African Development Bank to boost Nigeria’s economy with additional loans of $2bn
January 23, 20182.3K views0 comments
Akinwumi Adesina, the president of African Development Bank announced the plans on the bank to increase its loans to Nigeria by more than $2 billion next year with investments in energy, infrastructure, and agriculture.
This was said in an interview on Jan. 18 in Abuja, the country’s capital, according to Bloomberg.
“The total portfolio we have in Nigeria is $6 billion…, we expect that by the year 2019, we will grow that into a little bit over $8 billion,” the president said.
The Abidjan, Ivory Coast-based lender will pump more than $800 million into Nigeria this year, most of which will fund investments in power. Among them is a $250 million support to revamp power-transmission lines and electricity sub-stations as well as fund a $200 million solar power project in Jigawa state in the north, Adesina said. The $400 million balance from a $1 billion loan for budget support will be disbursed directly to industries identified by the government after projects have been vetted by the bank, he said.
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Africa’s most populous country, with more than 180 million people, is recovering from its worst economic slump in 25 years. It will also receive budget support and public financial management assistance from the lender, he said.
The AfDB forecast Nigeria’s economy will grow 2.1 percent this year as the output of and the price of oil, its main export, recovers. The country depends on crude exports for two-thirds of government revenue and most of its foreign income. Brent crude, which compares with Nigeria’s export grades, has gained 26 percent in the past year, helping the recovery. It traded at $69.40 a barrel as of 7:18 a.m. in London
As Nigeria seeks to reduce its dependence on oil by boosting agricultural production, the AfDB plans to help set up “staple crop processing zones” and create agribusiness clusters across the country to curb harvest losses of as much as 70 percent for some crops, Adesina said.
“These zones will change our rural economy,” he said. “You will be able to create markets for farmers and reduce massive post-harvest losses. You will change the structure of agriculture itself because people will see it as a business as opposed to a subsistence activity.”