IMF explains drop in FDIs into Nigeria, others
International Monetary Fund (IMF) says the recent slowdown witnessed in Foreign Direct Investment (FDI), especially in developing countries, including Nigeria, can be linked to the divergent trade patterns among countries, with flows increasingly concentrated among geopolitically aligned countries, particularly in strategic sectors.
According to reports, a decrease in FDI has been particularly visible, with global FDI declining from 3.3 percent of GDP in the 2000s to 1.3 per cent between 2018 and 2022
Also, FDI inflows into Nigeria have fallen drastically over the years with inflows falling by 77.79 percent from $23.99bn in 2019 to $5.33bn in 2022.
IMF said the new development would affect emerging markets and developing economies given their reliance on FDI from geopolitically distant countries.
In its ‘World Economic Outlook: A Rocky Recovery’ report, IMF said said rising geopolitical tensions such as Brexit, trade tensions between the United States and China, and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine posed a challenge to international relations and could lead to a policy-driven reversal of global economic integration.
According to the IMF, foreign direct investment is cross-border investment through which foreign investors establish a stable and long-lasting influence over domestic enterprises.