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Asymmetric Effect of Oil Price and Revenue Shocks on Nigeria’s Economy

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This study analyses the asymmetric effects of oil price and revenue shocks on Nigeria’s economy, utilising annual time series data from 1981 to 2023 and employing the Non-Linear Autoregressive Distributed Lag (NARDL) methodology. The empirical results confirm a long-run relationship between real GDP and selected macroeconomic variables. In the long run, positive oil price shocks exhibit a weakly significant positive effect on real GDP, whereas negative shocks have a much stronger and statistically significant negative impact. Regarding oil revenue, positive shocks are found to be statistically insignificant, while negative shocks exert a highly significant contractionary influence on real GDP. In the short run, negative oil price shocks surprisingly have a positive and significant effect on output, suggesting that declines in oil prices may prompt compensatory fiscal measures or lead to increased non-oil activity. The findings underscore Nigeria’s economic vulnerability due to its dependence on oil, as negative oil price and revenue shocks impose substantial long-term contractionary pressures, whereas positive shocks do not translate into sustained economic growth. This evidence strongly supports the resource curse hypothesis and highlights the fragility of oil-dependent economies such as Nigeria. Consequently, the study recommends that the Federal Government pursue economic diversification centred on long-term structural transformation, with targeted investments in human capital, infrastructure, and technology to foster a knowledge-driven economy. Additionally, the establishment of robust fiscal buffers, particularly a rules-based sovereign wealth fund for saving excess oil revenues during boom periods, is advocated to improve resilience and provide essential resources during economic downturns.
Title: Asymmetric Effect of Oil Price and Revenue Shocks on Nigeria’s Economy
Description:
This study analyses the asymmetric effects of oil price and revenue shocks on Nigeria’s economy, utilising annual time series data from 1981 to 2023 and employing the Non-Linear Autoregressive Distributed Lag (NARDL) methodology.
The empirical results confirm a long-run relationship between real GDP and selected macroeconomic variables.
In the long run, positive oil price shocks exhibit a weakly significant positive effect on real GDP, whereas negative shocks have a much stronger and statistically significant negative impact.
Regarding oil revenue, positive shocks are found to be statistically insignificant, while negative shocks exert a highly significant contractionary influence on real GDP.
In the short run, negative oil price shocks surprisingly have a positive and significant effect on output, suggesting that declines in oil prices may prompt compensatory fiscal measures or lead to increased non-oil activity.
The findings underscore Nigeria’s economic vulnerability due to its dependence on oil, as negative oil price and revenue shocks impose substantial long-term contractionary pressures, whereas positive shocks do not translate into sustained economic growth.
This evidence strongly supports the resource curse hypothesis and highlights the fragility of oil-dependent economies such as Nigeria.
Consequently, the study recommends that the Federal Government pursue economic diversification centred on long-term structural transformation, with targeted investments in human capital, infrastructure, and technology to foster a knowledge-driven economy.
Additionally, the establishment of robust fiscal buffers, particularly a rules-based sovereign wealth fund for saving excess oil revenues during boom periods, is advocated to improve resilience and provide essential resources during economic downturns.

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