World Bank Downgrades Nigeria’s Economic Growth Projection

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Nigeria’s economy has once again been downgraded by the World Bank Group, largely due to a weak oil sector.

A report published by the World Bank on Tuesday contained this information.

Nigeria’s economy is expected to continue decelerating to 2.9 percent in 2023 and not grow at all in 2024, according to the projection.

It said Nigeria’s growth slowed to 3.1% in 2022 and would further decelerate to 2.9% this year.

The Washington-based bank said growth momentum in the non-oil sector was likely to be restrained by continued weakness in the oil sector, which would negatively impact Nigeria’s oil-based economy.

The Bank noted that a number of factors, such as low oil output, insecurity, petrol subsidies, forex scarcity, among others, hamper growth in the country.

“A strong recovery in non-oil sectors moderated in the second half of the year as floods and surging consumer prices (annual inflation surpassed 21 per cent for the first time in 17 years) disrupted activity and depressed consumer demand. Persistent fuel and foreign exchange shortages, with the naira depreciating by over 30 per cent last year in the parallel market, further dampened economic activity.”

The bank further noted that the poor economic growth of 2.9 per cent in 2023, will be barely above population growth, which is often said to be around 2.5 per cent in previous reports.

The latest projection came barely three weeks after the bank lowered its economic projection for Nigeria’s economic growth from 3.8 percent to 3.1 percent.

The report, which was prepared by the World Bank’s Nigeria Development Update, had said that Nigeria’s economy needs to grow faster to reduce poverty.

The report noted that inflation had surged to 21.1 percent in October 2022, pushing as many as five million more Nigerians into poverty since the start of 2022.

It further stated that despite higher oil export revenues, official reserves have fallen, and the currency market is severely distorted, undermining the business environment and investment.

It warned that the weaknesses in the macroeconomic policy framework are suppressing growth and making Nigeria more vulnerable to shocks.

“Nigeria has a choice to implement critical macroeconomic and structural reforms that can reduce crisis vulnerabilities and increase growth. Doing so will lift per-capita incomes, sustainably reduce poverty and deliver better life outcomes for many Nigerians.

“Urgent business-unusual choices are needed to avoid a scenario in which up to 80 million working-age Nigerians do not have a full-time job by 2030 and up to 23 million more Nigerians could be living in extreme poverty,” said Shubham Chaudhuri, World Bank Country Director for Nigeria.

Alex Sienaert, World Bank Lead Economist for Nigeria and co-author of the Report noted that if Nigeria chooses to make reforms that stabilize its macro-fiscal policy settings and support investment, this would be transformative for 80 million poor Nigerians, for Nigeria as a whole, and for Africa.

 

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