November 6, 2020

Nigeria Economic Update (Issue 41)

President Muhammadu Buhari presented the Federal Government’s Proposal for the 2021 fiscal year before a joint sitting of the National Assembly. The proposed Revenue and Expenditure budgets are ₦7.89 trillion and ₦13.08 trillion respectively, representing a ₦5.20 trillion fiscal deficit.1 With an estimated Gross Domestic Product (GDP) of ₦1.43 trillion2, the fiscal deficit is 3.64 percent of estimated GDP, above the 3 percent threshold set by the Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2007. Key assumptions of the proposed budget include: $40 per barrel oil benchmark, crude oil production of 1.86 million barrel per day, an exchange rate of ₦379 per US$, GDP growth rate of 3 percent and inflation rate of 11.95 percent. The high fiscal deficit increases the likelihood of a default in the near term as the government is unlikely to considerably raise tax or cut back on government programmes. The overtly expansionary macroeconomic policies and explicitly unsustainable public debt dynamics calls for reforms capable of increasing the share of domestic savings to finance domestic capital stock rather than external debt.

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Africa Economic Update (Issue 6)

Available data shows that headline inflation reduced in most countries in the region in May 2017 relative to preceding months. Notably, headline inflation decreased in Nigeria (16.25 percent), Ghana (12.26 percent), Tanzania (6.1 percent), Senegal (1.8 percent), Namibia (6.3 percent) and Rwanda (11.7 percent), while it grew in South Africa (5.4 percent), Kenya (11.7 percent), Ethiopia (8.7 percent) and Uganda (7.2 percent). Cote dIvoire (-0.4 percent) recorded consumer price deflation. The decrease in consumer price in Nigeria, Tanzania and Ghana can be attributed to decreases in both food and non-food components of inflation. Regionally, all countries in Southern Africa recorded single digits inflation, however consumer price marginally increased in South Africa, for the first time in 2017 owing to spike in food prices6, and Botswana (both by 0.1 percent).