Business
IMF’s Report On Nigeria’ll Reassure Investors – Don
A university teacher, Prof.
Badayi Sani, has said that the International Monetary Fund’s (IMF) latest report, which rated Nigeria as Africa’s largest economy, would boost investors confidence in the country.
The IMF in its World Economic Outlook for October projected Nigeria as the biggest economy in Africa ahead of South Africa and Egypt.
Sani told newsmen in Abuja that the rating had the potential to not only increase Foreign Direct Investments (FDIs) but also bring back lost investments.
According to the economics teacher at Bayero University, Kano, it is also a signal to domestic entrepreneurs and indigenous industries to change their decisions of relocating their investments outside the country.
He added that the rating would make potential non-indigenous investors to come to the country “and also enable those with investments in the country already to increase it”.
He said that agriculture and the mineral sector held huge potential for attracting FDIs to the country due to the endowments that had remained untapped.
An analyst, Mr Jude Ndukwe, who also spoke, however, said that there was need to know the parameters used by IMF to arrive at the rating.
“I am interested in knowing the parameters that IMF used to reach that conclusion in spite of the obvious sufferings and recession in the country.
“However, if in this kind of suffering, IMF says we are still the largest in Africa, it simply means that if this administration concentrates on resuscitating the economy instead of propaganda, things will be better.
“I want to advise the government to take advantage of this good news in the midst of the bad news going all over Nigeria to concentrate on working on the economy,” he said.
Ndukwe added that it would be only when the economy “stops biting hard on the citizens and the prices of goods and services begin to go down that Nigerians will believe the report’’.
In August, 2016, Nigeria was reported to have lost its spot as Africa’s biggest economy to South Africa, following the recalculation of South Africa’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP).
But, current estimates from IMF, however, put Nigeria’s GDP at 415.08 billion dollars for 2016, from 493.83 billion dollars at the end of 2015.