Knoema.com - Nigeria http://ar.knoema.com 2021-07-02T13:47:11Z /favicon.png يمثل موقع Knoema مسار معرفتك الشخصية Africa's Demographic Boom — A Path to Economic Prosperity, or to Social Crisis? //ar.knoema.com/sqjbhhb/africa-s-demographic-boom-a-path-to-economic-prosperity-or-to-social-crisis 2021-07-02T13:47:11Z Misha Gusev ar.knoema.com://ar.knoema.com/user/1000560
Africa's Demographic Boom — A Path to Economic Prosperity, or to Social Crisis?

(16 June 2021) Africa is the only continent with a fast-growing population, and the only one where the population is expected to continue growing beyond 2050.  According to the UN's 2019 World Population Prospects report, in the next 80 years population of Africa will increase by more than three times — from 1.3 billion people in 2020 to 4.2 billion in 2100. In 19 African countries, the population is on track to double in the next 30 years, and in 28 African countries the population is expected to triple by 2100. Nigeria is projected to become the world's third most populous country by the end of the century, with 732 million people. The rapid population growth in Africa combined with the simultaneously increasing share of the population that is of working age provide conditions that can be the basis for so-called "demographic dividend": an increasing working age population and a low share of non-working population translating into rapid economic growth.  But this growth doesn't happen automatically. People don’t just skate into good jobs by being of working age, and smart investments don’t come from thin air. The most countries in Sub-Saharan Africa are currently among the least developed nations in the world, according to the UN Human Development Index (HDI). In addition, a comparison between Nigeria (the largest African economy and the most populous country on the continent) and India — developing countries with equal per capita income — shows a slower pace of social progress (measured by HDI) in Nigeria over the last 16 than in India. In fact, in the last five years social progress in Sub-Saharan Africa, as measured by UN Human Development Index, has almost stopped. Lack of economic and educational opportunity could increase the risk that the population boom in Africa will end up not with demographic dividend but with increasing instability, higher inequality, social conflicts, and growing violence. Note: UN Human Development Index is a summary measure of average achievement in key dimensions of human development: a long and healthy life, being knowledgeable and have a decent standard of living. The HDI is the geometric mean of normalized indices for each of the three dimensions.

Misha Gusev ar.knoema.com://ar.knoema.com/user/1000560
Nigeria: Armed Conflicts, Military Spending, and the Economic Context //ar.knoema.com/yfkakle/nigeria-armed-conflicts-military-spending-and-the-economic-context 2021-06-15T07:55:59Z Alex Kulikov ar.knoema.com://ar.knoema.com/user/1847910
Nigeria: Armed Conflicts, Military Spending, and the Economic Context

During the mid-to-late 2000s, Nigeria struggled to reign in the Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta, better known simply as MEND. MEND is a militant group based in the southwest of Nigeria in the Niger Delta, Nigeria's primary onshore oil production region.  The group sought increased economic benefits for residents of the Niger Delta from the country's oil production and reparations for destruction of the environment by foreign oil companies. The group's guerrilla warfare tactics and deadly bombings were only part of the reason it was so potent; the group also caused severe economic losses by disrupting or shutting in oil and gas production infrastructure and kidnapping foreign oil workers. A second violent group was developing its identity and reach during this same period: Boko Haram. Much of the world learned of the Boko Haram terrorist group after it kidnapped 276 school girls from their dormitory in the Nigerian town of Chibok in April 2014, but for years it has grown in size and capability. Formally established in the early 2000s, this Islamic extremist group gained new momentum and potency in the period 2009-2010 when it started an armed rebellion against the government of Nigeria.  Today both groups have contributed to escalating levels of violence throughout Nigeria, although many of the claims of responsibility by purported members of MEND are questionable. In 2014, Nigeria experienced a dramatic increase in fatalities, reaching about 11,000 deaths, according to ACLED estimates. In late January 2015, after the largest massacre by Boko Haram in Baga (1,700-2,000 killed), a coalition of military forces from Nigeria, Chad, Cameroon, and Niger began a counter-insurgency campaign against the group. By summer, it was believed that the Nigerian military had retaken most of the areas previously controlled by Boko Haram in the northeastern area of the country, however, the first quarter death toll still reached 6,109 fatalities. Violence in Nigeria must be examined in the context of the socioeconomic conditions that have only accentuated ethnic, religious, and geographic divisions in the country. Nigeria is Africa’s largest economy as well as its largest oil producer. Yet, astonishing levels of corruption have left it lagging in basic development and infrastructure in most of the country.Egypt has a population roughly half the size of Nigeria's and yet it has nearly five times the installed power generation capacity, according to data from the International Energy Agency and the World Bank.According to the IMF's 2015 World Economic Outlook, Nigeria also has the lowest total government expenditure as a percent of GDP in the world at only 10.58 percent. The average in Sub-Saharan Africa is 22.4 percent with some countries like Kenya and South Africa spending upwards of 30 percent or more of GDP. Nigeria, for all its violence, lags not only in socioeconomic-related spending, but also in military expenditures.Since 2009 when MEND signed an amnesty agreement with the Government of Nigeria, Nigeria has maintained military expenditures of about 370-380 billion naira, or 2.2-2.3 billion US dollars. In contrast, Algeria - another large African oil and gas producer with a GDP (PPP) about half the size of Nigeria's - spent $11.9B in 2014 on its military.Steady economic growth has also reduced Nigeria's military expenditure relative to GDP from 0.9 percent in 2009 to 0.4 percent in 2014. Nigeria now ranks 39th among African countries by military expenditures as a percent of GDP.  Sources: Armed Conflict Location and Event Dataset (ACLED) African Data (1997-2016)  SIPRI Military Expenditure Database, 1988-2016, Global Firepower, IMF World Economic Outlook (WEO), October 2017 , EIA International Energy Statistics, The World Bank World Development Indicators

Alex Kulikov ar.knoema.com://ar.knoema.com/user/1847910
Nigeria: Rising Unemployment and Food Prices Ignite Social Unrest //ar.knoema.com/jeyfune/nigeria-rising-unemployment-and-food-prices-ignite-social-unrest 2021-04-08T17:22:09Z Alex Kulikov ar.knoema.com://ar.knoema.com/user/1847910
Nigeria: Rising Unemployment and Food Prices Ignite Social Unrest

(15 January 2021)Rising global food prices, low local and global oil prices, and the high unemployment rate in Nigeria where 40% of the population already lives below the poverty line fueled record-high incidents of political and social unrest in 2020. While October was by far the most conflict-prone month, the year clocked in more than 1.5 times the number of conflicts recorded in 2019. And, while the world outside Nigeria may speculate automatically that Boko Haram is to blame, the terrorist group is responsible for only 30 percent of the uptick in conflicts.    The conflict has many costs, and 2021 will see these mature further in Nigeria as the government seeks policy avenues and external support in the wake of 2020. The economy is reeling from demand and supply shocks that have translated into stagflation - a decline of economic growth amidst high inflation and unemployment rate. During Q2 2020, Nigeria's GDP decreased by 6 percent and unemployment increased to 27 percent (compared to 23% in 2018).Headline inflation rose from 12 percent in May to 15 percent in November 2020, propelled by food supply shortages and increasing petrol prices. Given Nigeria's high vulnerability to global grain prices—net imports of cereals constitute 24% of production—rising global food prices coupled with currency depreciation disrupted domestic food supply.Demand was constrained by decreased household incomes caused by high unemployment (partly resulting from COVID-19 containment measures) as well as reduced oil exports and government spending. Supply was negatively affected by food shortages caused by rising food prices (a global phenomenon) and the depreciation of the naira. The government introduced a limited budget stimulus package (1.8% of GDP) because of Abuja's budget deficit and dwindling foreign reserves. However, due to the country's expansionary monetary policy, the overall economic response measures accounted for about 3 percent of the country's GDP during the spring-summer period. In October, when the protests became more frequent, the government increased the economic stimulus to 6 percent of GDP.

Alex Kulikov ar.knoema.com://ar.knoema.com/user/1847910
Nigeria: Coffee and Cocoa //ar.knoema.com/jyosraf/nigeria-coffee-and-cocoa 2020-11-11T09:47:17Z Alex Kulikov ar.knoema.com://ar.knoema.com/user/1847910
Nigeria: Coffee and Cocoa

Alex Kulikov ar.knoema.com://ar.knoema.com/user/1847910
Global Oil Market Imbalance | Overview of countries on either side //ar.knoema.com/bcobhm/global-oil-market-imbalance-overview-of-countries-on-either-side 2020-04-20T20:46:53Z Alex Kulikov ar.knoema.com://ar.knoema.com/user/1847910
Global Oil Market Imbalance | Overview of countries on either side

Global oil production remains strong even as some leading industry forecasts suggest that global economic conditions will override low global oil prices to constrain oil demand growth this year.Some leading OPEC producers, including Iraq, Kuwait, and Saudi Arabia, are producing at or near record levels, largely offsetting production declines from several OPEC and non-OPEC producers. Many of these OPEC members have relatively low operating costs or are on the upside of years of development to bring online new production and thus may not reduce production in the face of the oil price slump to retain their market shares.In contrast, other major producers, such as Mexico, Nigeria, the United States, and Venezuela, are seeing global oil prices fall below their break-even prices. These producers are working to reign in production costs, manage declining production in major producing fields, and/or expedite rationalization of their domestic industry, spurred by the boom-bust cycle of the market, under investment, and internal regulatory reforms.

Alex Kulikov ar.knoema.com://ar.knoema.com/user/1847910
Nigeria: External Sector Unprepared for Any Major Drop in Oil Prices in 2020 //ar.knoema.com/zpfxky/nigeria-external-sector-unprepared-for-any-major-drop-in-oil-prices-in-2020 2020-01-15T03:46:21Z Misha Gusev ar.knoema.com://ar.knoema.com/user/1000560
Nigeria: External Sector Unprepared for Any Major Drop in Oil Prices in 2020

Nigeria’s external reserves dropped to $40.7 billion at the end of Q3 2019, a single-quarter decrease of $4 billion. By the end of 2019, Nigeria’s external reserves dropped even deeper to less than $39 billion. As analysts began predicting that the falling reserves might force the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) to depreciate the naira, the CBN sought to calm markets and announce that the probability of a naira devaluation is low provided crude oil prices remain stable in 2020. Nigeria's current-account deficit narrowed in Q3 2019 to -2.3% from a revised -3.3% of GDP the previous quarter, reflecting stronger trade performance. Exports hovered in late 2019 in the $15 billion to $16 billion range, while the trade balance showed improvement in Q3 largely due to a $2 billion decrease in imports to $12.6 billion.The net deficit on services has settled between $8 billion and $8.5 billion over the past four quarters.The CBN has also made some sizable data revisions for Q2 2019: the trade deficit has narrowed from 2.2% to 1.3% of GDP and the current-account deficit has widened from -2.5% to -3.3%, as previously mentioned. The culprit was an increase in oil and gas imports from $2.2 billion to $3 billion.

Misha Gusev ar.knoema.com://ar.knoema.com/user/1000560
Nigeria Beyond Oil: Agriculture, water resources, and food prices //ar.knoema.com/rveuewf/nigeria-beyond-oil-agriculture-water-resources-and-food-prices 2019-03-12T08:52:36Z Knoema Team ar.knoema.com://ar.knoema.com/user/2660920
Nigeria Beyond Oil: Agriculture, water resources, and food prices

Nigeria's transformation into a major oil producer in the late 1960s overwhelmed its status as one of the most promising agricultural producers in the world. Between 1960 and 1969, net exports of agricultural products constituted 6 to 7 percent of Nigeria's GDP and the country was able to feed itself. But as the country began to depend on oil to drive growth and development, Nigeria's status as an agricultural powerhouse steeply declined, and by 1975 it became a net importer of agricultural products. In 2013, Nigeria's agricultural net imports reached $3 billion, according to a World Bank estimate, with the largest imports, by value, including wheat, sugar, rice, and fish. And, yet, Nigeria's agricultural story need not be finished. It has abundant resources to support a more substantial agricultural economy: large areas of arable land, two of Africa’s largest rivers, and a large, youthful workforce. As former President of Nigeria Obasanjo wrote in Forbes in 2014, agriculture could become the new oil for Nigeria, providing long-term sustainable growth in the new world of low energy prices.  In this series, Knoema presents data and visuals on Nigeria's agricultural sector, land use, and water resources as well as the crowdsourced retail food prices, collected by contributors of our MarketTap program. Sources: World Development Indicators (WDI); FAO Value of Agricultural production; FAO AQUASTAT; OECD-FAO Agricultural Outlook 2018-2027; Food Balance Sheets; Socio-Economic Data, Nigeria 2014; Agriculture Sector of Nigeria, 2012; Regional Geographic Data of Nigeria, 2010; Food Prices  Sector overview          Land use and agricultural production          Water resources and water use          Retail food prices

Knoema Team ar.knoema.com://ar.knoema.com/user/2660920
Nigeria Beyond Oil: Agriculture, water resources, and food prices //ar.knoema.com/vcycaad/nigeria-beyond-oil-agriculture-water-resources-and-food-prices 2019-03-12T08:52:32Z Knoema Team ar.knoema.com://ar.knoema.com/user/2660920
Nigeria Beyond Oil: Agriculture, water resources, and food prices

Nigeria's transformation into a major oil producer in the late 1960s overwhelmed its status as one of the most promising agricultural producers in the world. Between 1960 and 1969, net exports of agricultural products constituted 6 to 7 percent of Nigeria's GDP and the country was able to feed itself. But as the country began to depend on oil to drive growth and development, Nigeria's status as an agricultural powerhouse steeply declined, and by 1975 it became a net importer of agricultural products. In 2013, Nigeria's agricultural net imports reached $3 billion, according to a World Bank estimate, with the largest imports, by value, including wheat, sugar, rice, and fish. And, yet, Nigeria's agricultural story need not be finished. It has abundant resources to support a more substantial agricultural economy: large areas of arable land, two of Africa’s largest rivers, and a large, youthful workforce. As former President of Nigeria Obasanjo wrote in Forbes in 2014, agriculture could become the new oil for Nigeria, providing long-term sustainable growth in the new world of low energy prices.  In this series, Knoema presents data and visuals on Nigeria's agricultural sector, land use, and water resources as well as the crowdsourced retail food prices, collected by contributors of our MarketTap program. Sources: World Development Indicators (WDI); FAO Value of Agricultural production; FAO AQUASTAT; OECD-FAO Agricultural Outlook 2018-2027; Food Balance Sheets; Socio-Economic Data, Nigeria 2014; Agriculture Sector of Nigeria, 2012; Regional Geographic Data of Nigeria, 2010; Food Prices  Sector overview          Land use and agricultural production          Water resources and water use          Retail food prices

Knoema Team ar.knoema.com://ar.knoema.com/user/2660920
Nigeria Beyond Oil: Agriculture, water resources, and food prices //ar.knoema.com/sazkime/nigeria-beyond-oil-agriculture-water-resources-and-food-prices 2019-01-18T16:17:55Z Misha Gusev ar.knoema.com://ar.knoema.com/user/1000560
Nigeria Beyond Oil: Agriculture, water resources, and food prices

Nigeria's transformation into a major oil producer in the late 1960s overwhelmed its status as one of the most promising agricultural producers in the world. Between 1960 and 1969, net exports of agricultural products constituted 6 to 7 percent of Nigeria's GDP and the country was able to feed itself. But as the country began to depend on oil to drive growth and development, Nigeria's status as an agricultural powerhouse steeply declined, and by 1975 it became a net importer of agricultural products. In 2013, Nigeria's agricultural net imports reached $3 billion, according to a World Bank estimate, with the largest imports, by value, including wheat, sugar, rice, and fish. And, yet, Nigeria's agricultural story need not be finished. It has abundant resources to support a more substantial agricultural economy: large areas of arable land, two of Africa’s largest rivers, and a large, youthful workforce. As former President of Nigeria Obasanjo wrote in Forbes in 2014, agriculture could become the new oil for Nigeria, providing long-term sustainable growth in the new world of low energy prices.  In this series, Knoema presents data and visuals on Nigeria's agricultural sector, land use, and water resources as well as the crowdsourced retail food prices, collected by contributors of Knoema's MarketTap program. Sources: World Development Indicators (WDI); FAO Value of Agricultural production; FAO AQUASTAT; OECD-FAO Agricultural Outlook 2018-2027; Food Balance Sheets; Socio-Economic Data, Nigeria 2014; Agriculture Sector of Nigeria, 2012; Regional Geographic Data of Nigeria, 2010; Food Prices  Sector overview          Land use and agricultural production          Water resources and water use          Retail food prices

Misha Gusev ar.knoema.com://ar.knoema.com/user/1000560
Nigeria Beyond Oil: Agriculture, water resources, and food prices //ar.knoema.com/igsyfqf/nigeria-beyond-oil-agriculture-water-resources-and-food-prices 2018-09-20T10:02:46Z Misha Gusev ar.knoema.com://ar.knoema.com/user/1000560
Nigeria Beyond Oil: Agriculture, water resources, and food prices

Nigeria's transformation into a major oil producer in the late 1960s overwhelmed its status as one of the most promising agricultural producers in the world. Between 1960 and 1969, net exports of agricultural products constituted 6 to 7 percent of Nigeria's GDP and the country was able to feed itself. But as the country began to depend on oil to drive growth and development, Nigeria's status as an agricultural powerhouse steeply declined, and by 1975 it became a net importer of agricultural products. In 2013, Nigeria's agricultural net imports reached $3 billion, according to a World Bank estimate, with the largest imports, by value, including wheat, sugar, rice, and fish. And, yet, Nigeria's agricultural story need not be finished. It has abundant resources to support a more substantial agricultural economy: large areas of arable land, two of Africa’s largest rivers, and a large, youthful workforce. As former President of Nigeria Obasanjo wrote in Forbes in 2014, agriculture could become the new oil for Nigeria, providing long-term sustainable growth in the new world of low energy prices.  In this series, Knoema presents data and visuals on Nigeria's agricultural sector, land use, and water resources as well as the crowdsourced retail food prices, collected by contributors of our MarketTap program. Sources: World Development Indicators (WDI); FAO Value of Agricultural production; FAO AQUASTAT, 2015; OECD-FAO Agricultural Outlook 2017-2026; Food Balance Sheets; Socio-Economic Data, Nigeria 2014; Agriculture Sector of Nigeria, 2012; Regional Geographic Data of Nigeria, 2010; Food Prices  Sector overview          Land use and agricultural production          Water resources and water use         Retail food prices

Misha Gusev ar.knoema.com://ar.knoema.com/user/1000560
Nigeria Healthcare Service Cost Comparison //ar.knoema.com/jlebqif/nigeria-healthcare-service-cost-comparison 2018-08-03T14:11:31Z Balaji S ar.knoema.com://ar.knoema.com/user/1000220
Nigeria Healthcare Service Cost Comparison

The page contains data on the cost of essential healthcare services in Nigeria including diagnostics services, consulting services, and clinical procedures in public and private health facilities. The data is being collected under the Knoema's MarketTap Collection Program that mobilizes Knoema's in-country networks of paid volunteers to obtain client-defined streams of local data. Our established commercial network of collectors is global, expanding, and highly trained in mobile data collection.

Balaji S ar.knoema.com://ar.knoema.com/user/1000220
Nigeria Annual International Conference & Exhibition 2017 //ar.knoema.com/lqqeoqd/nigeria-annual-international-conference-exhibition-2017 2018-06-20T07:55:11Z Alina Buzanakova ar.knoema.com://ar.knoema.com/user/1293450
Nigeria Annual International Conference & Exhibition 2017

Over the years NAICE has grown to become the largest upstream Oil and Gas event in Africa. It holds annually in Nigeria and attracts industry practitioners at all levels, as well as key stakeholders. It has continuously served as one of the industry's opportunity to learn, debate and challenge ideas to chart the right course towards a sustainable future for the industry. Traditionally, NAICE holds on a rotational basis at major cities in the SPE Sections in Nigeria.  The theme of 2017 NAICE: Riding the Waves of Boom and Bust: Common Objectives, Diverse Perspectives Synopsis: Low oil prices may have bottomed out but the challenge of keeping production costs competitive will remain. The theme would address some of the key areas that contribute directly to production costs, from the perspectives of the government, operators and service companies. Key issues would include prevailing fiscal arrangement; contracting process especially for JVs; innovative solutions both in project delivery and operations; talent management; security challenges; and regulatory policies.    Date of Event: 31 July- 2 August 2017 Event Holder: OPEC Location: Eko Hotels & Suites, LagosNigeria  Source of data: OPEC Annual Statistical Bulletin| JODI Oil Dataset | World Rig Count, Monthly OPEC Estimates

Alina Buzanakova ar.knoema.com://ar.knoema.com/user/1293450
Nigeria Energy Production Profile //ar.knoema.com/hxpnegg/nigeria-energy-production-profile 2018-05-31T06:30:03Z Misha Gusev ar.knoema.com://ar.knoema.com/user/1000560
Nigeria Energy Production Profile

Misha Gusev ar.knoema.com://ar.knoema.com/user/1000560
Nigeria: Political Institutions and Development //ar.knoema.com/sjhrlpc/nigeria-political-institutions-and-development 2017-10-11T19:20:31Z Alex Kulikov ar.knoema.com://ar.knoema.com/user/1847910
Nigeria: Political Institutions and Development

For additional information on elections please visit each country's respective electoral commission web site: Nigeria - The Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC)

Alex Kulikov ar.knoema.com://ar.knoema.com/user/1847910
Nigeria Food Security //ar.knoema.com/rynenif/nigeria-food-security 2017-08-10T08:45:17Z Mikhail Zhukovskii ar.knoema.com://ar.knoema.com/user/1293430
Nigeria Food Security

Mikhail Zhukovskii ar.knoema.com://ar.knoema.com/user/1293430
Nigeria Economy //ar.knoema.com/vfmjllb/nigeria-economy 2016-05-05T05:19:19Z Alex Kulikov ar.knoema.com://ar.knoema.com/user/1847910
Nigeria Economy

Alex Kulikov ar.knoema.com://ar.knoema.com/user/1847910
Nigeria Population | Data and Charts, 1900-2013 //ar.knoema.com/qtbezdc/nigeria-population-data-and-charts-1900-2013 2016-04-22T08:22:20Z Alex Kulikov ar.knoema.com://ar.knoema.com/user/1847910
Nigeria Population | Data and Charts, 1900-2013

The current population of Nigeria is 173,6 million people. During the last fifty years total fertility rate in Nigeria holds around 6 children, which means that, on average, every woman gives birth to 6 children. Population division of the UN expects Nigeria population to exceed 440 million people in 2050.China PopulationIndia PopulationUSA PopulationIndonesia PopulationBrazil Population World PopulationPakistan PopulationNigeria PopulationBangladesh PopulationRussia PopulationJapan Population World Population Ranking

Alex Kulikov ar.knoema.com://ar.knoema.com/user/1847910
Nigeria: Oil price slump affecting production, undermining fiscal sustainability and growth //ar.knoema.com/fwhvshc/nigeria-oil-price-slump-affecting-production-undermining-fiscal-sustainability-and-growth 2016-01-14T11:17:25Z Alex Kulikov ar.knoema.com://ar.knoema.com/user/1847910
Nigeria: Oil price slump affecting production, undermining fiscal sustainability and growth

2015 was a momentous year for Nigeria. The general elections held in March brought about the first democratic transition of power from a ruling party to an opposition party, heightening expectations for meaningful political change. The new Government is establishing itself during a very challenging time, however, marked by a sharp, sustained decline in global oil prices and continuing violence in the country's northeast. Given the high dependency of Nigeria on oil revenues, the recent sharp decline in oil prices has given rise to major challenges in the form of external imbalance, steep falls in government revenues, and slower economic growth. As the World Bank says in its recent Nigeria Economic Report, in contrast to the period of 2008-2009, Nigeria no longer has a large fiscal reserve to buffer government budgets from the revenue shortfalls. The report goes on to describe the country's major fiscal contraction and slower economic growth last year spurred in part by falling oil output and an increasing cost of the fuel subsidy during 2001-2014 that contributed to a drawdown of the Excess Crude Account from $22 billion in 2008 to about $2 billion in 2015. The ECA had previously enabled the government to finance fiscal stimulus and sustain growth during the late 2000s while other economies globally suffered.  Given expectations for lower average oil prices and deferred oil production in the future, Nigeria will likely need to reduce rapidly the dependency of government finance on oil, according to the World Bank. In this page we provide a comprehensive overview of Nigeria's oil production, exports volumes, revenues and the position in the international oil market, as well as the recent data on key finance and economic indicators Sources: International Energy Agency (IEA) Monthly Oil Market Report; U. S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) International Energy Statistics; Joint Organisations Data Initiative (JODI)) Oil dataset;OPEC Annual Statistical Bulletin; Oil Supply and Demand: OPEC Estimates And Projections (OPEC Monthly Oil Market Report); US Petroleum dataset (EIA); Nigeria Foreign Trade (UN Comtrade Database); Nigeria Crude Oil Official Selling Prices and differentials vs. Dated Brent (Thomson Reuters data); Charles R. Weber Company (Tanker Freight Rates); World Bank Global Economic Monitor; International Debt Statistics (World Bank); IMF World Economic Outlook (WEO), October 2015

Alex Kulikov ar.knoema.com://ar.knoema.com/user/1847910
Nigeria Oil and Gas 2015 //ar.knoema.com/uxgedte/nigeria-oil-and-gas-2015 2015-04-27T17:25:35Z Mikhail Zhukovskii ar.knoema.com://ar.knoema.com/user/1293430
Nigeria Oil and Gas 2015

Under the auspices of the Federal Ministry of Petroleum Resources and Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), NOG is the established meeting place for the entire Nigerian oil and gas value chain from Ministries and Government organisations to leading international and indigenous producers and service providers. NOG this year will bring together a distinguished line-up of local and international speakers to establish best practice and discuss practical solutions, enabling Nigeria to continue its journey towards transformation and growth.  Event Holder: Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries

Mikhail Zhukovskii ar.knoema.com://ar.knoema.com/user/1293430
Nigeria Healthcare Costs in USD //ar.knoema.com/pgaldrd/nigeria-healthcare-costs-in-usd 2014-10-25T13:37:38Z Misha Gusev ar.knoema.com://ar.knoema.com/user/1000560
Nigeria Healthcare Costs in USD

USD | Local Currency

Misha Gusev ar.knoema.com://ar.knoema.com/user/1000560
Nigeria Healthcare Costs in Local Currency //ar.knoema.com/cwqhgyd/nigeria-healthcare-costs-in-local-currency 2014-10-25T13:37:11Z Misha Gusev ar.knoema.com://ar.knoema.com/user/1000560
Nigeria Healthcare Costs in Local Currency

USD | Local Currency

Misha Gusev ar.knoema.com://ar.knoema.com/user/1000560
Africa Food Price - Nigeria //ar.knoema.com/husxhqf/africa-food-price-nigeria 2014-08-26T10:40:00Z Ragothamman Piskalan ar.knoema.com://ar.knoema.com/user/1208370
Africa Food Price - Nigeria

Ragothamman Piskalan ar.knoema.com://ar.knoema.com/user/1208370