Nigeria on paper is Africa's biggest economy but depends on oil sales for 70 percent of government revenue
Nigeria's finance minister on Thursday played down an International Monetary Fund forecast that the country's growth would shrink this year, seeking to allay fears of recession in Africa's top economy.
The
IMF said on Tuesday it expected Nigeria's economy to contract by 1.8
percent in 2016 after having forecast a 2.3-percent expansion in April.
But Kemi Adeosun said she was "not too worried"
about the prediction, as the world body monitors global trends and had
also warned about the impact of Britain's vote to leave the European
Union.
"I don't think we should panic. I think we need to be confident around what we are doing and where we are going," she told a Senate committee hearing in Abuja.
"I
remain extremely confident about Nigeria. The IMF has given their
projection, which is that we may continue into negative territory. I'm
not sure that what we are seeing suggests that."
- Recession? Technically -
Nigeria
-- on paper Africa's biggest economy -- depends on oil sales for 70
percent of government revenue but that has been slashed by low prices
worldwide in the last two years.
The situation has complicated the task for the government, which has complained of being left a "virtually empty" treasury by the previous administration and the theft of vast sums of public money.
It
has struggled to pay public sector wages, while the naira currency has
weakened, foreign exchange dried up and investment stalled.
The
National Bureau of Statistics said this week that inflation rose to
16.5 percent in June -- the highest for nearly 11 years -- with
predictions it could reach 20 percent by the end of the year.
The
central bank in May said recession was "imminent" after negative growth
in the first quarter of this year. Figures for the second quarter are
expected soon.
Asked whether Nigeria was already in recession, Adeosun replied: "Technically. If you go into two quarters of negative growth, technically you are in recession.
"But I don't think we should dwell on definition. I think we should really dwell on where we are going," she added, predicting any recession would be "very short".
"The policy that we have will ensure that we don't go below where we need to go," she told senators.
- Right direction -
Adeosun
said she was encouraged by agricultural output and that despite the
high headline inflation year-on-year, the rate had slowed
month-on-month.
"That tells you that things are moving in the right direction," she added.
Nigeria's
economic woes have been exacerbated by sabotage to oil and gas
facilities in the oil-producing south by militants wanting
self-determination for the delta region.
That and the forex shortage has hit fuel supplies, driving up costs of imported petrol, diesel and electricity.
But
Adeosun said the government decision in May to effectively abandon the
fuel subsidy on petrol, which saw prices go up 67 percent per litre, had
helped cut government expenditure.
"If you
look at what happened in the petroleum sector, before, we were
subsidising around 45 million litres of fuel per day and now without
subsidy, it has dropped to 26 million litres," she said.
"That
tells you that all the smuggling that was going out of the country
based on the subsidy that we were providing has stopped.
"These
are real savings to the economy which we are now re-directing into the
essential infrastructure that will keep the economy going."
Nigeria's Finance minister plays down recession fears
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