CHAPTER ONE
1.0
INTRODUCTION
1.1
BACKGROUND INFORMATION
Economic Community of West Africa
states (ECOWAS) was founded on 28th of May, 1975. It is a regional organization
of fifteen countries which include; Benin, Burkina Faso, Cote d‟ivoire, Gambia.
Ghana, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Liberia, Mali, Cape Verde, Niger, Nigeria,
Senegal, Sierra Leone and Togo. The ECOWAS treaty was signed on 28th of May,
1975, when the fifteen countries met in Lagos, Nigeria to sign the treaty.
ECOWAS has governing bodies that has changed along the course of the
community‟s existence and these bodies include; the Head of State and
Government, the Council of Ministers, the Community Parliament, the Economic
and Social Council, the Community of Social Justice, the Executive Secretariat,
the Fund and Cooperation, Compensation, Development and Specialized Technical
Commission. ECOWAS is considered one of the pillars of the African Economic
Community; it was founded in order to achieve „collective self-sufficiency‟ for
its member states by creating a single large trading bloc through an economic and
trading union. (DR A.B Akinyemi et al (1984))
Its mission has been to foster
promotion cooperation and economic integration in all fields of economic
activity, particularly industry, transport, telecommunications, energy,
agriculture, natural resources, commerce, monetary and financial matters,
social and cultural issues among the member states.( ibid ) The Nigerian
economy has had a truncated history. In the period 1960-1970, the Gross
Domestic product recorded 3.1 per cent growth annually (A.H.EKPO and O.J.UMOH:
Online Nigeria Community Portal of Nigeria). During the oil boom era, roughly
1970-1978, GDP grew positively by 6.2percent annually, in the period 1988-1997
which constitute the period of structural adjustment and economic
liberalization, the GDP responded to economic adjustment policies and grew at a
positive rate of 4.0 per cent (ibid). In years after independence, the period
1980-1988 where industry manufacturing grew negatively 3.2 per cent and 2.9 per
cent respectively, Gross Domestic Investment as a percentage of GDP which was
16.3 per cent and 22.8 per cent in the periods 1965-1973 and 1973-1980
respectively, decreased to almost 14 per cent in 1980-1988 and increased to
18.2 per cent in 1991-1998 account balance before official transfers are
negative for 1965-1975, 1980-1988 and 1991-1998(ibid). The economy never
experienced double digit inflation during the 1960s. By 1976, the inflation
rate stood at 23 per cent, it decreased to 11.8 per cent in 1979 and moved to
41 per cent and 72.8 per cent in 1989 and 1995 respectively, by 1998, the
inflation rate had however reduced to 9.5 per cent from 29.0 per cent in 1996
(A.H.EKPO and O.J.UMOH: Online Nigeria Community Portal of Nigeria).
Today, as part of moving with the
trend of globalization and trade liberalization in the global economic system,
Nigeria is a member of signatory to the trade agreements such as IMF
(International Monetary Fund), World Trade Organization, ECOWAS just to mention
but a few. The policy response to economic partnership on trade has been to
remove trade barriers, reduce tariffs and embark on outward oriented trade
policies. Despite all her effort to meet up with the demands to these economic
partnership in term of opening up her border, according to the 2007 assessment of
trade policy review, Nigeria’s trade freedom was rated 56 per cent making her
the world 131st freest economy while in 2009, it was ranked 117th freest
economy, the country’s GDP was also ranked 161st in the world in February,
2009. In fact, it seems like as the country put greater effort to boost her
economic growth by opening up to trade with the global economy the more she
becomes worse off relating to her trading partners in term of country output
growth(A.H.EKPO and O.J.UMOH: Online Nigeria Community Portal of Nigeria). However,
in the 1980s the economy was in a recession. The on-going economic reform
programme is an attempt to put the economy on a recovery path with minimal
market. Based on some basic indicators, it appears that the economy performed
well inflation. Unemployment rates averaged almost 5 per cent for the period
1976-1998. However, the statistics especially on unemployment must be
interpreted with caution. Most job seekers do not use the labour exchanges,
apart from the inherent distortions in the country‟s labour during the years
immediately after independence and into the oil boom years (Dr. Mohamed (2007)
www.
Wilsoncenter.org/…/the-role-of-ecowas-in-achieving-the-economic-integration).
1.2 STATEMENT OF THE PROBLEM
From its very beginning, ECOWAS hasn’t
been effective. The organization did not have established foundations to deal
with logistics, infrastructure, human resources, or strong economy that were
needed to realistically promote a regional body. Nigeria is the linchpin of the
Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS). Over 50% of the ECOWAS
population lives in Nigeria. Nigeria’s GDP is larger than that of the combined
GDP of all the other ECOWAS states put together. Nigeria accounts for the lion
share of the annual ECOWAS budget (31%; relative to only 12.6% by the second
highest contributor- coted’ivoire), as well as of the ECOWAS Fund (32% relative
to only 13% by coted‟iviore) (Aribisala (2000)
www.nigeriadevelopmentandfinanceforum.org). The pre- eminence of the Nigerian
economy vis-à-vis the other ECOWAS states, and its correspondingly large
financial responsibilities (among others), inevitably raises the question of
the value of ECOWAS for Nigeria. Many regional integration schemes have been
established in Africa in the bid to attain a market number more than half the
size of Nigeria. Moreover, Nigeria’s domestic industrial production is still insufficient
to accommodate the vast demand of its internal market, how much more to provide
for significant exports to neighboring ECOWAS states. The effectiveness of this
regional organization has not really been felt, Nigeria is still having
economic problem. The research work looked at the factors that are preventing
West African countries including Nigeria from achieving the ECOWAS objectives.
1.3 OBJECTIVES OF THE STUDY
The broad objective that is considered
in this research work is to study the role of ECOWAS in the Economic
Development of West Africa. These objectives are:
To examine the contributions of
ECOWAS in the economic sector of the sub-region.
To examine the gap between the
stated objectives of ECOWAS and the reality of their fulfillment in Nigeria.
To identify the challenges to the
fulfillment of ECOWAS objectives in Nigeria.
To suggest and recommend the
solutions to these challenges in the West Africa sub regions as whole in
Nigeria in particular.
TOPIC: THE ROLE OF ECOWAS IN THE ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT OF NIGERIA
Chapters: 1 - 5
Delivery: Email
Delivery: Email
Number of Pages: 76
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