Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo has said that the nation’s revenues dropped by over 40 per cent due to the lockdown occasioned by the COVID-19 pandemic.
He said the country’s huge informal economy also crashed during the period.
Osinbajo stated this on tuesday during a webinar by the Commonwealth Enterprise and Investment Council with Nigeria as its focus, saying things were already looking up for Nigeria until the pandemic began.
The vice president said, “There is never a good time for a pandemic but there can be a terribly wrong time. That’s how it seemed three months ago as COVID-19 began to ravage.
“January 2020, oil prices approached $70 a barrel for the first time since the crash of 2015/2016, which saw prices crash to sub $30 a barrel, Q3 2019 growth was 2.55 percent, modest but clearly on the upward trajectory, 3 per cent growth was well in sight.
“Our Economic Recovery and Growth Plan was beginning to make sense. Work was ongoing in major rail, road and bridge projects along the main national trade corridors. The Engineering, Procurement and Construction arrangements on our Liquefied Natural Gas Train 7 which will unlock an additional 30% more LNG output had commenced.
“It seemed the sun was beginning to shine quite brightly after the years of recession and its immediate aftermath.
“Then came COVID-19, possibly the worst economic crisis the world has seen. For us in Nigeria, it was a perfect storm for oil prices, Russia and Saudi Arabia choosing that very moment for a price war.
“Then the inevitable lockdowns resulting in closure of businesses, our huge informal economy all but crashed and Government revenues fell too by over 40 per cent.”
He, however, said some silver linings had started appearing on the horizon for the country, attributing this to the decision of President Muhammadu Buhari to ask him (Osinbajo) to chair a committee charged with ensuring that the nation bounces back.