Nigeria.

KEY ISSUESContext. Despite recent strong non-oil growth, poverty and income inequality remainhigh and social and governance indicators are below averages for sub-Saharan Africa. Structural reforms under the Transformation Agenda are ongoing, but significant infrastructure gaps and weak institutional...

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Bibliographic Details
Online Access: Full text (MCPHS users only)
Main Author: African Dept., International Monetary Fund
Format: Electronic eBook
Language:English
Published: Washington : International Monetary Fund, 2014
Series:IMF Staff Country Reports.
Subjects:
Local Note:ProQuest Ebook Central
Table of Contents:
  • Cover; CONTENTS; CONTEXT; RECENT ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENTS AND OUTLOOK; A. Recent Economic and Policy Developments; B. Medium-Term Outlook and Risks; C. Inward and Outward Spillovers; ADDRESSING OIL THEFT/PRODUCTION LOSSES; STRONG ECONOMIC MANAGEMENT, NOTWITHSTANDING THE POLITICAL CYCLE; A. Preserving Fiscal Consolidation Through the Political Cycle; B. Monetary, Financial, and Exchange Rate Policies; C. Improving Competitiveness and Productivity; STAFF APPRAISAL; TABLES; 1. Millennium Development Goals, 1990-11; 2. Selected Economic and Financial Indicators, 2012-18.
  • 3. Balance of Payments, 2010-164a. Federal Government Operations, 2010-16; 4b. Consolidated Government, 2010-16; 4c. Government Operations, 2010-16; 4d. State and Local Governments, 2011-16; 4e. Extrabudgetary Funds (including ECA/SWF), 2011-16; 5a. Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Analytical Balance Sheet, 2011-16; 5b. Monetary Survey, 2011-16; 6. Financial Soundness Indicators: 2011-13; 7. Risk Assessment Matrix (RAM); FIGURES; 1. Real Sector Development, 2005-13; 2. External and Exchange Rate Developments, 2010-13; 3. Fiscal Developments, 2001-13.
  • 4. Monetary and Financial Developments, 2010-135. Key Indicators of the Oil Sector, 2005-12; 6. Oil Price Shock, 2013-18; 7. Fiscal Expansion, 2013-18; 8. Vulnerabilities in the Oil Sector, 2013-18; BOXES; 1. Authorities' Response to Past IMF Policy Recommendations; 2. Strengthening the Monitoring and Reconciliation of Oil Revenue Flows; 3. The Challenge of Fiscal Federalism in Nigeria; 4. Follow-up on the 2012 FSAP Recommendations; APPENDICES; I. Changing Trends in Oil Markets?; II: Gross Domestic Product (GDP) Rebasing and Implications; III. Oil Theft in Nigeria and Proposed Countermeasures.
  • IV. Estimates of the Sustainable Non-Oil Primary DeficitV. External Sector Assessment; VI. Tracking Job Creation; VII. Trade Policy and Competitiveness: Agriculture in Nigeria; CONTENTS; FUND RELATIONS; JOINT WORLD BANK-IMF WORK PROGRAM, 2013-14; STATISTICAL ISSUES.