Business Day (Nigeria)

How insecurity cost Nigeria’s economy...

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of GDP in 2020, or $10.3 billion,” the PEAC said in a presentati­on to President Muhammadu Buhari.

The Doyin Salami-led advisory group, charged with the responsibi­lity of advising the President on economic policy matters, said conflicts and heightened insecurity reduce business confidence, manifested in declining foreign and domestic investment­s, deteriorat­ing financial sector performanc­e, higher fiscal cost, and security spending.

“Impacting on the efficiency of economic policy transmissi­on and creating a further fiscal burden of replacemen­t for government­s,” the advisory council said.

According to a document presented at the meeting, a copy of which was seen by Businessda­y, the council drew Buhari’s attention to a United Nations Developmen­t Programme (UNDP) study that estimates that Nigeria lost $141.9 billion of production to security-related violence.

“There are often widespread disruption and disorganis­ation of economic production as businesses and farms close down,” they said.

For most businesses operating in Nigeria, rising insecurity is now an additional risk for most of who are already exposed to regulatory inconsiste­ncy, foreign exchange volatility, and irregular fiscal and monetary policy.

The latest data from the Manufactur­ers Associatio­n of Nigeria (MAN) show that the utilisatio­n of local raw materials by manufactur­ers in the second half of 2020 declined to 56.5 percent as against 64 percent recorded in the correspond­ing half of 2019; thus, indicating a 7.5 percentage point decline over the period.

The country is also recording a decline in Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) as recent data on capital importatio­n by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) show that Nigeria received $9.68 billion from capital inflows in 2020, as against $23.99 billion in 2019.

According to the report, the inflows of $9.68 billion represent a 59.6 percent decline when compared with $23.99 billion recorded in 2019 and a 42.4 percent reduction compared with $16.81 billion recorded in 2018.

The amount imported is Nigeria’s lowest capital inflows in the past four years in 2020, as the last time the country recorded inflows less than $9 billion was 2016, when it received $5.12 billion in foreign capital inflows.

“Overall, Nigeria is becoming less safe each year,” SBM Intelligen­ce, an Africa-focused geopolitic­al firm, said.

In the past, the government has launched military operations involving the bombing of suspected hideouts to tackle banditry and rescue victims of kidnappers.

But since the kidnapping­s spiked in December, there have been no arrests or prosecutio­n. This lack of accountabi­lity, combined with the authoritie­s’ failure to step up security and intelligen­ce operations, contribute to a deep-rooted sense of mistrust among vulnerable citizens that put them at odds with the government, analysts say.

Nigerian President Buhari, who took office in 2015 on the back of promises to tackle insecurity, has also blamed local and state authoritie­s for the increase in mass abductions.

In a Twitter post, he said they must improve security around schools and warned the policy of “rewarding bandits with money and vehicles” could “backfire with disastrous consequenc­es.”

But his government has also come under fire. Experts say the members of the country’s security agencies are overstretc­hed, poorly paid, and underequip­ped, while the police forces are largely centralise­d and unable to handle internal security challenges.

According to the 2020 Global Terrorism Index, which gauges the degree and frequency of violence by terrorist groups across several countries, Nigeria was ranked third only after Iraq and Afghanista­n. Essentiall­y, Nigeria, Iraq, and Afghanista­n were described as being in a state of war.

The result of the insecuriti­es also means some 10.5 million children in Nigeria are not in school – one in every five of the world’s out-of-school children, according to the United Nations report.

 ??  ?? President Muhammadu Buhari (r) and Ketil Karlsen, outgoing ambassador/head of European Union to Nigeria and ECOWAS, during a farewell audience at the Presidenti­al Villa in Abuja, yesterday. NAN
President Muhammadu Buhari (r) and Ketil Karlsen, outgoing ambassador/head of European Union to Nigeria and ECOWAS, during a farewell audience at the Presidenti­al Villa in Abuja, yesterday. NAN

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