(The SUN) - The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has ranked Nigeria’s exports
to Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) member-countries
to a whopping $6 billion between 1990 and 2013.
The increase, which indicates a sharp improvement from $1 billion as
at 1990, was contained in the global financial body’s 2014 Article IV
Consultation Staff Report.
The report, in appraising the regional Common External Tariffs
(CET), which was earlier scheduled to take off last January 2015, but
later shifted tothis month, also indicated that the development would
significantly reduce incentives for informal trade and simplify customs
procedures, thereby increasing recorded trade volumes.
“Under the new trade regime, billed to commence on January 1, 2015,
five per cent duty is applicable for 2,146 tariff lines under the basic
raw materials and capital goods category; 10 per cent for the 1,373
tariff lines that qualify as intermediate products category and 20 per
cent duty is reserved for the 2,165 tariff lines that fall into the
category of final consumer products.
“The CET will improve the transparency and coherence of the tariff
structure of Nigeria, increase formal trade ties with other ECOWAS
countries and reduce incentives for informal trade in the region.
“Moreover, the slowdown in Nigeria will adversely affect informal
exports to Nigeria. Anecdotal evidence indicates that goods that are
subject to import restrictions in Nigeria have become key export goods
for neighbouring countries.
Those informal exports to Nigeria are important sources of income for
some neighbouring countries and outward spillovers may be
nontrivial,” it said.
It said growing cross-border activity of Nigerian-based banks has
increased the scope for spillovers through financial channels, along
with regulatory and supervisory challenges.
The report further stated that the depreciation of the exchange rate
would add to inflation, reflecting the pass-through of higher domestic
prices for imports, but the effect is likely to be contained, in part,
due to lower food prices from increased local production of staple food
crops.
The IMF said low fiscal and external buffers, which have reduced the
capacity to absorb shocks relative to the experience of the 2008-09
financial crises, compromised the outlook.
The lender said the government expressed its determination to implement appropriate measures to manage risks.
“They agreed that the oil price shock is significant and, at least in
part, permanent, but saw a smaller effect on economic activity than
staff, owing to measures targeted at sectors critical for growth
(agriculture, power, small enterprises) and the impact of remittances.
They noted that rising food self-sufficiency would limit the
pass-through to inflation and activity in housing construction would
continue,” it said.
No comments:
Post a Comment