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<title>OIL EXPORT DEPENDENCE AND EXCHANGE RATE BEHAVIOUR IN NIGERIA</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/2320</link>
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<dc:date>2026-04-15T05:59:55Z</dc:date>
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<title>OIL EXPORT DEPENDENCE AND EXCHANGE RATE BEHAVIOUR IN NIGERIA</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/2321</link>
<description>OIL EXPORT DEPENDENCE AND EXCHANGE RATE BEHAVIOUR IN NIGERIA
OLOKO, Tirimisiyu Folorunsho
The behaviour of Nigeria’s currency exchange rates has been tied to the vagaries of oil export’s&#13;
proceeds. Despite export diversification efforts to reduce the level of Oil Export Dependence&#13;
(OED), the country’s nominal and real exchange rates remain unstable. Nigeria’s OED rose&#13;
from an average of 19.13% in the 1960s to 97.35% in the 1990s, before dropping to 83.89% in&#13;
2019. The Nominal Exchange Rate (NER) depreciated from N0.71/US$ in the 1960s to&#13;
N306.92/US$ in 2019, while the Real Exchange Rate (RER) of 137 basis points (bpts) in the&#13;
1960s appreciated to 97.24bpts in the 1980s, and became 134.52bpts in 2019. Extant literature&#13;
investigated the effect of OED on Nigeria’s NER without considering the managed floating&#13;
exchange rate (MFER) system and the varied exchange rates stabilising potential of non-oil&#13;
sectors (NOS), thus overstating the effect. This study was, therefore, designed to investigate&#13;
the effect of OED on the behaviour of Nigeria’s exchange rates from 1960 to 2019.&#13;
The Mundell-Fleming-Dornbusch framework provided the basis. The Structural Vector&#13;
Autoregressive with block exogeneity (SVARX) model was employed to capture both external&#13;
(oil export) and exogenous (non-oil export) components of OED. The model produced&#13;
contemporaneous, short-term(h=2), and medium-term(h=4) horizons effects of OED. The&#13;
study accounted for external reserves, which moderates monetary authorities’ commitment to&#13;
defend NER, thus making RER more responsive under MFER system. The exchange rates&#13;
stabilising potential of NOS were examined by simulating the effect of export diversification&#13;
to three main NOS (agriculture, manufacturing, and solid minerals) on OED and exchange&#13;
rates. The variables included OED (oil export percentage of total merchandise export), NER&#13;
(domestic price per unit of foreign currency), and RER (foreign price relative to domestic price&#13;
of a common basket of goods). The data were obtained from the Central Bank of Nigeria&#13;
Statistical Bulletin. All estimates were validated at α≤0.05.&#13;
The OED shock had insignificant negative contemporaneous effect on NER (-0.07;α=0.61) and&#13;
RER (-0.01;α=0.52). In the short to medium-term horizons, OED had insignificant effect on&#13;
NER (h2=0.01;α=0.72, h4=0.03,α=0.21), but a significant negative effect on RER (h2=-&#13;
0.05;α=0.00, h4=-0.07,α=0.00). This implied that a lower OED had no immediate impact on&#13;
NER and RER. However, it caused RER to depreciate in the short to medium term. This result&#13;
was explained by the dominance of oil export in OED, as the reduction in OED over the&#13;
sampled period was caused by a lower oil export rather than a higher non-oil export. The&#13;
simulation of export diversification with the dominance of non-oil export in OED showed that&#13;
higher export of manufactured goods and solid minerals reduced the level of OED, increased&#13;
external reserves, and stabilized NER better than higher export of agricultural goods. Whereas,&#13;
a higher export of agricultural goods caused RER appreciation, unlike the other sectors.&#13;
Non-oil export was insufficient to generate the reduction in oil export dependence necessary to&#13;
enhance stable nominal and real exchange rates. Higher commitment to export diversification,&#13;
particularly in the solid minerals and manufacturing sectors, is required to stabilise exchange&#13;
rates in Nigeria.
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<dc:date>2021-12-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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