Christine Lagarde (IMF Chief) |
Despite assurance from the Federal Government that it has put measures in
place to reduce the effect of fall in crude oil prices on the economy, the
International Monetary Fund (IMF) has said that Nigeria remained vulnerable to
oil price volatility and global financial developments.
The IMF which admitted that the country has already taken measures to cushion
the effect of the crude oil price decline, however believed that fiscal and
external buffers are low and that there is less policy space for maneuvering,
compared to the onset of the 2008-09 financial crisis.
In its report tagged: “2014 Article IV Mission to Nigeria”, released
recently, IMF disclosed that the Excess Crude Account (ECA) in 2008 was $21 billion
compared to $3 billion now, while gross international reserves was $52 billion.
“Further, the exigencies of public financial management apply equally to all
tiers of government: although the focus has been on the response of the federal
government, lower oil receipts, low internal generated revenues, and a
constrained ability to reduce recurrent expenditure could have a significant
impact on delivery of social services by state and local governments, suggest
the need for robust risk management frameworks across all tiers of government”,
it added.
It stated that rebuilding buffers, especially the ECA, was a necessity for
addressing future shocks. “Capital outflows have continued and, with lower oil
receipts, have led to sustained pressure on the naira. The authorities have
reaffirmed their willingness to implement appropriate measures to manage risks.
The report noted that the longer-term challenge, however, is to successfully
put the economy on a path to lower oil-dependency and a diversified and
competitive investment-driven non-oil sector.
“In that regard, staff is supportive of the authorities’ ongoing efforts to
promote targeted and core infrastructure (in power, integrated transport
network, aviation); reduce business environment costs and encourage high
value-chain sectors (agriculture); promote employment of youth and female
populations, and advance human capital development (health and education).
“Given the developments in the oil markets, the authorities have embarked on
initiatives to diversify revenue sources, address the cost of governance (an
opportunity cost to capital and social investment), improve efficiency of
public sector service delivery, galvanize public financial management reforms,
and improve effective capacity at the state and local tiers of government.”
Also, they are mobilizing non-oil revenue by improving tax administration
(achieving almost double the target for 2014), and intend to undertake tax
reform and lower leakages (through a rationalization of waivers and exemptions).
It is important that these continue. Despite the outlook, Nigeria could
surmount its challenges, especially if a national spirit of burden sharing and
rebuilding together is actively embraced.
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