PROFILE
OFFICIAL NAME:
Federal Republic of Nigeria
Geography
Area: 923.8 thousand sq. km. (356,700 sq. mi.)
about the size of California, Nevada, and
Arizona.
Cities: Capital--Abuja
(pop. est. 452,000). Other
cities--Kano (9.3 million), Lagos (9.01
million), Ibadan (5 million), Enugu (500,000).
Terrain: Ranges from southern coastal swamps to
tropical forests, open woodlands, grasslands,
and semi-desert in the far north. The highest
regions are the Jos Plateau 1,200-2,400 meters
above sea level and the mountains along the
border with Cameroon.
Climate: Annual rainfall ranges from 381 cm.
along the coast to 64 cm. or less in the far
north.
People
Nationality: Noun
and adjective--Nigerian(s).
Population (2007): 148 million.
Population growth rate (2007): 2.2%.
Total fertility rate (avg. number of children
per woman in 2006): 5.4.
Ethnic groups (250): Hausa-Fulani, Igbo, Yoruba,
and Kanuri are the largest.
Religions: Muslim, Christian, indigenous
African.
Languages: English (official), Hausa, Igbo,
Yoruba, Fulani, Kanuri, others.
Education: Attendance (secondary)--male
32%, female 27%. Literacy--39%-51%.
Health: Life
expectancy (2006)--47
years.
Government
Type: Federal republic.
Independence: October 1, 1960.
Constitution: The 1999 constitution (based
largely on the 1979 constitution) was
promulgated by decree on May 5, 1999 and came
into force on May 29, 1999.
Subdivisions: 36 states plus Federal Capital
Territory (Abuja); states divided into a total
of 774 local government areas.
2008 budget: $23.4 billion, of which recurrent
expenditures constitute $11.1 billion, capital
expenditures $7.4 billion, statutory transfers
$1.4 billion, and debt service $3.2 billion. Critical
sectors--security and the Niger Delta (20%);
education (8%); transportation (7%); agriculture
and water (5%); and energy (5%).
Indebtedness, including federal/state government
debt, as percentage of GDP: 10.4%.
Economy
GDP (2007): $166 billion (agriculture 33%;
industry 39%; services 28%).
Real GDP growth rate (2007): 5.9%. Oil growth:
-5.6%. Non-oil growth: 9.6%.
Per capita GDP (2007): $1,149.
Inflation (2008): 8.5%.
Natural resources: Oil and natural gas (37% of
2006 GDP), tin, columbite, iron ore, coal,
limestone, lead, zinc.
Agriculture: Products--cocoa,
palm oil, yams, cassava, sorghum, millet, corn,
rice, livestock, groundnuts, cotton.
Industry: Types--textiles,
cement, food products, footwear, metal products,
lumber, beer, detergents, car assembly.
Trade (2007): Exports--$65.5
billion: fuels and mining products (97%);
agricultural products (cocoa, rubber, oil, nuts)
(2.2%); manufactures (0.8%). Partners--United
States (38.3%); European Union (21.8%); India
(9.9%); Brazil (6.8%); Japan (4%). Imports--$29.5
billion: machinery; chemicals; transport
equipment; manufactured goods (72.3%);
agricultural products (23.7%), fuels and mining
products (4%). Partners--European
Union (33.2%); United States (15.6%); China
7.2%; Korea (2.8%); U.A.E. (2.6%); others (15%).
Foreign direct investment (FDI, 2007): 6.2% of
GDP.
Official development assistance (2006): $11.434
billion.
Currency: Naira (119 Naira = U.S. $1 as of
November 24, 2008).
PEOPLE
The most populous country in Africa, Nigeria
accounts for over half of West Africa's
population. Although less than 25% of Nigerians
are urban dwellers, at least 24 cities have
populations of more than 100,000. The variety of
customs, languages, and traditions among
Nigeria's 250 ethnic groups gives the country a
rich diversity. The dominant ethnic group in the
northern two-thirds of the country is the
Hausa-Fulani, most of whom are Muslim. Other
major ethnic groups of the north are the Nupe,
Tiv, and Kanuri. The Yoruba people are
predominant in the southwest.
About half of the Yorubas are Christian and half
Muslim. The predominantly Catholic Igbo are the
largest ethnic group in the southeast, with the
Efik, Ibibio, and Ijaw comprising a substantial
segment of the population in that area. Persons
of different language backgrounds most commonly
communicate in English, although knowledge of
two or more Nigerian languages is widespread.
Hausa, Yoruba, Igbo, Fulani, and Kanuri are the
most widely used Nigerian languages.
HISTORY
In the northern cities of Kano and Katsina,
recorded history dates back to about 1000 AD. In
the centuries that followed, these Hausa
kingdoms and the Bornu empire near Lake Chad
prospered as important terminals of north-south
trade between North African Berbers and forest
people who exchanged slaves, ivory, and kola
nuts for salt, glass beads, coral, cloth,
weapons, brass rods, and cowrie shells used as
currency.
In the southwest, the Yoruba kingdom of Oyo was
founded about 1400, and at its height from the
17th to 19th centuries attained a high level of
political organization and extended as far as
modern Togo. In the south central part of
present-day Nigeria, as early as the 15th and
16th centuries, the kingdom of Benin had
developed an efficient army; an elaborate
ceremonial court; and artisans whose works in
ivory, wood, bronze, and brass are prized
throughout the world today. In the 17th through
19th centuries, European traders established
coastal ports for the increasing traffic in
slaves destined for the Americas. Commodity
trade, especially in palm oil and timber,
replaced slave trade in the 19th century,
particularly under anti-slavery actions by the
British Navy. In the early 19th century the
Fulani leader, Usman dan Fodio, promulgated
Islam and that brought most areas in the north
under the loose control of an empire centered in
Sokoto.
A British Sphere of Influence
Following the Napoleonic wars, the British
expanded trade with the Nigerian interior. In
1885, British claims to a sphere of influence in
that area received international recognition
and, in the following year, the Royal Niger
Company was chartered. In 1900, the company's
territory came under the control of the British
Government, which moved to consolidate its hold
over the area of modern Nigeria. In 1914, the
area was formally united as the "Colony and
Protectorate of Nigeria."
Administratively, Nigeria remained divided into
the northern and southern provinces and Lagos
colony. Western education and the development of
a modern economy proceeded more rapidly in the
south than in the north, with consequences felt
in Nigeria's political life ever since.
Following World War II, in response to the
growth of Nigerian nationalism and demands for
independence, successive constitutions
legislated by the British Government moved
Nigeria toward self-government on a
representative, increasingly federal, basis.
Independence
Nigeria was granted full independence in October
1960, as a federation of three regions
(northern, western, and eastern) under a
constitution that provided for a parliamentary
form of government. Under the constitution, each
of the three regions retained a substantial
measure of self-government. The federal
government was given exclusive powers in defense
and security, foreign relations, and commercial
and fiscal policies. In October 1963, Nigeria
altered its relationship with the United Kingdom
by proclaiming itself a federal republic and
promulgating a new constitution. A fourth region
(the midwest) was established that year. From
the outset, Nigeria's ethnic, regional, and
religious tensions were magnified by the
significant disparities in economic and
educational development between the south and
the north.
On January 15, 1966, a small group of army
officers, mostly southeastern Igbos, overthrew
the government and assassinated the federal
prime minister and the premiers of the northern
and western regions. The federal military
government that assumed power was unable to
quiet ethnic tensions or produce a constitution
acceptable to all sections of the country. Its
efforts to abolish the federal structure greatly
raised tensions and led to another coup in July.
The coup-related massacre of thousands of Igbo
in the north prompted hundreds of thousands of
them to return to the southeast, where
increasingly strong Igbo secessionist sentiment
emerged.
In a move that gave greater autonomy to minority
ethnic groups, the military divided the four
regions into 12 states. The Igbo rejected
attempts at constitutional revisions and
insisted on full autonomy for the east. Finally,
in May 1967, Lt. Col. Emeka Ojukwu, the military
governor of the eastern region, who emerged as
the leader of increasing Igbo secessionist
sentiment, declared the independence of the
eastern region as the "Republic of Biafra." The
ensuing civil war was bitter and bloody, ending
in the defeat of Biafra in 1970.
Following the civil war, reconciliation was
rapid and effective, and the country turned to
the task of economic development. Foreign
exchange earnings and government revenues
increased spectacularly with the oil price rises
of 1973-74. On July 29, 1975, Gen. Murtala
Muhammed and a group of fellow officers staged a
bloodless coup, accusing Gen. Yakubu Gowon's
military government of delaying the promised
return to civilian rule and becoming corrupt and
ineffective. General Muhammed replaced thousands
of civil servants and announced a timetable for
the resumption of civilian rule by October 1,
1979. Muhammed also announced the government's
intention to create new states and to construct
a new federal capital in the center of the
country.
General Muhammed was assassinated on February
13, 1976, in an abortive coup. His chief of
staff, Lt. Gen. Olusegun Obasanjo, became head
of state. Obasanjo adhered meticulously to the
schedule for return to civilian rule, moving to
modernize and streamline the armed forces and
seeking to use oil revenues to diversify and
develop the country's economy. Seven new states
were created in 1976, bringing the total to 19.
The process of creating additional states
continued until, in 1996, there were 36.
The Second Republic
A constituent assembly was elected in 1977 to
draft a new constitution, which was published
September 21, 1978, when the ban on political
activity, in effect since the advent of military
rule, was lifted. Political parties were formed,
and candidates were nominated for president and
vice president, the two houses of the National
Assembly, governorships, and state houses of
assembly. In 1979, five political parties
competed in a series of elections in which a
northerner, Alhaji Shehu Shagari of the National
Party of Nigeria (NPN), was elected president.
All five parties won representation in the
National Assembly.
In August 1983, Shagari and the NPN were
returned to power in a landslide victory, with a
majority of seats in the National Assembly and
control of 12 state governments. But the
elections were marred by violence, and
allegations of widespread vote rigging and
electoral malfeasance led to legal battles over
the results.
On December 31, 1983, the military overthrew the
Second Republic. Maj. Gen. Muhammadu Buhari
emerged as the leader of the Supreme Military
Council (SMC), the country's new ruling body. He
charged the civilian government with economic
mismanagement, widespread corruption, election
fraud, and a general lack of concern for the
problems of Nigerians. He also pledged to
restore prosperity to Nigeria and to return the
government to civilian rule but was stymied in
his attempt to deal with Nigeria's severe
economic problems. Despite relative popularity
for its no-nonsense approach in tackling
corruption, the Buhari government was peacefully
overthrown by the SMC's third-ranking member,
Army Chief of Staff Maj. Gen. Ibrahim Babangida,
in August 1985.
Babangida moved to restore freedom of the press
and to release political detainees being held
without charge. As part of a 15-month economic
emergency, he announced stringent pay cuts for
the military, police, and civil servants and
enacted similar cuts for the private sector.
Imports of rice, corn, and wheat were banned.
Babangida orchestrated a national debate on
proposed economic reform and recovery measures,
which reportedly convinced him of intense
opposition to an economic recovery package
dependent on an International Monetary Fund
(IMF) loan.
The Abortive Third Republic
In early 1989, a constituent assembly completed
work on a constitution for the Third Republic,
and political activity again was permitted. In
April 1990, mid-level officers tried and failed
to overthrow Babangida, and 69 accused coup
plotters were later executed after secret trials
before military tribunals. In December 1990 the
first stage of partisan elections was held at
the local government level, followed by
gubernatorial and state legislative elections in
December 1991; turnout was low but non-violent.
However, Babangida canceled primaries scheduled
for August and September 1992 due to fraud. All
announced candidates were disqualified from
again standing for president once a new election
format was selected. After delayed promises for
elections in 1990, the government finally held a
presidential election on June 12, 1993.
In what most observers deemed to be Nigeria's
fairest elections, early returns indicated that
wealthy Yoruba businessman M.K.O. Abiola had won
a decisive victory. But on June 23, Babangida,
using several pending lawsuits as a pretense,
annulled the election, throwing Nigeria into
turmoil. More than 100 persons were killed in
riots before Babangida agreed to hand power to
an "interim government" on August 27. Babangida
then attempted to renege on his decision.
Without popular and military support, he was
forced to hand over to Ernest Shonekan, a
prominent nonpartisan businessman. Shonekan was
to rule until new elections, slated for February
1994. Although he had led Babangida's
Transitional Council since early 1993, Shonekan
was unable to reverse Nigeria's ever-growing
economic problems or to defuse lingering
political tension.
With the country sliding into chaos, Defense
Minister Sani Abacha quickly assumed power and
forced Shonekan's "resignation" on November 17,
1993. Abacha dissolved all democratic political
institutions and replaced elected governors with
military officers. Abacha promised to return the
government to civilian rule but refused to
announce a timetable. Following the annulment of
the June 12 election, the United States and
other nations imposed various sanctions on
Nigeria, including restrictions on travel by
government officials and their families and
suspension of arms sales and military
assistance. Additional sanctions were imposed as
a result of Nigeria's failure to gain full
certification for its counter-narcotics efforts.
Although Abacha's takeover was initially
welcomed by many Nigerians, disenchantment grew
rapidly. Many opposition figures formed the
"National Democratic Coalition (NADECO)" to
campaign for an immediate return to civilian
rule, and most Nigerians boycotted the May 1994
polls for delegates to a government-sponsored
Constitutional Conference. On June 11, 1994,
using the groundwork laid by NADECO, Abiola
declared himself president and went into hiding.
He reemerged and was promptly arrested on June
23. A series of strikes by petroleum workers and
other unions initially brought economic life in
Lagos and the southwest to a standstill, but by
mid-August Abacha had dismissed the national
union leadership, arrested his opponents, closed
media houses, and moved strongly to curb
dissent. In early 1995, Abacha alleged that some
40 military officers and civilians were engaged
in a coup plot, including former head of state
Obasanjo and his deputy, retired Gen. Shehu Musa
Yar'Adua. After a secret tribunal, most of the
accused were convicted, and several death
sentences were handed down. The tribunal also
charged, convicted, and sentenced prominent
human rights activists, journalists, and
others--including relatives of the coup
suspects--for their alleged "anti-regime"
activities.
In an October 1, 1995 address to the nation,
Gen. Sani Abacha announced the timetable for a
3-year transition to civilian rule. Public
turnout for his sham local elections in December
1997 and in April 1998 state assembly and
gubernatorial elections was under 10%, and
public reaction to Abacha's presidential
nomination by the five accepted parties was
apathy and a near-complete boycott. Widely
expected to succeed himself as a civilian
president on October 1, 1998, he remained head
of state until his death on June 8 of that year.
During the Abacha regime, the government
continued to enforce its arbitrary authority
through the federal security system--the
military, the state security service, and the
courts. Under Abacha, all branches of the
security forces committed serious human rights
abuses. Abacha was replaced by General
Abdulsalami Abubakar, who subsequently released
almost all known civilian political detainees
and decreased the number of reported human
rights abuses.
Abubakar's Transition to Civilian Rule
During both the Abacha and Abubakar eras,
Nigeria's main decision-making organ was the
exclusively military Provisional Ruling Council
(PRC) which governed by decree. The PRC oversaw
the 32-member federal executive council composed
of civilians and military officers. Pending the
promulgation of the constitution written by the
constitutional conference in 1995, the
government observed some provisions of the 1979
and 1989 constitutions. Neither Abacha nor
Abubakar lifted the decree suspending the 1979
constitution, and the 1989 constitution was not
implemented. The judiciary's authority and
independence was significantly impaired during
the Abacha era by the military regime's
arrogation of judicial power and prohibition of
court review of its action. The court system
continued to be hampered by corruption and lack
of resources after Abacha's death. In an attempt
to alleviate such problems, Abubakar's
government implemented a civil service pay raise
and other reforms.
In August 1998, the Abubakar government
appointed the Independent National Electoral
Commission (INEC) to conduct elections for local
government councils, state legislatures and
governors, the National Assembly, and president.
INEC held a series of four successive elections
between December 1998 and February 1999. Former
military head of state Olusegun Obasanjo, freed
from prison by Abubakar, ran as a civilian
candidate and won the presidential election.
Irregularities marred the vote, and the defeated
candidate, Chief Olu Falae, challenged the
electoral results and Obasanjo's victory in
court.
The PRC promulgated a new constitution, based
largely on the suspended 1979 constitution,
before the May 29, 1999 inauguration of the new
civilian president. The constitution included
provisions for a bicameral legislature, the
National Assembly, consisting of a 360-member
House of Representatives and a 109-member
Senate. The executive branch and the office of
president retained strong federal powers. The
legislature and judiciary, having suffered years
of neglect, are finally rebuilding as
institutions and beginning to exercise their
constitutional roles in the balance of power.
The Obasanjo Administration
The emergence of a democratic Nigeria in May
1999 ended 16 years of consecutive military
rule. Olusegun Obasanjo became the steward of a
country suffering economic stagnation and the
deterioration of most of its democratic
institutions. Obasanjo, a former general, was
admired for his stand against the Abacha
dictatorship, his record of returning the
federal government to civilian rule in 1979, and
his claim to represent all Nigerians regardless
of religion.
The new President took over a country that faced
many problems, including a dysfunctional
bureaucracy, collapsed infrastructure, and a
military that wanted a reward for returning
quietly to the barracks. The President moved
quickly and retired hundreds of military
officers who held political positions,
established a blue-ribbon panel to investigate
human rights violations, ordered the release of
scores of persons held without charge, and
rescinded a number of questionable licenses and
contracts let by the previous military regimes.
The government also moved to recover millions of
dollars in funds secreted in overseas accounts.
Most civil society leaders and most Nigerians
saw a marked improvement in human rights and
democratic practice under Obasanjo. The press
enjoyed greater freedom than under previous
governments. As Nigeria works out
representational democracy, there have been
conflicts between the executive and legislative
branches over major appropriations and other
proposed legislation. A sign of federalism has
been the growing visibility of state governors
and the inherent friction between Abuja and the
various state capitols over resource allocation.
In the years following the end of military rule,
Nigeria witnessed recurrent incidents of
ethno-religious and community conflicts, many of
which derived from distorted use of oil revenue
wealth, flaws in the 1999 constitution, and
age-old disputes over the distribution of land
and other resources. In May 1999, violence
erupted in Kaduna State over the succession of
an Emir, resulting in more than 100 deaths. In
November 1999, the army destroyed the town of
Odi in Bayelsa State and killed scores of
civilians in retaliation for the murder of 12
policemen by a local gang. In Kaduna in
February-May 2000 over 1,000 people died in
rioting over the introduction of criminal
Shar'ia in the state. Hundreds of ethnic Hausa
were killed in reprisal attacks in southeastern
Nigeria. In September 2001, over 2,000 people
were killed in inter-religious rioting in Jos.
In October 2001, hundreds were killed and
thousands displaced in communal violence that
spread across the Middle-Belt states of Benue,
Taraba, and Nasarawa. On October 1, 2001,
President Obasanjo announced the formation of a
National Security Commission to address the
issue of communal violence. In 2003, he was
re-elected in contentious and highly flawed
national elections and state gubernatorial
elections, which were litigated over two years.
Since 2006, violence, destruction of oil
infrastructure, and kidnappings of primarily
expatriates in the oil-rich Niger River Delta
have intensified as militants demanded a greater
share of federal revenue for states in the
region, as well as benefits from community
development. For many reasons, Nigeria's
security services have been unable to respond
effectively to the security threat, which is
both political and criminal.
In May 2006, the National Assembly soundly
defeated an attempt to amend the constitution by
supporters of a third presidential term for
President Obasanjo. This measure was packaged in
a bundle of what were otherwise
non-controversial amendments. Nigeria's citizens
addressed this issue in a constitutional,
democratic, and relatively peaceful process.
Civilian Transition
Nigeria held state legislative and gubernatorial
elections on April 14 as well as presidential
and national legislative elections on April 21,
2007, in which more than 35 political parties
participated. Nigeria missed an opportunity to
strengthen an element of its democracy through a
sound electoral process. Analysis of the process
by most international observers did not conform
to what Nigeria's National Electoral Commission
(INEC) reported. U.S. and international
observers reported overall a seriously flawed
process with credible reports of malfeasance and
vote rigging in some constituencies. The scope
of violence that occurred also was regrettable.
There were considerable degrees of difference in
the conduct of elections among states, but
serious differences were also observed within
states during the two polling dates. The main
opposition parties, All Nigeria People's Party
(ANPP) and the Action Congress (AC), as well as
numerous smaller political parties and the
ruling People's Democratic Party (PDP) filed
petitions to challenge the results of
gubernatorial elections in 34 of Nigeria's 36
states. INEC's principal problems included
politicization and lack of independence, lack of
transparency in its operations and
decision-making, and persistent failure to make
adequate logistical arrangements for both voter
registration and polling. With INEC's
certification of the ruling party's presidential
ticket as the winner with over 70% of the vote,
Nigeria experienced its first transition of
power between civilian administrations when
President Obasanjo stepped down on May 29, 2007.
Newly-elected President Umaru Yar'Adua, a
moderate and a respected governor from the
northern state of Katsina, pledged publicly to
make electoral reform, peace and security in the
Niger Delta, and continued electoral reform his
top priorities.
Much reform remains to be implemented, but the
Yar'Adua administration has shown unprecedented
restraint in allowing the legislative and
judicial branches to operate freely. In October
2007 Patricia Etteh, the Speaker of the Federal
House of Representatives, resigned over
allegations of corruption, after intense
legislative and public pressure. Electoral
tribunals and the courts had nullified at least
six gubernatorial, nine Senate, 11 House, and 14
state-level House of Assembly elections from
April 2007 based on technicalities. Of greater
significance for Nigeria's system of checks and
balances and the rule of law, on November 12, an
appeals court upheld a lower court ruling that
approved an opposition party's gubernatorial
election appeal, effectively unseating the
ruling party's incumbent in favor of the
opposition candidate. On February 26, 2008 a
tribunal upheld the results of the April 2007
presidential election. Two of the leading
opposition candidates have appealed that ruling
to Nigeria's Supreme Court, which might make a
ruling in December 2008.
Principal Government Officials
President--Umaru Yar'Adua
Vice President--Goodluck Jonathan
Nigeria maintains an embassy in
the United States at 3519 International Place,
NW, Washington, DC 20008, (phone: 202-986-8400,
fax: 202-362-6552, website: http://www.nigeriaembassyusa.org);
and consulates general in New York at 575
Lexington Ave., New York, NY 10022 (phone:
212-850-2217), and in Atlanta at 8060 Roswell
Road, Atlanta GA 30350 (phone: 770-394-6161).
ECONOMY
Trade
Nigeria is the United States' largest
trading partner in sub-Saharan Africa, largely
due to the high level of petroleum imports from
Nigeria, which supply 11% of U.S. oil
imports--nearly 46% of Nigeria's daily oil
production. Nigeria is the fifth-largest
exporter of oil to the United States. Two-way
trade was valued at $29 billion in 2007. Led by
machinery, wheat, and motor vehicles, U.S. goods
exports to Nigeria in 2007 were worth $4
billion. U.S. imports from Nigeria were $25
billion in 2007. U.S. imports from Nigeria
consisted predominantly of oil. However, rubber
products, cocoa, gum arabic, cashews, coffee,
and ginger constituted over $70 million of U.S.
imports from Nigeria in 2007. The U.S. trade
deficit with Nigeria was $21 billion in 2007.
Nigeria is the 50th-largest export market for
U.S. goods and the 14th-largest exporter of
goods to the United States. The United States is
Nigeria's largest trading partner after the
United Kingdom. Although the trade balance
overwhelmingly favors Nigeria, thanks to oil
exports, a large portion of U.S. exports to
Nigeria is believed to enter the country outside
of the Nigerian Government's official
statistics, due to importers seeking to avoid
Nigeria's excessive tariffs.
The United States is the largest foreign
investor in Nigeria. The stock of U.S. foreign
direct investment (FDI) in Nigeria in 2006 was
$339 million, down from $2 billion in 2004. U.S.
FDI in Nigeria is concentrated largely in the
petroleum/mining and wholesale trade sectors.
Exxon-Mobil and Chevron are the two largest U.S.
corporate players in offshore oil and gas
production.
In April 2008, the United States and Nigeria met
under the existing Trade and Investment
Framework Agreement (TIFA) to advance the
ongoing work program and to discuss improvements
in Nigerian trade policies and market access.
Among the topics discussed were cooperation in
the World Trade Organization (WTO), market
access, export diversification, intellectual
property protection and enforcement, commercial
issues, trade capacity building and technical
assistance, infrastructure, and investment
issues.
Dominated by Oil
The oil boom of the 1970s led Nigeria to neglect
its strong agricultural and light manufacturing
bases in favor of an unhealthy dependence on
crude oil. In 2002 oil and gas exports accounted
for more than 98% of export earnings and about
83% of federal government revenue. New oil
wealth, the concurrent decline of other economic
sectors, and a lurch toward a statist economic
model fueled massive migration to the cities and
led to increasingly widespread poverty,
especially in rural areas. A collapse of basic
infrastructure and social services since the
early 1980s accompanied this trend. By 2002
Nigeria's per capita income had plunged to about
one-quarter of its mid-1970s high, below the
level at independence. Along with the endemic
malaise of Nigeria's non-oil sectors, the
economy continues to witness massive growth of
"informal sector" economic activities, estimated
by some to be as high as 75% of the total
economy.
Nigeria's proven oil reserves are estimated to
be 36 billion barrels; natural gas reserves are
well over 100 trillion cubic feet. Nigeria is a
member of the Organization of Petroleum
Exporting Countries (OPEC), and in 2006 its
crude oil production averaged around two million
barrels per day. Poor corporate relations with
indigenous communities, vandalism of oil
infrastructure, severe ecological damage, and
personal security problems throughout the Niger
Delta oil-producing region continue to plague
Nigeria's oil sector. Efforts are underway to
reverse these troubles. In the absence of
coherent government programs, the major
multinational oil companies have launched their
own community development programs. The Niger
Delta Development Commission (NDDC) was created
to help catalyze economic and social development
in the region, but it is widely perceived to be
ineffective and opaque. Oil accounts for 90% of
Nigeria's exports and over 80% of government
revenue. Significant exports of liquefied
natural gas started in late 1999 and are slated
to expand as Nigeria seeks to eliminate gas
flaring by 2009.
Nigeria inspects all imports on arrival, rather
than at ports of origin; as a result, about 95%
of containers are physically examined. This
procedure, along with Nigeria's uneven
application of import and labeling regulations
and poor infrastructure, complicates the
movement of goods through Nigeria's notoriously
congested ports and increases the cost of doing
business. The government has promoted foreign
investment and encouraged reforms in these and
other areas, but the investment climate remains
daunting to all but the most determined.
Agriculture has suffered from years of
mismanagement, inconsistent and poorly conceived
government policies, and the lack of basic
infrastructure. Still, the sector accounts for
about 30% of GDP and two-thirds of employment.
Agriculture provides a big chunk of non-oil
growth, which in 2006 reached 9%. Poultry and
cocoa are just two areas where production is not
keeping pace with domestic or international
demand. Fisheries also have great potential, but
are poorly managed. Most critical for the
country's future, Nigeria's land tenure system
does not encourage long-term investment in
technology or modern production methods and does
not inspire the availability of rural credit.
Oil dependency, and the allure it generated of
great wealth through government contracts,
spawned other economic distortions. The
country's high propensity to import means
roughly 80% of government expenditures is
recycled into foreign exchange. Cheap consumer
imports, resulting from a chronically overvalued
Naira, coupled with excessively high domestic
production costs due in part to erratic
electricity and fuel supply, have pushed down
industrial capacity utilization to less than
30%. Many more Nigerian factories would have
closed except for relatively low labor costs
(10%-15%). Domestic manufacturers, especially
pharmaceuticals and textiles, have lost their
ability to compete in traditional regional
markets; however, there are signs that some
manufacturers have begun to address their
competitiveness.
Arguably Nigeria's biggest macroeconomic
achievement has been the sharp reduction in its
external debt, which declined from 36% of GDP in
2004 to less than 4% of GDP in 2007. In October
2005, the International Monetary Fund (IMF)
approved its first ever Policy Support
Instrument for Nigeria. In December 2005, the
United States and seven other Paris Club nations
signed debt reduction agreements with Nigeria
for $18 billion in debt reduction, with the
proviso that Nigeria pay back its remaining $12
billion in debt by March 2006. The United States
was one of the smaller creditors, and received
about $356 million from Nigeria in return for
over $600 million of debt reduction. Merrill
Lynch won the right to take on $509 million of
Nigeria's promissory debt (accrued since 1984)
to the "London Club" of private creditors. This
arrangement saved Nigeria about $34 million over
a simple prepayment of the notes. , Nigeria
faces intense pressure to accept multibillion
dollar loans for railroads, power plants, roads,
and other infrastructure.
Expanded government spending also has led to
upward pressure on consumer prices. Recent high
world oil prices had resulted in the government
now holding $60 billion in foreign exchange
reserves. State and local governmental bodies
demand access to this "windfall" revenue,
creating a tug-of-war between the federal
government--which seeks to control spending--and
state governments desirous of augmented budgets,
preventing the government from making provision
for periods of lower oil prices.
One of Nigeria's greatest success stories has
been the completion in early 2006 of a major
overhaul of its banking system under aggressive
Central Bank supervision. Reforms have reduced
the number of banks from 89 to 25, increased a
bank's minimal capital requirement to $190
million, and required banks to hold 40% of their
deposits in liquid assets. Retail, corporate,
and Internet banking are seen as intensively
competitive, and the home loan market is
considered moderately competitive. Less than 10%
of lending is believed to be made to
individuals. About 65% of the economically
active population is serviced by the informal
financial sector, e.g., microfinance
institutions, moneylenders, friends, relatives,
and credit unions. Since 1999, the Nigerian
Stock Exchange has enjoyed strong performance,
although equity as a means to foster corporate
growth remains underutilized by Nigeria's
private sector. Rural communities remain largely
unbanked, the real estate sector and small
businesses receive a low level of lending, and
the credit card market remains at an early stage
of development.
Nigeria's publicly owned transportation
infrastructure is a major constraint to economic
development. Principal ports are at Lagos (Apapa
and Tin Can Island), Port Harcourt, and Calabar.
Docking fees for freighters are among the
highest in the world. Of the 80,500 kilometers
(50,000 mi.) of roads, more than 15,000
kilometers (10,000 mi.) are officially paved,
but many remain in poor shape. Extensive road
repairs and new construction activities are
gradually being implemented as state
governments, in particular, spend their portions
of enhanced government revenue allocations. The
government implementation of 100% destination
inspection of all goods entering Nigeria has
resulted in long delays in clearing goods for
importers and created new sources of corruption,
since the ports lack adequate facilities to
carry out the inspection. Four of Nigeria's
airports--Lagos, Kano, Port Harcourt and
Abuja--currently receive international flights.
There are several domestic private Nigerian
carriers, and air service among Nigeria's cities
is generally dependable. The maintenance culture
of Nigeria's domestic airlines is not up to
international standards.
Gradual Reform
Nigeria has made progress toward
establishing a market-based economy. In recent
years, it privatized the only government-owned
petrochemical company and sold its interest in
eight oil service companies. The Yar'Adua
administration has paid especially close
attention to due process by overturning or
reviewing a number of suspect contracts awarded
by its predecessor. Nigeria's implementation of
non-tariff barriers has been arbitrary and
uneven and continues to violate WTO prohibitions
against trade bans. However, Nigeria has made
some progress in its implementation of the
Economic Community of West African States
(ECOWAS) Common External Tariff by removing some
textile items from its list of prohibited
imports in 2006. In a September 2008
breakthrough, Nigeria decreased the number of
banned import categories from 44 to 26 items,
reduced a number of tariffs, and reiterated its
commitment to harmonizing its tariff regime with
its neighbors. Enforcement of criminal penalties
against intellectual property rights (IPR)
violations is weak, and firms that are
successfully countering IPR piracy have
generally done so through civil court cases. The
government has created an intellectual property
commission. Rules concerning sanitary and
phytosanitary standards, testing, and labeling
are well defined, but bureaucratic hurdles slow
trade opportunities. The government is generally
supportive of biotechnology cooperation,
although legislation governing biosafety is
sparse at best.
A co-member of the International Advisory Group
of the Extractive Industries Transparency
Initiative (EITI) initiated by the G8, Nigeria's
federal government is playing an important role
in having volunteered to pilot the new
disclosure and validation methodologies. It has
completed a comprehensive audit of oil sector
payments and government revenues from 1999-2004.
The federal government has passed implementing
legislation on public procurement and fiscal
transparency, but now it must ensure that
Nigeria's 36 states pass and implement similar
bills. It is perceived that government
contracting remains rife with corruption and
kickbacks, and that many state and local
officials continue to steal public monies
outright.
Nigeria's economic team has enjoyed an excellent
reputation in the international community. The
team produced an encouraging body of work,
notably budgets described as "prudent and
responsible" by the IMF and a detailed economic
reform blueprint, the National Economic
Empowerment and Development Strategy (NEEDS).
Other positive developments have included: (1)
government efforts to deregulate fuel prices;
(2) Nigeria's participation in the EITI and
commitment to the G8 Anticorruption/Transparency
Initiative; (3) creation of what had been an
effective Economic and Financial Crimes
Commission (EFCC), which until 2008 had earned
150 convictions and recovered over $5 billion in
mishandled funds; and (4) development of several
governmental offices to better monitor official
revenues and expenditures.
Nigeria is not on track to meet its Millennium
Development Goals because of a lack of policy
coordination between the federal, state, and
local governments, a lack of funding commitments
at the state and local levels; and a lack of
available staff to implement and monitor
projects on health, poverty, and education.
Investment
Although Nigeria must grapple with its decaying
infrastructure and a poor regulatory
environment, the country possesses many positive
attributes for carefully targeted investment and
will expand as both a regional and international
market player. Profitable niche markets outside
the energy sector, such as specialized
telecommunication providers, have developed
under the government's reform program. There is
a growing Nigerian consensus that foreign
investment is essential to realizing Nigeria's
vast potential. Companies interested in
long-term investment and joint ventures,
especially those that use locally available raw
materials, will find opportunities in the large
national market. However, to improve prospects
for success, potential investors must educate
themselves extensively on local conditions and
business practices, establish a local presence,
and choose their partners carefully. The
Nigerian Government is keenly aware that
sustaining democratic principles, enhancing
security for life and property, and rebuilding
and maintaining infrastructure are necessary for
the country to attract foreign investment.
DEFENSE
Active duty personnel in the three Nigerian
armed services total approximately 76,000. The
Nigerian Army, the largest of the services, has
about 60,000 personnel deployed in two
mechanized infantry divisions, one composite
division (airborne and amphibious), the Lagos
Garrison Command (a division size unit), and the
Abuja-based Brigade of Guards. It has
demonstrated its capability to mobilize, deploy,
and sustain battalions in support of
peacekeeping operations in the former
Yugoslavia, Angola, Rwanda, Sierra Leone,
Liberia, Sudan/Darfur, and Somalia. The Nigerian
Navy (7,000) is equipped with frigates, fast
attack, and coastal patrol boats. The Nigerian
Air Force (9,000) flies transport, trainer,
helicopter, and fighter aircraft, but most are
currently not operational. Nigeria also has
pursued a policy of developing domestic military
production capabilities. Before the lifting of
sanctions by many Western nations, Nigeria had
turned to China, Russia, North Korea, and India
for the purchase of military equipment and
training.
FOREIGN RELATIONS
Since independence, Nigerian foreign policy
has been characterized by a focus on Africa and
by attachment to several fundamental principles:
African unity and independence; peaceful
settlement of disputes; nonalignment and
nonintentional interference in the internal
affairs of other nations; and regional economic
cooperation and development. In pursuing the
goal of regional economic cooperation and
development, Nigeria helped create the Economic
Community of West African States (ECOWAS), which
seeks to harmonize trade and investment
practices for its 15 West African member
countries and ultimately to achieve a full
customs union. Over the past decade, Nigeria has
played a pivotal role in the support of peace in
Africa. It has provided the bulk of troops for
the UN peacekeeping mission in Sierra Leone
(UNAMSIL), the UN Mission in Liberia (UNMIL),
and many of the troops to the African Union
Mission in Sudan (AMIS). Nigeria is anticipated
to do likewise in Somalia.
Nigeria has enjoyed generally good relations
with its immediate neighbors. A longstanding
border dispute with Cameroon over the
potentially oil-rich Bakassi Peninsula was
addressed by International Court of Justice
(ICJ) in The Hague in 2002. The ICJ awarded most
of the disputed Bakassi Peninsula and maritime
rights to Cameroon, and the UN established a
Mixed Commission on implementing the ICJ ruling.
On June 12, 2006 Nigerian President Obasanjo and
Cameroonian President Biya signed an agreement
in New York on implementing the ICJ decision.
Nigeria promptly withdrew its troops within 60
days. On August 14, 2008, Nigeria formally ceded
Bakassi to Cameroon.
Nigeria is a member of the following
international organizations: UN and many of its
special and related agencies; World Trade
Organization (WTO); International Monetary Fund
(IMF); World Bank/IBRD; African Development Bank
(AfDB); INTERPOL; Organization of Petroleum
Exporting Countries (OPEC); Economic Community
of West African States (ECOWAS); African Union
(AU); Maritime Organization of West and Central
Africa (MOWCA) and several other West African
bodies; Commonwealth; Nonaligned Movement (NAM);
and Organization of the Islamic Conference
(OIC), among others.
U.S.-NIGERIAN RELATIONS
Since the restoration of basic democracy in
Nigeria in 1999, the bilateral relationship has
continued to improve, and cooperation on many
important foreign policy goals, such as regional
peacekeeping, has been excellent.
The government has lent strong diplomatic
support to U.S. Government counter-terrorism
efforts in the aftermath of the September 11,
2001 terrorist attacks. The Government of
Nigeria, in its official statements, has both
condemned the terrorist attacks and supported
military action against the Taliban and Al
Qaida. Nigeria also has played a leading role in
forging an anti-terrorism consensus among states
in Sub-Saharan Africa. An estimated one million
Nigerians and Nigerian Americans live, study,
and work in the United States, while over 25,000
Americans live and work in Nigeria. President
Yar'Adua visited President Bush at the White
House on December 13, 2007.
U.S. Foreign Assistance Priorities
Democratic and economic progress in Nigeria
is challenged by poor governance, entrenched
corruption, internal conflict, ineffective
service delivery, and pervasive poverty. Nigeria
remains mired near the bottom of the United
National Development Program (UNDP) human
development index. While there has been notable
progress in macroeconomic policy reform over the
past few years, these reforms have yet to bring
measurable improvements to the lives of the
people. U.S. assistance is trying to help
Nigeria address these challenges by fostering
transparent and accountable governance; engaging
civil society and government partners to battle
corruption; increasing professionalism of the
military and law enforcement agencies;
strengthening health and education systems to
deliver quality services; growing the non-oil
economy; and improving the environment for
regional and international trade. With national
and local elections scheduled for mid-2011,
efforts are also focused on creating an
environment for transparent and credible
elections.
Peace and Security: Prior decades of military
rule had a negative effect on the professional
development of the Nigerian armed forces. The
Nigerian military is still in need of reform
efforts to professionalize the officer and
noncommissioned officer corps to include a focus
on promoting effective civilian oversight and
respect for human rights and the rule of law. U.
S. assistance continues to provide equipment and
training for Nigerian peacekeeping forces, which
are deployed to peacekeeping missions throughout
the continent. Funding assists in developing the
capacity of government institutions and civil
society to prevent, manage, and mitigate
conflict. The U.S. program also builds Nigeria's
capability to address threats to maritime
security, including narcotics trafficking, and
attempts to improve Nigeria's human rights
record and enhance public trust in the security
services.
Governing Justly and Democratically: U.S.
funding advances the rule of law by
strengthening the capacity and transparency of
the justice system and building judicial
independence at the federal level. Good
governance and anti-corruption reform is
enhanced by creating more responsive governance
structures at the national and local levels,
improving service delivery, and strengthening
budget management capacity and fiscal oversight.
The United States works directly with a diverse
cross-section of Nigerian civil society
organizations, building their internal
management capacity and strengthening their
ability to engage with the government on issues
of fiscal accountability, budget monitoring, and
extractive industries transparency. To lay the
groundwork for credible elections in 2011, the
United States will help to build local capacity
in managing and coordinating elections
infrastructure, and to promote civil society
input into electoral and constitutional reform
dialogue and oversight of the electoral process.
Investing in People: Helping Nigeria address the
fundamental health and education needs of its
citizens directly impacts governance, stability,
and economic growth. Nigeria ranks 70 out of 71
countries in the 2008 Report on the State of the
World's Mothers. The national average maternal
mortality is about 800 per 100,000 live births,
but the rate is at least three times higher in
the northern states. Health-care consumers often
opt to forego treatment, or to pay for treatment
from unskilled providers. Almost one-third of
women receive no antenatal care. Sixty-six
percent of deliveries take place in the home,
with only 35% assisted by trained health care
personnel. The United States supports increased
access to quality family planning and
reproductive health services, focusing efforts
in selected states with high unmet demand.
Maternal and child health efforts target routine
immunization, polio eradication, birth
preparedness, and maternity services, seeking to
reduce catastrophic rates of maternal and young
child mortality. With Nigeria's child malaria
mortality burden of over 300,000 preventable
deaths per year, U.S. assistance increases
access to proven preventive and curative
interventions, including insecticide treated
nets, net retreatment kits, and artemisinin
combination therapy treatment for children and
pregnant women. Nigeria has the largest
tuberculosis (TB) burden in Africa. To reduce
death and disability, especially in the
vulnerable co-infected HIV/AIDS population, U.S.
assistance aims to double the case detection
rate and halve the incidence of TB over the next
10 years. Funding supports equitable access to
quality basic education through teacher
training, infrastructure improvement, and
community involvement, focusing on public
schools as well as Islamiyyah schools that
provide both secular and religious education.
U.S. assistance fosters higher education
partnerships between American and Nigerian
universities, focusing on institutions in the
north. Through the President's Emergency Plan
for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), Nigeria receives
significant support to build partnerships with
the host country to provide integrated
prevention, care, and treatment programs
throughout the country and support orphans and
vulnerable children. As a result, in 2007 the
World Bank noted that HIV-positive
seroprevalence rates decreased to 3.1%.
Economic Growth: Funding will build trade and
investment capacity and improve the enabling
environment for agriculture and microfinance.
The United States will continue to implement
activities under the Global Food Security
Response that will accelerate the uptake of
proven production, processing, and marketing
technologies, significantly increase the
productivity of selected staple food crops,
foster agricultural value chain development, and
stimulate job creation through the growth of
agribusiness enterprises. Customs regulation and
policy reform will enhance regional trade,
transport linkages, and smooth supply to
regional markets, ensuring adherence to
international standards. U.S. assistance will
also focus on expanding investment
opportunities, which are hampered by limited
access to market-driven commercial financial
services, including microfinance. U.S.
assistance will also help expand access to
credit through partnerships with commercial
banks and increased capacity of microfinance
institutions. The U.S. will partner with
Nigeria's Central Bank to improve the policy
environment for micro-, small, and medium-sized
enterprises.
Ongoing presidential initiatives with Nigeria
include the African Growth and Competitiveness
Initiative, fighting avian flu, the Initiative
to End Hunger in Africa, and the Trans-Sahel
Counter-Terrorism Program. Nigeria's eligibility
for other regional activities include the Famine
Early Warning System; Anti-Corruption
Initiative; trafficking in persons; and the
Ambassador's Girls Scholarship Fund. Nigeria is
a premier participant in the President's
Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), for
which about $467 million was committed in FY
2008.
Principal U.S. Officials
Ambassador--Robin
Renee Sanders
Deputy Chief of Mission--Lisa Piascik
Political Affairs--Terry Pflaumer
Economic Affairs--Robert Tansey
Commercial Affairs--Larry Farris (Lagos)
Agricultural Affairs--Ali Abdi (Lagos)
Consul General--Donna Blair (Lagos)
Defense Attaché--Col. Peter Hoffman
Public Affairs--Atim George
Legal Attaché--Ronald Nolan (Lagos)
U.S. Embassy website: http://nigeria.usembassy.gov/