Nigeria’s economy slips into recession
Nigeria's economy was last in recession in 2016, its first in more than two decades. While it emerged in 2017, growth since then has been sluggish.
Nigeria is struggling to cope with both an outbreak of coronavirus and plunging demand for its top export oil. AFP/File/Pierre FAVENNEC
Oil-rich Nigeria, Africa’s biggest economy, slipped into recession for the second time in four years, hit by both the coronavirus pandemic and falling oil prices, official figures revealed Saturday.
The third-quarter 2020 real GDP shrank for a second consecutive quarter by 3.62 percent, said the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) said Saturday.
“Cumulative GDP for the first 9 months of 2020 therefore stood at -2.48 percent,” it added.
The agency blamed falling oil prices and the effects of the coronavirus epidemic.
GDP related to oil shrank by 13.89 percent, compared to 6.63 in the second quarter, said the third-quarter report.
Non-oil GDP shrank 2.51 percent over the same period, compared to 6.05 percent in the second quarter.
Already in the second quarter, Nigeria’s economy contracted by six percent.
Nigeria’s economy was last in recession in 2016, its first in more than two decades. While it emerged in 2017, growth since then has been sluggish.
The International Monetary Fund has forecast a 5.4-percent drop in Nigeria’s GDP this year. The government has said the economy may shrink by as much as 8.9 percent.
Nigeria is Africa’s top oil producer, normally accounting for an average output of two million barrels per day. But the effects of the Covid-19 pandemic and low oil prices have cut production to around 1.4 million barrels.
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