Connect with us

News

Recession: Lai Mohammed reacts, vows ‘it’ll be short-lived’

Published

Alhaji Lai Mohammed Twitter Ban



The Minister of Information and Culture, Lai Mohammed, has confirmed that Nigeria has entered into recession.

This comes after NBS’ report days ago revealed that the country is in its worst recession in 36 years, amid the rising debt profile, inflation and unemployment.

The official data showed that the country’s gross domestic product contracted for the second consecutive quarter since the recession of 2016, the worst since 1987 when GDP declined by 10.8 per cent.

Whilst the World Bank and NBS said that this is the second recession under the President, Major General Muhamadu Buhari’s (retd) democratic reign and his fourth as head of state, Mohammed believes that the recession won’t last long.

MORE READING!  Tinubu present at burial ceremony of slain Delta soldiers

Speaking on NTA on Wednesday, Mohammed said, yes, “we are in a recession and it is inevitable,” likening Nigeria to the likes of Spain, Mexico, Russia who he said “have all fallen into recession”.

Mohammed also said that the recession is “is easy to understand” blaming “low demand for oil” which was caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.

His statement reads partly: “It is true we are in a recession. Recession comes when a country records two consecutive quarters of negative growths. But we must go beyond that to understand that despite that, our economy is still very well in circumstances.

MORE READING!  Military frees abducted Lagos editor Segun Olatunji

“The main reason why we have entered into this recession is the oil sector. The oil sector recorded -13.89% and that is the worst in 14 quarters. Of course, it is easy to understand why; with the pandemic, there is low demand for oil…but when you look at the non-oil sector which is about -2.51 % in Q3, it is far better than what it was in the Q2.

MORE READING!  Delta bloodbath: Police hand over wanted monarch to army

“Overall, yes, we are in a recession and it is inevitable but while our Q2 result was -6.1%, South Africa was -50% and as we speak today, Finland, Hungary, Spain, Mexico, Russia, Romania, Belgium, Austria have all fallen into recession.

“But we are very confident that with the intervention policies, with the fiscal and monetary interventions the government has put in place, the recession will be short-lived.” he said

Advertisement
Comments



Trending