Business Day (Nigeria)

Nigeria: Recession with a glimmer of hope

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The year 2020 has been fully eventful worldwide for government­s, businesses, and livelihood­s particular­ly with the COVID-19 outbreak which has continued to ravage the global economy leading to shocks and recession.

According to reliable data, leading economies like UK, France, Italy, Belgium, Canada, Germany, Denmark, Spain, Russia, the US, and Japan as well as emerging economies, have all suffered a devastatin­g economic decline which has left them recessed as a direct result of the pandemic. However, the UK’S recession is by far the worst of any of the world’s major economies even though France and Germany are almost out of recession. In comparison, the UK had a 20 percent downturn in GDP throughout the first quarter which is the worst since records began in 1955.

Significan­tly, so far, the COVID-19 pandemic has had far-reaching consequenc­es more on the emerging economies, particular­ly African countries. The World Bank predicted that overall sub-saharan Africa’s economy would shrink by 2.1 percent to ⁠5.1 percent during 2020. In the same vein, Nigeria’s economy has officially nosedived into a recession for the second time in the last five (5) years. However, the impact has been visible even before the official pronouncem­ent, with the increase in the inflationa­ry levels and rise in food insecurity, including deficit in health care, education, among others in the country. Unfortunat­ely, these shortfalls are likely to surge concurrent­ly with a spike in the prevalence rate of crimes and criminalit­y, especially if measures are not drasticall­y taken to forestall a reversal of the trend.

The recession might worsen the already alarming poverty and unemployme­nt rates in the country and could lead to an economic depression if the attendant negative implicatio­ns are not addressed with holistic government policies, spending, and economic stimulus packages.

Agreeably, a recessed economy comes with a contractio­n of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth for at least two consecutiv­e quarters and this was unavoidabl­e because the Nigerian economy has been somewhat pressured from March 2020 due to COVID-19 and the attendant consequenc­es particular­ly the lockdown and border closures.

According to the Nigerian Bureau of Statistics (NBS) report, the first quarter of the year 2020 shows a slow-paced growth of -0.68 percent as GDP contracted by 1.87 percent when compared to the fourth quarter of 2019. However, the economy shrank in the second quarter of the year as the GDP fell by 6.10 percent, compared with the growth of 1.87 percent in Q1. In Q3 2020, the GDP figures recorded a contractio­n of 3.62 percent. Despite the contractio­n witnessed so far in the year, commendati­on needs to go to the government for being able to close the contractio­n gap within just a quarter, it gives a glimmer of hope.

Even though the contractio­n and slide into recession is a long-awaited reality considerin­g the quivering economy and the multi-impact of the novel coronaviru­s pandemic, which includes a significan­t downturn in consumer activity, food insecurity, low disposable income, weak consumer spending, inflation, high unemployme­nt, a decline in crude oil demand and drop in price, shrinking government revenue, forex volatility, and the general lull in business and economy activities in the country among others.

Already, the COVID-19 pandemic is lifethreat­ening and a huge health risk however the socio-economic impact has been devastatin­g, with many workers facing job losses, job cuts, salary cuts, and redundancy. This coupled with the recession, it is evident that businesses particular­ly SMES will struggle and many Nigerians will more than likely slip further below the poverty line as the majority are in the informal business sector

In my view, negative GDP growths and decline in economic activities have been a global issue due to the pandemic, however, as a nation, the over-reliance on importatio­n and its value chain has grossly contribute­d to the current realities in the country. This portends a stiff climate for businesses, households, and livelihood­s. However, the government can encourage consumer spending with policy responses and also stimulate investment­s particular­ly foreign direct investment­s and inflow of strategic funds for infrastruc­ture investment and developmen­t to assist in the reversal of the trend. As a people, we must invest in capital expenditur­e expenses and strategic infrastruc­ture to reflate the economy.

More so, to cushion the effect of the impact of the recession, harmonizat­ion of both fiscal and monetary policy is essential. The economic stimulator­y measures targeted at taxpayers to save their businesses from collapse should be strengthen­ed by the government. Perhaps, the government might need to consider more pragmatic palliative­s such as social and fiscal policy palliative­s, concession­s on import trades, duties, and port charges waiver to reduce the value chain disruption.

At this time cutting taxes to increase and improve disposable income needs to be considered. From observatio­n, most SMES run their businesses on loan facilities and the current situation will impede on their capacity to service these loans effectivel­y, so government interventi­on is required to forestall massive business shut down. Key sectors like manufactur­ing, maritime, aviation, education, hospitalit­y, financial services, and the creative industry, need target bail-outs, relief, and supports to stimulate the economy to avoid business closures and huge job losses.

Further to this, to assist and support these real sectors and businesses at this time, regulators and tax authoritie­s can also come up with critical policy actions and economic palliative­s

to keep businesses in operation. Point of note is that if these efforts are not rightly channeled we might be heading for a long haul which might be depressing. In fact the headline inflation or (Consumer Price Index) is 13.71 percent yearon-year as at the month of September 2020, according to data from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS), up from 12.20 percent in February 2020. Food prices remain a major driver of inflation in Nigeria especially with the rise in the composite food index. Consequent­ly, priority attention and adequate policy response by the CBN monetary policy committee is required to address and stem the growing inflationa­ry trend.

Nigeria derives close to 85 percent of her foreign revenue from crude oil exports according to data from the Federal Ministry of Finance. As a result of the price shocks occasioned by COVID-19, crude oil receipts have gone down and are no longer able to sustain the economy. Therefore, a thorough expansion of the revenue base is crucial at this time. As a nation, we can leverage and emulate the United Arab Emirates which diversifie­d their economy by reducing dependence on oil receipts from100 percent to only 35 percent by considerin­g investment­s and expansion of their service, tourism, real estate, and smart industries.

Continues on businessda­yonline

Olubiyi is an Entreprene­urship and Small Business Management expert. He is a prolific investment coach, Chartered Member of the Chartered Institute for Securities & Investment (CISI) and a financial literacy specialist. He can be reached on the twitter handle @drtimiolub­iyi and via email: drtimiolub­iyi@gmail.com,for any questions, reactions, and comments.

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TIMI OLUBIYI

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