Effect of Crude Oil Revenue on the Oil and Non-oil Sectors in Nigeria - Acta Universitatis Sapientiae

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Volume 11, 2023
Effect of Crude Oil Revenue on the Oil and Non-oil Sectors in Nigeria
Mohammed Bashir SALAUDEEN

Acta Univ. Sapientiae, Economics and Business, 11 (2023) 138–161

DOI: 10.2478/auseb-2023-0007

Abstract. The debate for oil-rich economies to plough their oil windfalls into real economic activities to spur diversification has become intense due to the deficit fiscal crisis and poor socio-economic profile of resource-abundant nations. Therefore, we use secondary data from the period between 1981 and 2020 to assess the impact of crude oil revenue on the oil and non-oil sector output performance in Nigeria. The study adopts the ARDL (i.e. autoregressive distributed lag) and the augmented Granger causality techniques to analyse the data. The ARDL regressions show that crude oil positively impacts oil sector performance, but the impact is only substantial in the short run. Crude oil revenue exerts a positive and insignificant effect on the short-run non-oil sector output, whereas, over the long run, it has a negative but significant effect. To propel growth, the study recommends using the excess crude oil earnings to develop non-oil sectors such as agriculture, services, and manufacturing.

Keywords: natural resources, diversification, economic growth, economic output, revenue shock

Volume 11, 2023
Financial Well-Being and Financial Stress: Examining the Moderating Effect of Gender, Ifra BASHIR, Ishtiaq QURESHI Catalysts of Economic Welfare in Africa: A Cross-Sectional Autoregressive Distributed Lag Approach, Ayomide Oluwafunmisho KUTI, Taiwo Adebusuyi ADEROGBA, Ndubuisi Johnbosco EZENWA, Rasheed Adegboyega QUADRI Corporate Spin-Offs and Shareholders’ Wealth: A Systematic Review and Future Research Agenda, Saima NAZIR, Khalid CHISTI Work–Life Balance, Supervisor Support, and Life Satisfaction in the Higher Education Sector, Ambreen Khursheed WANI Beyond the Big Five: How Dynamic Personality Traits Predict Financial Risk Tolerance?, Shakira MUKHTAR, Anisa JAN, Adil ZAHOOR Does Gender Wage Gap Exist among Farm Workers in Nigeria? Evidence from Decomposition-Matching Analysis, Abdulrazaq K. DAUDU, Oyedola W. KAREEM, Latifat K. OLATINWO, Suleiman B. SHUAIB, Abdulganiyu I. ABDULRAHMAN Effect of Crude Oil Revenue on the Oil and Non-oil Sectors in Nigeria, Mohammed Bashir SALAUDEEN Deciphering Financial Health and Risk: Hierarchical Relationships and Interdependencies among Key Factors, Mayank JAIN, Taniya MALIK, Sakshi MALIK Towards Sustainability on a Sea of Eco-Labels. Leading or Misleading?, Katalin NAGY-KERCSÓ Demand for Kerala’s International Tourism by the Top Three Source Markets: A Comparative Analysis, Muhammed Salim ANAPPATTATH, Shiby M. THOMAS Revisiting the Financial Development and Income Inequality Nexus: Evidence from Hungary, Faeyzh BARHOOM Intergovernmental Fiscal Transfers and Tax Collection of Indian States: Estimation from Panel Data Models, Sumit KUMAR, Baljit KAUR Front pages in PDF,
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