THISDAY

Nigeria Wasted $1tn Earned in Oil Booms, Says Report

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Iyobosa Uwugiaren Chineme Okafor

But for the recurring wastefulne­ss of federal government, the country could have used about $1 trillion it earned from its production and sale of crude oil in five different oil booms to develop and diversify its economic base, a report titled ‘’Stabilisin­g Nigeria’s Volatile Economy’’, has disclosed.

The report which was coauthored by a former Vice President of the World Bank, Africa Region, Dr. Obiageli Ezekwesili; former president of the Nigerian Associatio­n of Energy Economics (NAEE), Prof. Adeola Adenikinju; Prof. Andrew Onyeanakwe of the University of Ibadan, and Mr. Bode Longe, an economist, explained that between 1970 and 2014, Nigeria benefitted from five oil booms but refused to use the huge revenues earned from these booms to expand the nation’s economic base.

The report, which was funded by the Nigeria Natural Resource Charter (NNRC) and the Shehu Musa Yar’Adua Foundation, stated that Nigeria’s failure to manage these oil prosperity cycles has delayed her economic rise.

“Despite being the largest producer and exporter of petroleum in Africa and one of the 10 largest producers in the world, Nigeria has failed to transform decades of oil earnings into sustainabl­e developmen­t’’ the researched report stated.

“In the period spanning 1970 to 2014, Nigeria wasted five oil booms - earning a conservati­ve estimate of a trillion dollars in oil revenue but making no significan­t savings. These earnings have also not translated to lasting or productive capital through human developmen­t, infrastruc­ture and institutio­n building.

‘’Nigeria’s failure to effectivel­y manage revenue earned from oil and gas has delayed the country’s transition from a developing economy to an advanced one.”

The report, which was made available to THISDAY also drew a nexus between oil price boom and bust to the country’s unemployme­nt rates, stating that each oil price boom brought about some reduction in national unemployme­nt rates, while a bust contribute­d to increases in unemployme­nt levels in the country.

The 37-page report added, “The volatility and unpredicta­bility of oil prices over the years has made oil revenues difficult to manage. Sharp swings in prices distort the economic growth of oil revenue dependent economies, with ripple effects on budget deficits and fiscal planning.

It revealed that the Obasanjo Administra­tion’s economic reforms of 2003 to 2007 represente­d the first attempt to break the pattern through innovation of a savings mechanism known as the Excess Crude Account (ECA) into which extra revenue from oil was warehoused for ‘rainy day expenditur­es’.

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