IMF Ends Post-Financing Review with Nigeria

Washington, DC: On January 12, 2024, the Executive Board of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) concluded the Post Financing Assessment (PFA)[1]and endorsed the Staff Appraisal on a lapse-of-time basis.[2]Nigeria's capacity to repay the Fund is adequate.

President Tinubu has moved ahead with important structural reforms: removing fuel subsidies and unifying the various official foreign exchange windows. He appointed a Presidential Fiscal Policy and Tax Reforms Committee to make proposals for raising domestic revenue to support investments in infrastructure, health, and education. To ease the impact of rapidly rising inflation on living conditions, the government has released cereals from the grain reserve, provided subsidized fertilizer to farmers, capped retail fuel and electricity prices—thus partially reversing the fuel subsidy removal—implemented a civil service wage award, and suspended the VAT on diesel.

Nigeria exited the Covid-19 recession quickly, but growth, held back by the hydrocarbon economy, is barely keeping up with population dynamics. Low revenue collection hampers the provision of services and public investment. Security concerns persist in the northern part of the country, adversely affecting agriculture and food security. Latest estimates show 25 million (13 percent of the population) as food insecure. The poverty rate was 37 percent in 2022.

Growth is projected at 2.9 percent for 2023, and 3 percent in 2024, as hydrocarbon performance revives, including from better control of theft. If the authorities succeed in developing and implementing a comprehensive reform agenda, the medium-term outlook would be much improved. Headline inflation reached 27 percent year-on-year in October (food inflation 32 percent), reflecting fuel subsidy removal, exchange rate depreciation, and poor agricultural production. While the current account registered a surplus in the first half of 2023, the 30-day average of gross international reserves (GIR) reported by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) declined to $33 billion in October, covering 6 months of imports.

Executive Board Assessment

The new administration has made a strong start, tackling deep-rooted structural issues in challenging circumstances. Immediately, it adopted two policy reforms that its predecessors had shied away from: fuel subsidy removal and the unification of the official exchange rates. Since then, the new CBN team has made price stability its core mandate and demonstrated this resolve by dropping its previous role in development finance. On the fiscal side, the authorities are developing an ambitious domestic revenue mobilization agenda.

Like many other countries, Nigeria faces a difficult external environment and wide-ranging domestic challenges. External financing (market and official) is scarce, and global food prices have surged, reflecting the repercussions of conflict and geo-economic fragmentation. Per-capita growth in Nigeria has stalled, poverty and food insecurity are high, exacerbating the cost-of-living crisis. Low reserves and very limited fiscal space constrain the authorities' option space. Against this backdrop, the authorities' focus on restoring macroeconomic stability and creating conditions for sustained, high and inclusive growth is appropriate.

The CBN has set out on a welcome path of monetary tightening. The Governor has committed to making price stability the core objective of monetary policy, and the CBN has taken actions to mop up excess liquidity. Continuing to raise the monetary policy rate until it is positive in real terms would be an important signal of the direction of monetary policy. The authorities are exploring options to strengthen Nigeria's reserve position, though a careful assessment of unintended consequences is needed in some cases. Settling the CBN's overdue dollar obligations will help rebuild confidence in the central bank and the naira. Sharing comprehensive information on Nigeria's reserves position would facilitate a more complete assessment of the external situation.

The government's focus on revenue mobilization and digitalization would improve public service delivery and safeguard fiscal sustainability. The envisaged reduction in the overall deficit in 2024 would help contain debt vulnerabilities and eliminate the need for CBN financing. Temporary and targeted support to the most vulnerable in the form of social transfers is needed, given the ongoing cost-of-living crisis. Fuel and electricity subsidies are costly, do not reach those that most need government support and should be phased out completely.

Staff assesses that Nigeria's capacity to repay the Fund is adequate under the baseline. The authorities' policy intentions are well placed to address risks of a downside scenario where difficult trade-offs may arise between urgent humanitarian needs and debt service, including to the Fund. In such circumstances aggressive monetary tightening and fiscal adjustment combined with support from development partners would be needed to restore macroeconomic stability.


Table 1. Nigeria: Selected Economic and Financial Indicators, 2022–25

2022

2023

2024

2025

Act.

Est.

Proj.

Proj.

National income and prices

(Annual percentage change, unless otherwise specified)

Real GDP

(at 2010 market prices)

3.3

2.9

3.0

3.1

Oil and Gas GDP

-19.2

1.4

2.5

3.8

Non-oil GDP

5.0

3.0

3.1

3.0

Non-oil non-agriculture GDP

6.2

3.8

3.4

3.3

Production of crude oil

(million barrels per day)

1.38

1.46

1.47

1.52

Nominal GDP at market prices

(trillions of naira)

202.4

245.3

305.4

355.2

Nominal non-oil GDP

(trillions of naira)

190.4

229.8

278.9

326.7

Nominal GDP per capita

(US$)

2,202

1,699

1,219

1,271

GDP deflator

11.3

17.8

20.8

12.8

Consumer price index

(annual average)

18.8

25.0

25.2

14.8

Consumer price index

(end of period)

21.3

31.1

17.1

15.0

Investment and savings

(Percent of GDP)

Gross national savings

20.2

19.7

20.2

21.8

Public

-2.3

-1.6

-0.1

-0.2

Private

22.5

21.2

20.3

22.0

Investment

19.9

19.2

19.5

21.2

Public

2.5

3.1

3.3

3.6

Private

17.5

16.1

16.3

17.6

Consolidated government operations

(Percent of GDP)

Total revenues and grants

9.1

9.4

10.8

10.9

Of which: oil and gas revenue

3.8

4.3

5.4

5.1

Of which: non-oil revenue

4.8

4.9

5.3

5.8

Total expenditure and net lending

14.5

14.8

15.1

15.5

Of which: fuel subsidies

2.2

0.9

0.8

0.1

Overall balance

-5.4

-5.4

-4.3

-4.5

Non-oil primary balance

-6.9

-7.0

-6.6

-6.4

Public gross debt 1

38.7

45.6

44.5

44.3

Of which: Fx debt

8.5

15.6

16.7

17.9

FGN interest payments

(percent of FGN revenue)

90.4

83.4

81.1

79.2

Money and credit

(Change in percent of broad money at the beginning of the period, unless otherwise specified)

Broad money (percent change; end of period)

17.4

24.2

17.4

14.9

Net foreign assets

-11.5

-5.6

-13.0

3.3

Net domestic assets

28.8

29.8

30.4

11.5

Of which:

Claims on consolidated government

26.2

9.1

3.1

1.6

Credit to the private sector

(y-o-y, percent)

19.9

20.2

20.6

16.5

Velocity of broad money

(ratio; end of period)

3.6

3.5

3.6

3.7

External sector

(Annual percentage change, unless otherwise specified)

Current account balance

(percent of GDP)

0.2

0.5

0.7

0.6

Exports of goods and services

35.9

-12.6

-3.1

-5.2

Imports of goods and services

14.2

-13.2

-0.5

-1.9

Terms of trade

12.6

-7.9

-1.6

-3.2

Price of Nigerian oil

(US$ per barrel)

99.0

82.4

81.2

77.4

External debt outstanding

(US$ billions) 2

119.9

110.1

109.1

114.0

Gross international reserves

(US$ billions, CBN definition) 3

36.6

27.9

23.8

26.3

(equivalent months of imports of G&Ss)

6.6

5.0

4.4

4.9

Sources: Nigerian authorities;

and IMF staff estimates and projections.

1Gross debt figures for the Federal Government and

the public sector include overdrafts from the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN).

2Includes both public and private sector.

3Based on the IMF definition,

the gross international reserves are $8.2 billion lower in 2023.



[1]After completing anIMF lending program, a country may be subject to a Post Financing Assessment (PFA). It aims to identify risks to a country's medium-term viability and provide early warnings on risks to the IMF's balance sheets. For more details clickhere.

[2]The Executive Board takes decisions under its lapse-of-time procedure when it is agreed by the Board that a proposal can be considered without convening formal discussions.

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