The
sharp fall in oil prices in the last seven months has resulted in a
28.05 per cent drop in Nigeria’s revenue. The country’s gross receipts
fell to a total of N3.676 trillion between July 2014 and January 2015,
figures compiled by ThisDay have shown.
This
represents a reduction by N1.433 trillion, compared to N5.109 trillion
gross federally collected revenue recorded by the Central Bank of
Nigeria (CBN) in its economic report for the first half of 2014.
Brent crude price which peaked at $115 a barrel in June last year,
declined to about $45 per barrel by January this year before rallying to
$60 per barrel last month.
Crude oil accounts form about 90
per cent of Nigeria’s export earnings and 70 per cent of total revenue.
As such, any drop in the price of oil has a significantly negative
impact on the Nigerian economy resulting from the revenue shortfall.
The Federation Account Allocation Committee (FAAC) report between July 2014 and January 2015 compiled by ThisDay
showed a decline in the country’s gross receipts, just as the net
distribution among the three tiers of government also slumped.
FAAC holds monthly meetings on the monthly distribution of revenue
accruing to the Federation Account to the federal, state and local
governments.
The figures revealed that while Nigeria’s gross
receipt in July 2014 was N630.3 billion and N601.6 billion in August
2014, it further dropped to N502 billion in September 2014, N536.6
billion in October, N500 billion in November 2014 and N490 billion in
December 2014. The country recorded further heavy decline in gross
receipts in January 2015, as revenue dipped to N416 billion.
On
the other hand, the net distribution shared by the federal, state and
local governments in the last seven months stood at a total of N4.172
trillion. A breakdown of this showed that in July 2014, a total of N654
billion was shared among the three tiers of government, N611.7 billion
was shared for August 2014, N603.5 billion for September 2014, N593.3
billion for October 2014, N628.7 billion for November 2014, N580.3
billion for December 2014 and N500.1 for January 2015.
A former Chairman of the Asset Management Division of Goldman Sachs Group, Dr. Jim O’Neill, in a recent interview with ThisDay,
had advised policy makers in Nigeria to use the opportunity of the drop
in crude oil prices to speedily diversify the economy.
According to O’Neill, the falling crude oil prices would test the flexibility of the Nigerian economy.
The renowned economist said: “In my opinion, for all oil producing
economies, it is important that as oil prices decline, they should
diversify and not just depend on oil prices.
“It is very
dangerous for oil producing countries to just depend on oil. In some
way, declining oil prices are an important test of Nigeria’s economic
resilience.”
Also, Senior Consultant/Chief Executive Officer,
RTC Advisory Services Limited, Mr. Opeyemi Agbaje, stressed the need for
the government to create policies and incentives that could promote
non-oil exports by Nigerian firms.
He pointed out that although
the current structure of Nigeria’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) shows
that the country has achieved significant diversification in terms of
local production and consumption, there is need for Nigeria to be
competitive in the area of non-oil exports of goods and services by the
private sector.
Agbaje cited the case of South Africa, whose
export revenue is driven largely by private sector firms such as MTN,
DSTV and South African Breweries, among others.
“The challenge
for the Nigerian economy is for government to create policies and
incentives that will allow our private sector to become exporters.
“If our export revenue was earned by thousands of Nigerian companies
exporting their services, we would not collapse anytime the price of oil
falls.
“We also need to start refining our oil domestically
and exporting it. We should be one of the biggest exporters of refined
petroleum products in the world.
“There are significant
opportunities in Nigeria. If you look at the structure of Nigeria’s GDP,
you will see that huge opportunities abound in Nigeria.
“In
terms of the structure of domestic production, we have done a good job
of diversification, but the problem is that in terms of the structure of
export and government revenue, we have not done enough,” he said.
Credit: Obinna Chima/James Emejo/ThisDay
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