There is stagflation in Nigeria. From a high inflation rate, joblessness to low per capita income, data show that Africa’s largest economy may be worse off now than it was during the recession.
After contracting by 1.92 percent in 2020, its second annual contraction since 2016, Nigeria’s economy managed to limp out of recession in the fourth quarter of 2020 after it expanded by 0.11 percent.
The economy of Africa’s biggest oil producer grew by a paltry 0.51 percent in the three months through March from a year earlier, a slow recovery rate that remains too slow to create sufficient opportunities for a rapidly rising population.
“The resilience of the Nigerian economy is being severely tested by the ongoing insecurity and related uncertainty,” Adebajo, said.
According to him, Nigeria’s economic woes has also been exacerbated by a lack of economic leadership.
While the impact of COVID-19 is easily blamed for the recent economic woes in Nigeria, an evaluation of the country’s macro-economic indicators before the pandemic exposes how the pandemic only made what was already a bad situation worse.
Long before the pandemic started spreading across the globe late last year; Nigeria’s economy had been gasping for breath for five years.
Economic growth in Africa’s most populous nation averaged 1.2 percent between 2015 and 2019. The problem with that is the population grew two times faster at an average of 2.6 percent per year.
Those five years were a painful squeeze for Nigerians who grew progressively poorer, as economic growth was too slow to lift many out of poverty. According to analysts, it is safe to say that COVID-19 made an already bad situation worse.
Nigeria retains a long list of economic reforms that can unlock economic growth and reduce poverty but have been stuck. Decrepit infrastructure and the lack of a functional rail system means Apapa, which houses Nigeria’s main post, remains a crying shame.
When transporting imported goods from the warehouse in Nigeria’s busiest seaport, businesses spend an average cost of $2,050, according to a research firm, SBM Intelligence. This is nearly ten times the $208 it cost to transport containers from Durban Harbour to the South African warehouse. In Ghana, it cost $285 to transport containers to a local warehouse.
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