Nigeria may lose N985bn oil revenue this year
should oil price average $55 barrels per day this year and recent oil production trends in the country
continue, Nigeria could see about $5bn (N985bn) oil revenue shortfall, PricewaterhouseCoopers has said.
PwC’s economists, in a new report
published on Wednesday, said this financing hole could widen to about
$10bn in the event of a re-emergence of Iran oil production in the
second quarter of the year as price is expected to hit a low point of
$35 per barrel, slowly recovering to an average of $45 per barrel.
They said significant debt issuance and
cuts to recurrent expenditure would be needed, adding that state
governments could struggle to borrow from the financial markets to pay
their workers.
According to the report, some highly-indebted states may miss planned interest payments on their debts.
If oil production falls by 15 per cent
through bunkering and other supply disruptions, gross oil revenues will
fall to a third of the 2013 level (about $43bn), it stated.
“Combined with difficulties of
administering tax collection from unstable parts of the country, we
would expect the Federal Government to fall over three months behind on
paying employee wages and government bond yields on US dollar-debt could
approach 20 per cent,” the economists noted.
They said that they expected that if the
oil price continued to stabilise, the Central Bank of Nigeria’s recent
adjustment of the exchange rate regime would be sufficient to ease
pressure on the naira this year.
“However, if oil prices deteriorate
further, a further 10 per cent devaluation of the naira will be
necessary in 2015,” they stated.
They said any deterioration of the political and security landscape could unnerve investors and tip the country into recession.
If a ‘medium’ political shock occurs
against the backdrop of a severe oil price scenario, the report predicts
that Nigeria’s economy could see zero growth or even contract in 2015
and 2016.
It, however, stated that despite the
uncertainties generated by the volatility in oil prices and the
significant drop in government revenue, the Nigerian economy would
continue to grow, even if oil prices fall to $35 per barrel and average
just $45 in 2015, provided there was no deterioration of the political
and security landscape.
A Partner and Chief Economist at PwC
Nigeria, Dr. Andrew Nevin, said, “Our modelling and forecasts show that
while the economy will continue to struggle even under the most benign
scenario, it will be able to realise growth averaging four per cent for
the period.
“Despite oil’s importance to the Nigerian
exchequer, the real economy is largely insulated against falling oil
prices. This is driven by the fundamental structure of Nigeria’s economy
and how the oil and public sectors interact with the non-oil sector.”
source punch nigeria
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