Nigeria entered the 2020 COVID-19-related oil price downturn without the fiscal buffers that numerous resource-rich economies had built over time. Despite heavy dependence on petroleum revenues, the country has made limited use of stabilization tools such as structured hedging programs, sovereign savings mechanisms, or strategic reserves, leaving public finances exposed to external shocks. Drawing on political choice theory and the resource governance literature, this study examines how institutional conditions shaped crisis management during the 2020 oil price collapse and the COVID-19 pandemic. The study combines qualitative institutional analysis with a stochastic counterfactual simulation. It compares Nigeria’s policy approach with those of oil-producing countries including Mexico, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Angola, and Ghana, using data from the IMF, World Bank, Afreximbank, and peer-reviewed sources. The counterfactual simulation is calibrated to Nigeria’s 2019 federal budget oil benchmark of US 60 per barrel, with the IMF’s 2019 petroleum price assumption used as a robustness check. The model treats hedging as a form of partial fiscal insurance rather than full stabilization. Results suggest that hedging sufficient to offset 10%, 20%, and 30% of the shock would have improved 2020 GDP decline from −1. 80% to approximately −1. 62%, −1. 44%, and −1. 26%, respectively. The analysis identifies institutional gaps in Nigeria’s use of hedging, sovereign savings, and reserve infrastructure. The counterfactual results indicate that even modest oil hedging could have meaningfully softened the 2020 downturn, with the 20% scenario reducing GDP contraction by an estimated 0. 36 percentage points. These findings suggest that governance constraints contributed materially to fiscal vulnerability. The study proposes a four-pillar framework centered on risk hedging, revenue savings, strategic investment, and institutional reform to strengthen fiscal stability and resilience to external shocks.
Akolisa Ufodike (Mon,) studied this question.