The International Monetary Fund
(IMF) has projected a shrink of 4.1 per cent in Nigeria’s economy down from the
earlier projection of 2.7 per cent, to berth at a negative growth rate average
of -1.8 per cent.
Effectively, what the
current updated global economic growth rate outlook released yesterday means is
that Nigeria’s economy will be in full recession this year.
According to the IMF, which
is the global economic policy advisory establishment, the new outlook also cuts
Nigeria’s 2017 growth projection from the earlier 1.1 per cent to -2.4 per
cent.
The new economic outlook is
against the backdrop of the risk of the recent exit from the European Union by
Britain.
Concerning the sub-Saharan
African commodities-reliant countries, the IMF said: “The outlook for other
emerging and developing economies remains diverse and broadly unchanged
relative to April. That said, gains in the emerging group are matched by losses
in low-income economies. Indeed, low-income countries saw a large downward
revision in 2016, in large part driven by the economic contraction in Nigeria
and also worsened outlook in South Africa, Angola and Gabon. “
On Monday, Nigeria’s
National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) released the June 2016 figures which
revealed that the country recorded another negative growth result with
inflation moving from 15.6 per cent the previous month to an 11-year high of
16.5 per cent, the increase being the fifth in the current fiscal year.
Meanwhile, there are fresh
revelations that from the third quarter of last year, the Federal Government’s
budgetary capital spending had declined, the worst in four years spanning 2012
to last year.
The consolidated 2015
Federal Government Budget Implementation Report just released by the Federal
Ministry of Budget and National Planning revealed that both provisional
allocation and implementation levels have dropped from a height of N1.004
trillion capital votes releases and actual implementation of N968.93 billion
recorded in 2013 to just N387.39 billion releases with no information on the
amount of cash backing or actual implementation in the 2015 fiscal plan out of
the N557 billion provision for the year.
In the 2012 fiscal plan,
N1.017 trillion out of the N1.339 trillion projected for capital budget
implementation for the year was released to MDAs out of which N739.3 billion
(or 72.66 per cent) was cash-backed while N686.3 billion (or 92.83 per cent) of
the cash-backed sum was utilized by the government agencies.
No comments:
Post a Comment