORT The period from July 1, 1998 to June 30, 2007 (World Bank fiscal years 99-07) saw a substantial improvement in Nigeria's economic performance and outlook relative to the previous two decades, during which, notwithstanding the expanding production of oil and gas, Nigeria's social indicators deteriorated steadily and the country acquired among the worst reputations for corruption and poor governance. During its second term, the Obasanjo administration built on some actions taken previously to stabilize the economy, created an oil surplus account to prevent the fiscal instability of the earlier period, took significant steps to improve public financial management, put in place important new initiatives on corruption and transparency, and continued the privatization program. During this period, the Bank provided important assistance to the government of Nigeria. In spite of the relatively small weight of the Bank's financial contribution given Nigeria's earnings from oil, the Bank carried a great deal of weight as a source of objective advice and as a means of influencing perceptions of Nigeria in the international community. During the period to mid-2003, however, the Bank had some difficulty in determining the role it should play. A large number of lending operations were started, often without the base of local knowledge needed for success. At the same time, the Bank was slow to invest in analytic work. With the reform team providing clear Nigerian leadership in the second term of President Obasanjo, the Bank adapted its program in many areas to provide effective support. The Bank is well placed to continue to make an important contribution to Nigeria's economic and social progress. For this to occur, it is important that the Nigerian government take all necessary steps to ensure policy continuity as well as to extend and deepen the reforms initiated over the evaluation period-this is of critical importance for the country's long-term economic success. 2012-08-13T12:14:35Z 2012-08-13T12:14:35Z 2008-09 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2008/09/12815470/nigeria-country-assistance-evaluation http://hdl.handle.net/10986/10592 English IEG Fast Track Brief CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank Washington, DC Publications & Research :: Brief Publications & Research
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic ANTICORRUPTION
CIVIL SERVICE
CONFIDENCE
CORRUPT
CORRUPTION
DEBT
DEBT RELIEF
DEMOCRACY
ECONOMIC AND FINANCIAL CRIMES COMMISSION
ECONOMIC REFORM
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT
FINANCIAL CRIMES
FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT
GENERATORS
GOVERNMENT OFFICIALS
INCOME
INDIVIDUALS
INFLATION
INITIATIVE
INSTITUTIONAL DEVELOPMENT
INSTITUTIONAL REFORMS
INSTITUTIONAL STRUCTURE
LEADERSHIP
LIMITED
LOCAL GOVERNMENT
LOCAL GOVERNMENTS
MACROECONOMIC STABILITY
MANAGERS
MILITARY REGIME
PARTNERSHIP
POVERTY REDUCTION
PRIVATIZATION
PROCUREMENT
PROGRAMS
REDUCING POVERTY
SERVICE DELIVERY
SEVERANCE PAYMENTS
SOCIAL INDICATORS
SOCIAL SERVICES
STATE GOVERNMENTS
TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE
TRANSPARENCY
TRANSPORT
spellingShingle ANTICORRUPTION
CIVIL SERVICE
CONFIDENCE
CORRUPT
CORRUPTION
DEBT
DEBT RELIEF
DEMOCRACY
ECONOMIC AND FINANCIAL CRIMES COMMISSION
ECONOMIC REFORM
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT
FINANCIAL CRIMES
FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT
GENERATORS
GOVERNMENT OFFICIALS
INCOME
INDIVIDUALS
INFLATION
INITIATIVE
INSTITUTIONAL DEVELOPMENT
INSTITUTIONAL REFORMS
INSTITUTIONAL STRUCTURE
LEADERSHIP
LIMITED
LOCAL GOVERNMENT
LOCAL GOVERNMENTS
MACROECONOMIC STABILITY
MANAGERS
MILITARY REGIME
PARTNERSHIP
POVERTY REDUCTION
PRIVATIZATION
PROCUREMENT
PROGRAMS
REDUCING POVERTY
SERVICE DELIVERY
SEVERANCE PAYMENTS
SOCIAL INDICATORS
SOCIAL SERVICES
STATE GOVERNMENTS
TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE
TRANSPARENCY
TRANSPORT
World Bank
Nigeria - Country Assistance Evaluation
relation IEG Fast Track Brief
description The period from July 1, 1998 to June 30, 2007 (World Bank fiscal years 99-07) saw a substantial improvement in Nigeria's economic performance and outlook relative to the previous two decades, during which, notwithstanding the expanding production of oil and gas, Nigeria's social indicators deteriorated steadily and the country acquired among the worst reputations for corruption and poor governance. During its second term, the Obasanjo administration built on some actions taken previously to stabilize the economy, created an oil surplus account to prevent the fiscal instability of the earlier period, took significant steps to improve public financial management, put in place important new initiatives on corruption and transparency, and continued the privatization program. During this period, the Bank provided important assistance to the government of Nigeria. In spite of the relatively small weight of the Bank's financial contribution given Nigeria's earnings from oil, the Bank carried a great deal of weight as a source of objective advice and as a means of influencing perceptions of Nigeria in the international community. During the period to mid-2003, however, the Bank had some difficulty in determining the role it should play. A large number of lending operations were started, often without the base of local knowledge needed for success. At the same time, the Bank was slow to invest in analytic work. With the reform team providing clear Nigerian leadership in the second term of President Obasanjo, the Bank adapted its program in many areas to provide effective support. The Bank is well placed to continue to make an important contribution to Nigeria's economic and social progress. For this to occur, it is important that the Nigerian government take all necessary steps to ensure policy continuity as well as to extend and deepen the reforms initiated over the evaluation period-this is of critical importance for the country's long-term economic success.
format Publications & Research :: Brief
author World Bank
author_facet World Bank
author_sort World Bank
title Nigeria - Country Assistance Evaluation
title_short Nigeria - Country Assistance Evaluation
title_full Nigeria - Country Assistance Evaluation
title_fullStr Nigeria - Country Assistance Evaluation
title_full_unstemmed Nigeria - Country Assistance Evaluation
title_sort nigeria - country assistance evaluation
publisher Washington, DC
publishDate 2012
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2008/09/12815470/nigeria-country-assistance-evaluation
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/10592
_version_ 1764413663980027904