Foreign Trade reports published by the National Bureau of Statistics have revealed that Nigeria’s trade balance of manufactured goods hit a deficit of N9.4 trillion in the first nine months of 2023.
The data indicates that Nigeria imported N2.5 trillion worth of manufactured products in the first quarter of 2023. It rose to N3.2tn in the second quarter and N4.1tn in the third. In all, N9.9 trillion worth of manufactured goods were imported in the first nine months of 2023.
However, the total exports in this category for the first, second, and third quarters were N543 billion, or N131 billion, N212 billion, and N200 billion, respectively. This indicates that imports outpaced exports by N9.37 trillion during the period under consideration, meaning that the difference between imports and exports was negative.
Some of the major items imported during the period included ‘Used Vehicles, with diesel or semi-diesel engines from the United States and United Arab Emirates, ‘machines’ for reception, conversion, and gearbox… of voice, images, or data’ imported from China, and ‘other medicaments not elsewhere specified’ from India.
According to the data, the primary regions to which goods were exported were Asia, Africa, and Europe.
The Manufacturers Association of Nigeria reported that, prior to COVID-19, Nigerian companies had exported non-oil goods worth $9.13 billion, the biggest amount ever.
Nigeria, placed 52nd among nations, was found to have performed poorly in international export trade by the survey.