Oil shocks in Nigeria in the 20th century: a case of Dutch Disease?

Oil shocks in Nigeria in the 20th century: a case of Dutch Disease?

A comparative paper on determining the existence of the Dutch Disease in Nigeria

GlobeEdit ( 2014-08-27 )

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This paper investigates whether the Dutch Disease (DD) occurred in Nigeria during the 20th century by examining the spending and the resource movement effect using the Error Correction and Partial Adjustment regression models. The spending effect shows that under a fixed exchange rate the DD is nullified. Under a floating exchange rate, the exchange rate appreciates indicative of the DD. Controlling for the change in exchange rate regime in 1986 shows that a spurious regression was run and no inferences can be taken. Examining the resource movement effect, the manufacturing sector contracts but the Agricultural sector’s size remains stable. The assumption in the core DD model of perfect labor substitutability does not hold empirically. This paper shares the view that when looking at economic phenomena one should focus on the change in economic fundamentals. It is concluded that the DD is present following the 1998 to 2002 oil shock under a floating exchange rate, Looney’s finding of effective policy against the DD holds empirically and the Dornbusch overshooting phenomenon is found under a fixed exchange rate regime.

Book Details:

ISBN-13:

978-3-639-75803-0

ISBN-10:

363975803X

EAN:

9783639758030

Book language:

English

By (author) :

Yannick Lamens

Number of pages:

72

Published on:

2014-08-27

Category:

Economics