Kuwait Times

Nigerian economy shrinks by 0.5%

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Nigeria’s economy contracted for a fifth straight quarter, official figures showed yeterday, as low oil production dented overall output. Gross domestic product shrank by 0.5 percent in the first three months of 2017, an improvemen­t from a 1.7 percent fall in the last quarter of 2016, said Nigeria’s National Bureau of Statistics. Despite an encouragin­g pick-up of momentum in the non-oil sector, the latest reading disappoint­ed expectatio­ns of a modest recovery and an exit out of a debilitati­ng recession. “It’s worse than what we’d expected,” said John Ashbourne, Africa economist at London-based Capital Economics. “But if you remove oil, non-oil GDP increased. Manufactur­ing picked up and constructi­on picked up,” Ashbourne said, “it’s a pretty positive set of figures in the sense that the contractio­n is easing.”

As a result of attacks on oil and gas infrastruc­ture in the oil-producing swamplands, last year production fell to a low of 1.4 million barrels per day (bpd) and Nigeria’s growth contracted by 1.5 percent. “The numbers still show a contractio­n, although at least the hemorrhage has stopped,” said Cheta Nwanze, research head at SBM Intelligen­ce, a Lagos-based advisory firm, “I’m cautious because we are growing too slowly.” Growth is likely to pick up in the next quarter if there are no new attacks on oil and gas infrastruc­ture. Economists say a new government policy increasing the availabili­ty of foreign exchange is already yielding positive results. “Given the weak base, double-digit oil sector growth is possible going forward, even given compliance with OPEC oil production cuts which may take effect following this week’s meeting,” said Razia Khan, Africa economist at Standard Chartered Bank. — AFP

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