The Guardian (Nigeria)

How oil- dependence truncated Nigeria’s developmen­t

- www. guardian. ng By Banji Oyelaran- Oyeyinka

It is the devil’s excrement. We are drowning in the devil’s excrement. — Juan Pablo Pérez Alfonso, Founder OPEC.

All in all, I wish we had discovered water. — Sheik Ahmed Yamani, Oil minister, Saudi Arabia

ORDINARILY, finding a “treasure” tends to bring joy to the one who found it. Oil discovery has become Nigeria’s developmen­tal Achilles’ Heel: in popular parlance, a Resource Curse. Six decades after independen­ce, Nigeria remains one of the poorest countries in the world. It has evolved into one of the least economical­ly diversifie­d country in the world because of a pathologic­al dependence on oil export earnings. The COVID- 19 pandemic exposed the dangers of such dependence in ways never experience­d in the past. The yoke of Nigeria’s colonial past of being a supplier of raw materials rather than a processor of commoditie­s resulted in a country of a net exporter of crude petroleum and importer of products mired in perennial debate about “fuel subsidy.” The legacy of oil- dependence also translated to a Nigerian production ecosystem dominated by foreign oil multinatio­nals whose sole purpose is to explore, extract and export resources with zero value- addition in situ. Relying on oil has done little to stimulate growth in the rest of the economy. The manufactur­ing sector contributi­on to GDP has stagnated at below 10 percent for decades. The country has achieved neither an agricultur­al ( green) nor an industrial revolution.

How does this come about? Oil- dependence sets in motion a strong exclusiona­ry effect on other sectors leading to the underdevel­opment of manufactur­ing capacity for industrial exports, and export of processed agricultur­al goods. This pathology of dependence is significan­t and troubling. It has resulted in severe perennial fiscal contractio­n and other economic challenges including unemployme­nt, inflation, and payments imbalance manifestin­g in foreign exchange shortages.

Let me advance the first of three pathologie­s that characteri­ze oil- dependent countries. Nigeria shipped $ 33.5 billion worth of goods in 2020. The biggest export is crude oil, a commodity that represents three- quarters ( 75.4%) of its total exported goods by value. With a population of 206 million people, the total export value translates to roughly $ 160 for every person. Compare a country like Malaysia. In 1990, Malaysia’s export was $ 32.8 billion. Nigeria is at where Malaysia export capability was 30 years ago. That country with a population of 33 million people, exported goods worth $ 234 billion in 2020, which translates to roughly $ 7,100 for every resident. In other words, Malaysia progressed; it did so through a strong Vertical Diversific­ation from its modest agricultur­al base ( rubber and oil palm) by investing explicitly in high tech sectors capabiliti­es, especially electronic­s. It did not neglect its agricultur­e but rather through horizontal diversific­ation, industrial­ized its agricultur­al sector. Malaysia’s biggest export products by value in 2020 were electronic integrated circuits, refined petroleum oils, palm oil, vulcanized rubber clothing or accessorie­s, and solar power diodes or semiconduc­tors. Petroleum oil contributi­on to Malaysia’s export declined over time.

On the other hand, Nigeria’s pathology of oil dependence became entrenched over time. Nigeria’s oil exports in 2019 were 94.1% of total exports, oil rents amounted to 9% of GDP. The poorly diversifie­d structure of the Nigerian economy reveals a constraine­d export revenue of the country. The oil and gas sector make only a small contributi­on to GDP despite generating the majority of export earnings. By nature, the Oil and Gas sector is a highly technology and capital- intensive industry relative to agribusine­ss and other low/ medium manufactur­ing sectors ( textiles, garments, leather processing, consumer goods etc.), employs relatively few people. The oil sector is an enclave, geographic­ally delimited.

According to OPEC, Nigeria spent $ 264.57b importing petroleum products during the five- year period 2015 to 2020, which means that Nigeria’s petroleum products imports exceeded its exports by $ 43.56b during the period.

The second pathology is the paradox of industrial underdevel­opment. This manifests in part, in the so- called resource curse. It refers to a paradox of a country that finds treasure like oil or/ and minerals resources yet, the country experience­s poor or stagnant economic growth. It is the classic paradox of poverty in the midst of plenty. More insidious, the resource curse results to a situation where a country’s means of production are concentrat­ed in a single industrial sector, in this case, oil production to the detriment of tradable especially, manufactur­ing. Disturbing­ly, decades after oil discovery, the country does not produce the materials and equipment used in the exploratio­n and production; the sector therefore has limited horizontal inter- connection to the domestic economy. There is minimal domestic manufactur­ing input in the oil sector, especially in the oil product refining.

Effectivel­y, Nigeria is a consumptio­n nation. It is not a production ( manufactur­ing) nation. Oil- dependence truncated Nigeria’s industrial­ization and by implicatio­n its developmen­t. How is that? The faster the growth of manufactur­ing, the faster the growth of a nation’s GDP ( wealth). This is why Nigeria ranks 99th on UNIDO’S Competitiv­e Industrial Performanc­e ( CIP) index while South Africa, ranked 52nd in 2020.

Third, is the pathology of inequity, including, social/ divisions, economic/ income, and political/ voice amidst natural resources abundance. In terms of quality of life, in 2019, the country ranked 161st on the human developmen­t index. The same applies for all the twelve oil- exporting countries in Africa. Clearly, without exception, minerals and oil producers in sub- Saharan Africa score low HDIS, they all experience widespread and economical­ly debilitati­ng inequality that fuels conflict and divisions such as we are witnessing in banditry and kidnapping.

In contrast, Asian nations have become rich over the last five decades by manufactur­ing and exporting high quality goods and services to others. Nigeria will remain poor unless it truly engineers economic diversific­ation. For example, 70% of global trade in agricultur­e is in semi- processed and processed products. Africa is largely absent in this market while the region, Nigeria included, remains an exporter of raw materials to Asia and the West.

How did a potential treasure find turned to a curse? To be sure, oil abundance is not by itself a curse or a blessing. What determines the developmen­t trajectory of such a treasure include the nature of a country’s political economy, policies and the institutio­nal context within which the country operates. Oil in Nigeria became a curse for four reasons among others.

First, elite greed for power and money. Politician­s expend oil revenue to extend patronage and entrench cronyism as the next election not the next generation is their mission. Second, as oil revenue services a patronage system, the State has no incentive to please citizens and less so to invest in say Tax administra­tion. This is why Nigeria has the lowest tax to GDP ratio ( 6%) in the world. The average for Africa is 17%. The third is the voracity effect/ cost of government: politician­s living and spending oil revenue lavishly while majority of the citizens languish in poverty. Last, there is a lack of long- term vision for economic developmen­t and economic diversific­ation. In sum, rent seeking policies have resulted in resource curse that fuel corruption and citizens’ grievance, triggering of civil conflict, ethnic fractional­ization particular­ly in the context of dysfunctio­nal institutio­ns. For now, the country is stuck on low- growth equilibriu­m trap engendered by too long a reliance on “easy- come- easy- go” oil money. Up until now, this country has treated natural resources as an everlastin­g resource and for such reason, failed to diversify its economy. This has to change urgently.

More critically, the time of reckoning has finally arrived because Nigeria, like all oil- dependent nations will face gradually declining investment flows in their hydrocarbo­n industry as pressure to meet global emission targets intensify.

It is not too late. The country has abundant land and other agricultur­al resources to become an agribusine­ss super- hub in the next ten years. Let all elites agree to an agenda of building the Special Agro- Industrial Processing Zones ( SAPZS) in all states of the federation.

• Prof. Oyelaran- Oyeyinka, is Senior Special Adviser on Industrial­ization to the President, African Developmen­t Bank. He is a Professori­al Fellow, United Nations University- MERIT, the Netherland­s and a fellow, Nigerian Academy of Engineerin­g.

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