Nigeria’s people are getting poorer despite the
country’s slow recovery from recession and economic reforms are urgently
needed, the International Monetary Fund has said.
The Fund expects the government to “muddle
through” in the medium term, and any progress could also be threatened if
elections next year consume political energy and resources, it said in a report
seen by Reuters on Wednesday.
Since emerging from recession in the second
quarter of 2017, Nigerian officials have repeatedly boasted that they have set
the economy back on track.
But critics say much of the recovery comes from a
return to oil dependence after a rise in global oil prices and a rebound in
crude production, more the result of militants in the Niger Delta halting
attacks on oil facilities than of economic policy under President Muhammadu
Buhari’s administration.
The IMF said in the report that the outlook for
growth had improved but remained challenging.
“Comprehensive and coherent” economic policies
“remain urgent and must not be delayed by approaching elections and recovering
oil prices,” it stated in its annual Article IV review of Nigeria’s economy.
“Higher oil prices would support a recovery in
2018 but a ‘muddle-through’ outlook is projected for the medium term under
current policies, with fiscal dominance and structural constraints leading to
continuing falls in real GDP per capital,” the IMF added.
In the report, it identified risks to growth,
including additional delays to implementing policies and reforms ahead of the
2019 elections, security tensions, and oil prices, a fall in which could see
capital flows reversed.
“Further delays in policy action, including
because of pre-election pressures, can only make the inevitable adjustment more
difficult and costlier,” the report added.
The lender repeated its call for Nigeria to
simplify its complex foreign exchange system, a bugbear for the IMF for more
than a year, which has left large gaps between official rates and various
windows that certain groups can use to get other rates.
“Moving towards a unified exchange rate should be
pursued as soon as possible. The IMF staff does not support the exchange
measures that have given rise to the exchange restrictions and multiple
currency practices,” it stated.
The Fund further singled out the central bank,
saying it should discontinue direct interventions in the economy.
The Central Bank of Nigeria frequently injects
hundreds of millions of dollars into the foreign exchange market to keep its own
rates stable.
Commercial banks struggling to remain solvent
were also called out, but not identified by the IMF, including one that the
lender said was already insolvent, adding, “Some of these banks are kept afloat
through continuous recourse to the CBN’s lending facilities.”
The IMF said it would not comment on purported
leaks. A spokeswoman for the Fund said a statement would be issued after the
lender’s board’s meeting to discuss its assessment on Friday.
A spokeswoman for the Federal Ministry of Finance
did not immediately respond to a phone call and email requesting comment.
Post A Comment: