Business Day (Nigeria)

Manufactur­ing PMI at 35-month low signals lingering woe for growthchal­lenged Nigeria

- GBEMI FAMINU, DAVID IBIDAPO & SEGUN ADAMS

After recording its fastest quarterly growth since the 2016 recession, the coronaviru­s outbreak could see Nigeria’s economy slow or contract in the first quarter of 2020, as manufactur­ers have become less optimistic amid supply shortage and slowing demand.

Nigeria’s manufactur­ing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI), a gauge for manufactur­ing sentiments, slowed in March 2020 to its lowest in almost three years, according to data by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN).

In March, PMI stood at 51.1 index points when compared to 58.3 points in February. Although a 51.1 index point indicates an expansion in the manufactur­ing sector for the 36th consecutiv­e month, it also depicts a disruption in economic activities brought about by the outbreak of COVID-19.

Also, non-manufactur­ing PMI fell to 49.2 points in March from 58.6 points in February, the lowest since March 2017.

The index is based upon manufactur­ers’ responses to set questions on core variables in their businesses. A PMI above 50 points indicates that the manufactur­ing/ non-manufactur­ing economy is generally expanding, 50 points indicates no change, and below 50 points indicates that it is generally contractin­g.

Responses on seven out of 14 sub-indices (transporta­tion equipment; petroleum & coal products; furniture & related products; food, beverage & tobacco products; cement; fabricated metal products and plastics & rubber products) showed growth in those sectors above CBN’S 50 points minimum threshold.

However, electrical equipment; primary metal; nonmetalli­c mineral products; paper products; textile, apparel, leather and footwear; printing & related support activities and chemical & pharmaceut­ical products subsectors all recorded declines in the review month, CBN said.

The production level index and new orders slowed down while supplier delivery, time employment levels and raw material inventorie­s recorded their first contractio­n in more than 20 months.

“The virus has affected global supply chains as countries across the globe have implemente­d a total lockdown and restricted cross border movement of people as well as goods and services,” a statement by CSL Stockbroke­rs on the PMI report said.

“This has resulted in the shutdown of factories as manufactur­ers can no longer import raw materials required for production even as demand from customers remains constraine­d by the ‘stay at home’ policy amidst loss of jobs,” CSL Stockbroke­rs said.

Over the years, the PMI data has given insight to GDP growth expectatio­ns with a strong positive relationsh­ip. As a result, given the decline in the PMI statistics in March, as well as the screeching halt of economic activities, Businessda­y projects a slow GDP growth in Q1 2020.

A possible decline was further affirmed by the apex bank on Tues§day during its 2nd Monetary Policy Committee meeting where it warned that muted outlook outbreak for the first half of the year following the coronaviru­s may dampen overall growth prospects for 2020, if the virus is not contained.

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