NEE - Newly Emerging Economy
27th
2.5%, 13th in the world.
6th largest population in the world.
A global economic hub.
- Fastest growing economy in Africa.
- Highest GNI in Africa.
- Former British Colony that gained independence in 1960.
- Political instability and civil war followed independence.
- Stable government since 1999, encouraging overseas investment.
- It is now a member of the British Commonwealth.
- Multi-ethnic and multi-faith country.
- Recent religious and ethnic tensions have destabilised the economy. E.g The Islamic fundamentalist group Boko Haram.
- Music like Fela Kuti.
- A large film making industry --> Nollywood.
- Literature like Wole Soyinka.
- Sport --> Won the Africa Cup of Nations three times.
- Natural environment ranges from tropical rainforests in the South to semi-deserts in the North.
- Diseases like malaria and pests like the Tsetse fly, which is lethal to livestock.
- 14% of rainforest was lost between 2005 and 2020.
- Employment in agriculture is declining due to increased mechanisation and rural-urban migration.
- There is rapid growth of communications, retail, manufacturing and finance.
10%
- Multiplier effects
- Provides, regular, secure incomes, and therefore taxation revenues.
- A thriving industrial sector attracts foreign investment.
- Oil processing creates chemical by-products. This has led to the growth of chemical industries such as soaps, detergents and plastics.
A transnational corporation is a large company that operates in several countries.
- Tax incentives
- Laxer environmental laws
- Cheaper labour and raw materials
- Access to a wider market
About 40.
- Jobs and development of skills.
- More money is spent in the economy.
- Investment by TNCs in local infrastructure and education.
- The sales of local business may rise due to TNCs.
- Valuble export revenues are earned.
- Local workers may be poorly paid.
- Working conditions may be poor.
- Management/High paying jobs often go to foreign employees brought in by the TNC.
- Economic leakage.
- Grants and subsidies used to attract TNCs could have been used to invest in the country's own industries.
- Contributes to taxation and export revenue.
- Directly provides 65,000 jobs for Nigerians and 250,000 jobs in related industries.
- Gives 91% of contracts to Nigerian companies.
- Support growth of Nigeria's energy sector.
- Oil spills cause water pollution and soil degradation, reducing agricultural production and fishing yields.
- Frequent oil flares send toxic fumes into the air.
- Militant groups disrupt oil supply in the delta.
- Oil theft leads to Shell and the Nigerian government losing $23 billion a year.
- Former British colony that gained independence in 1960.
- It is now a member of the British Commonwealth.
- UN = United Nations --> Peacekeeping role.
- WTO = World Trade Organisation --> Promoting free trade.
- OPEC = Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries.
- African Union --> Economic and peacekeeping role.
- ECOWAS = Economic Community of West Africa States --> Trade group.
- CEN-SAD = Community of Sahel-Saharan States --> Trade and sporting links.
- Refined oil from the EU and the US.
- Cars from Brazil and the US.
- Telephones from China.
- Crude oil
- Natural gas
- Rubber
- Cocoa
- Cotton
High quality crude oil dominates Nigeria's exports, reducing the importance of Nigeria's agricultural products. This leads to reduced income for farmers, contributing to the widening development gap.
- Poverty --> Over 60% of the population lives on less than $1 a day.
- Birth and infant mortality rates are high; whereas life expectancy is low.
- Sprawling squatter settlements in large cities like Lagos.
- In 2014, the World Bank approved $500 million to fund development projects and provide long-term loans to businesses. This helped to reduce the over-dependence on oil exports.
- The NGO Nets for Life provides education on malaria prevention and distributes anti-mosquito nets to many families in Nigeria.
- High levels of corruption.
- Previous and current governments using aid money for other purposes such as defence.
- Donors having political influence over what happens to the aid.
- Money is often used to promote the commercial self-interest of the donor.
- Mining --> Tin mining leads to soil erosion. Local water supplies were also polluted with toxic chemicals.
- Oil extraction --> Oil spills in the Nigeria Delta have impacted freshwater and marine ecosystems. They cause acid rain which harms wildlife.
- Industrial growth --> In Lagos, many harmful pollutants go directly into open drains and water channels. They are harmful to people and damage ecosystems downstream. Some industries dispose of chemical waste on nearby land, threatening the groundwater quality.
- Commercial farming --> Land degradation, water pollution due to chemicals, soil erosion and silting of rivers.
- Deforestation --> Cheetahs, giraffes and nearly 500 types of plants have disappeared from areas of commercial farming and deforestation.
- Reliable, better paid jobs in manufacturing industries or services.
- Better access to safe water and sanitation.
- Higher disposable income to spend on education, homes, food, clothes, and recreation.
- Improvements to infrastructure such as roads.
- Better-quality healthcare due to investments.