The price of Nigeria's premium crude, the Bonny light has declined by about 51.8 percent between September 2014 and January 2015. Given that this resource is the major source of revenue for Nigeria, the possible effe...The price of Nigeria's premium crude, the Bonny light has declined by about 51.8 percent between September 2014 and January 2015. Given that this resource is the major source of revenue for Nigeria, the possible effects on the economy of these continuing shocks in oil prices are definitely of prime interest in order to predict the effects of a drastic change in oil prices, on the Nigerian economy as a whole. This study investigates the impact of oil price shocks on the Nigerian economy using quarterly time series data from 1985Q2-2014Q3. The study employed GARCH model and a multivariate VAR analysis using impulse response functions and variance decompositions tests to examine the interrelationship among the variables. The impulse response functions show that oil price shocks have immediate and prolonged effect on all the macroeconomic variables considered. Thus, we conclude that oil price shocks have a direct impact on real GDP, total monetary assets and credit to private sector and as such urgent and serious efforts should be made to cut back on government expenditure, increase the tax base, diversify the economy and improve the overall efficiency and scope of other existing non-oil revenue sources, so as to ameliorate the impact of falling oil prices.展开更多
文摘The price of Nigeria's premium crude, the Bonny light has declined by about 51.8 percent between September 2014 and January 2015. Given that this resource is the major source of revenue for Nigeria, the possible effects on the economy of these continuing shocks in oil prices are definitely of prime interest in order to predict the effects of a drastic change in oil prices, on the Nigerian economy as a whole. This study investigates the impact of oil price shocks on the Nigerian economy using quarterly time series data from 1985Q2-2014Q3. The study employed GARCH model and a multivariate VAR analysis using impulse response functions and variance decompositions tests to examine the interrelationship among the variables. The impulse response functions show that oil price shocks have immediate and prolonged effect on all the macroeconomic variables considered. Thus, we conclude that oil price shocks have a direct impact on real GDP, total monetary assets and credit to private sector and as such urgent and serious efforts should be made to cut back on government expenditure, increase the tax base, diversify the economy and improve the overall efficiency and scope of other existing non-oil revenue sources, so as to ameliorate the impact of falling oil prices.