NON EXPORTATION OF OIL IN NIGERIA. LIKELY PROBLEMS ACCOUNTING FOR AND POSSIBLE SOLUTION
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The stimulation of non-oil exports will provide a veritable alternative source of revenue, increase access to foreign exchange and enhance the country’s foreign/external reserves. The increased foreign exchange earnings generated from non-oil exports will go a long way in ensuring a stable and competitive exchange rate/value for the naira. Furthermore, the nation’s ability to reduce her external indebtedness and service existing debts will, to a large extent, depend on our export earnings, through additional revenue from non-oil exports.The promotion of non-oil exports, willy-nilly, will have tremendous multiplier effects, directly and indirectly, on employment generation/job creation, especially considering the present high level of youth and graduate unemployment in the country. This is because with increased non-oil exports, there will be an exponential increase in employment opportunities in the industries engaged in direct production for exports. By extension, export growth will also have positive bearings and indirect effects on employment in feeder industries supplying inputs, materials and equipment to the industries directly engaged in export production. The aggregate consumer expenditures of workers employed in all these industries, as a result of income earned will also have significant impact on the economy by way of lowering income inequalities, enhancing the country’s Gross National Income and stimulating economic growth.
In furtherance of its transformation agenda to liberate the nation’s tottering economy from the shackles of the current high-dependence and over-reliance on oil export/revenue, the government must adopt outward-looking and permissive economic policies which will emphasise vigorous export promotion and expansion. This it will do through the provision of appropriate mix of incentives to exporters. In this regard, I reiterate the need to emulate and learn from the experience of the Newly Industrialised Countries, especially the “Asian Tigers”, such as South Korea, Taiwan, China, Singapore, Hong Kong, Thailand, Malaysia and Indonesia. It is an acclaimed fact that the remarkable economic performances of the NICs have been largely due to the export-oriented growth of their economies. The governments of these countries, together with dynamic entrepreneurs and investors succeeded in promoting vigorous export-led growth and industrialisation.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Title page i Dedication ii Acknowledgement iii
CHAPTER ONE Introduction 1
CHAPTER TWO Problems of Non-Export in Nigeria Crude oil 7
CHAPTER THREE Solutions to the Problems
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APA
Kings, S. (2026). NON EXPORTATION OF OIL IN NIGERIA. LIKELY PROBLEMS ACCOUNTING FOR AND POSSIBLE SOLUTION. Afribary. Retrieved June 14, 2026, from http://library.afribary.com/works/non-exportation-of-oil-in-nigeria-likely-problems-accounting-for-and-possible-solution
MLA
Kings, Solomon. "NON EXPORTATION OF OIL IN NIGERIA. LIKELY PROBLEMS ACCOUNTING FOR AND POSSIBLE SOLUTION." Afribary, 6 Jun. 2026, http://library.afribary.com/works/non-exportation-of-oil-in-nigeria-likely-problems-accounting-for-and-possible-solution. Accessed June 14, 2026.
Chicago
Kings, Solomon. "NON EXPORTATION OF OIL IN NIGERIA. LIKELY PROBLEMS ACCOUNTING FOR AND POSSIBLE SOLUTION." Afribary (2026). Accessed June 14, 2026. http://library.afribary.com/works/non-exportation-of-oil-in-nigeria-likely-problems-accounting-for-and-possible-solution