Impact of foreign trade and investment on Nigeria’s textile industry: The case of China

Authors

  • Mathias Agri Eneji1,2*, Iwayanwu J. Onyinye1, Drenkat N. Kennedy1 and Shi Li Rong2 1 Department of Economics, University of Jos. Nigeria. 2 International Trade Department of Shanghai Pudong Hanwei – Ltd., China. Author

Keywords:

Competition, innovation, dependency theory, price stabilization, economic growth, research and development, investment, imports.

Abstract

The textile industry in Nigeria is the third largest in Africa after Egypt and South Africa. It is the largest employer of
labour in the manufacturing sector. The industry is mainly controlled by large private-sector firms, often with
substantial foreign participation. Low productivity levels limit Nigeria’s export possibilities. Nevertheless, the
substantially liberated economic environment and the opportunity Nigeria offers to avoid quota restrictions under the
Multi Fibre Agreement (MFA), which is not applicable to Nigeria have induced some foreign entrepreneurs, mostly
from Asian countries, to establish export-oriented plants. The bilateral trade between Nigeria and China has grown
steadily since 1971 as the volume of trade between the two countries in 2009 hit $6.373billion. In order to analyze the
effects of higher imports over exports on the textile industry and the aggregate economy, the complete structural
model is constructed with market equilibrium identity, such that total supply of agricultural, industrial, and oil
sectors equal aggregate demand. The effect of imports on other macroeconomic variables was tested using nth
order vector-regressive model. More private investments are highly needed in the Nigerian textile industry to make it
internationally competitive.

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Published

2020-01-30

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Articles

How to Cite

Impact of foreign trade and investment on Nigeria’s textile industry: The case of China. (2020). Global Journal of Sociology and Anthropology, 9(1), 1-12. https://ijpp.org/journal/index.php/GJSA/article/view/206