The Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU), the research unit of The
Economist Magazine, has predicted that the opposition Peoples Democratic
Party (PDP) will defeat the ruling All Progressives Congress (APC)
candidate in the upcoming 2019 presidential election.
EIU stated this in its latest country forecast overview on Nigeria which was made public on Tuesday.
The EIU, which gave an array of reasons for its prediction, said even
though it would be a close call, the opposition PDP would win the
election.
It predicted slowdown in economic activities in Nigeria as politics takes centre stage.
The London-based magazine, which also anticipated a depreciation of
the naira, said further in its assessment that Buhari was fast shedding
support from within the APC with governors and lawmakers defecting to
the opposition en masse.
“Intra-party politics would be chaotic ahead of the poll and we ultimately expect the incumbent to lose power.
“The 2019 elections will be a close contest between the ruling APC
and the PDP. We expect the PDP presidential candidate to win, but for
the next administration to flounder against the same problems as the
incumbent one.
“The next government is likely to be led by the PDP, the main
opposition, potentially in a coalition with smaller parties, but
instability will remain an insoluble challenge.
“Internally, not all ambitious politicians from the APC who have
defected will be rewarded with places in the next government; or if they
are, it will mean that pre-existing grandees within the PDP will have
been sidelined.
“Whoever ends up feeling cheated will eventually turn on the new
administration, as is happening to the APC now. There is also a unifying
PDP presidential candidate, with around 16 aspirants competing for the
nomination.
“A weak APC before the election and a troubled government thereafter
implies that Nigeria’s manifold security threats will continue to
fester.
“Parliamentary rifts will remain the main problem, and this applies
no matter who is in charge, given competing priorities between
representatives from different regions and the absence of a common
ideology within parties,” it said.
Continuing, it noted that “policy reforms, particularly in the vital
oil industry would be slow as a result of division in the political
elite between advocates of tough, unpopular market reforms and those who
refer pandering to nationalistic and pro-subsidy interest groups. The
latter group was likely to remain in the ascendancy.”
According to the EIU, politicization of economic policy would also
slow reforms and at times actively decelerate economic growth.
“The Central Bank of Nigeria will not act completely independently,
and the overall policy agenda will be pulled in differing directions by
various powerful interest groups,” the report stated.
“Fiscal expenditure will remain dominant by recurrent spending
despite attempts to boost capital investments. Efforts to boost non-oil
tax revenue will be constraint by weak bureaucratic capacity and low
economic growth. Constrained by a crippling infrastructure deficit,
economic growth will be well beneath level needed to boost job creation
and increasing living standard.
“Inflation will generally remain high over the forecast period
(2018-2022) amid expansionary fiscal policy and high food prices
stemming from government efforts to limit import and support local
producers.
“The authorities will continue to interfere in the foreign exchange
market although the degree of interference should eventually lessen with
higher oil prices supporting reserves and broad economic confidence
slowly improving. The naira will nonetheless depreciate over 2019-21 and
be broadly stable in 2022,” the report explained.
Furthermore, the EIU held the view that Nigeria’s current account
would record marginal gain over the forecasts period, saying pick-up in
oil prices would be offset by recovering import demand.
The difficult business environment will restrict the development of non-oil exports, it added.
The report further pointed out that without a collective resolve, it
would prove impossible to bring permanent peace to the large parts of
Nigeria hit variously by an Islamist insurgency in the north,
ethno-nationalism and piracy in the main oil-producing region and
secessionism in the Biafra region, as well as inter-religious tensions
and disputes over land access across the centre of the country.
“It will prove hard to build a more effective security apparatus
while also creating economic opportunities for local populations;
poverty lies at the root of much of the instability.
“Our central forecast is, however, that the 2019 elections will be
completed without a widespread breakdown in stability with Nigeria’s
democracy proving once again to be robust enough to endure.
“However, we expect major unrest to continue in 2020-2022 as
comprehensive solutions prove too complex and costly to implement in the
medium term.”
It noted that given the severe risks to stability, speculation over
the threat of a military coup or a civil war was likely to surface
periodically.
It stated, “That these issues are part of the popular discourse
highlights the seriousness of the challenges facing Nigeria, but we
consider a widespread breakdown of security to be unlikely; the military
is more professional and has been depoliticised since the junta stepped
aside in 1999.
“Meanwhile, there is little appetite outside more extremists’
agitators for a return to civil war, given memories of how disastrous
the 1967-1970 conflict was for the country.
“Nevertheless, as the country’s leadership struggles to shift Nigeria
onto a more sustainable and robust pat of economic development, the
risks to stability will intensify as more and more Nigerians question
what they have to lose from pushing for violent change.”
-Daily Post
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