President Muhammadu Buhari has again
rejected calls for the devaluation of the naira, saying he has yet to be
convinced that the country and its people will derive any tangible
benefit from such a move.
A statement by his Senior Special
Assistant on Media and Publicity, Mallam Garba Shehu, on Thursday quoted
the President as speaking at a meeting he had with Nigerians living in
Kenya late on Wednesday.
Buhari, who is currently on a three-day
state visit to Kenya, was said to have maintained that while
export-driven economies could benefit from the devaluation of their
currencies, such a move would only result in further inflation and
hardship for the poor and middle class in Nigeria’s import-dependent
economy.
The President said he had no intention
of bringing further hardship on the country’s poor, who he noted had
suffered enough already.
He likened further devaluation of the naira to having the currency “killed.”
Buhari added that proponents of
devaluation must work harder to convince him that ordinary Nigerians
would gain anything from it.
The President also rejected suggestions
that the Central Bank of Nigeria should resume the sale of foreign
exchange to Bureaux De Change, saying that the BDC business had become a
scam and a drain on the economy.
“We had just 74 of the bureaux in 2005; now, they have grown to about 2,800,” he noted.
Buhari alleged that some bank and
government officials used surrogates to run the BDCs and prosper at
public expense by obtaining foreign exchange from the government at
official rates and selling it at much higher rates.
“We will use our foreign exchange for
industry, spare parts and the development of needed infrastructure. We
don’t have the dollar to give to the BDCs. Let them go and get it from
wherever they can, other than the central bank,” Buhari told the
gathering.
The President reaffirmed his conviction
that about a third of petroleum subsidy payments under the previous
administration was bogus.
“They just stamped papers and collected our foreign exchange,” he stated.
Buhari appealed to Nigerians studying
abroad to bear with his administration as it strives to address the
challenges they were facing as a result of the new foreign exchange
measures.
He said that he was optimistic that the
Nigerian economy would stabilise soon with the efficient implementation
of the measures and policies that had been introduced by his
administration.
However, some economic and financial
analysts have faulted Buhari’s position on the naira, stressing that the
CBN would find it difficult to preserve the currency from further
devaluation amid the depleting external reserves.
The Chief Executive Officer, Cowry Asset
Management Limited, Mr. Johnson Ckukwu, said, “This position is not
sustainable; the CBN will find it difficult to keep and preserve the
naira in the face of falling forex income to the nation.
“We cannot continue like this as a
country. Already, the CBN is no longer able to provide forex for basic
raw materials and production inputs; this may lead to further factory
closures. It is in our best interest to devalue now.”
Renowned economist and Chief Executive
Officer, Financial Derivatives Company Limited, Mr. Bismarck Rewane,
said a combination of naira devaluation and forex controls by the CBN
would save the country.
He said the naira-dollar official
exchange rate, pegged at between 197 and 199, was not realistic, adding
that there was a need for further adjustment of the official exchange
rate.
A professor of Economics at the Olabisi
Onabanjo University, Sheriffdeen Tella, is, however, of the opinion that
a further devaluation of the naira will not be in the interest of an
import-dependent nation like Nigeria.
He said countries like China allowed
official devaluation of their currencies because they had several
products to be exported in order to earn forex.
Tella said while such a move could be
good for export-oriented countries like China, it would be
counterproductive for an import-dependent nation like Nigeria.
“Do we have the products to export
abroad if we are to devalue the naira? Devaluation will, no doubt, make
exports to be more competitive in the international market, but we don’t
have the products to be exported for now. This is why devaluation may
not be good for Nigeria at this moment. China will allow its currency to
be devalued because it has the products to be exported,” he explained.
Chukwu, however, disagreed with Tella on
this position, maintaining that devaluation of the currency was good
for an import-dependent economy like Nigeria.
He said, “Actually, naira devaluation is
good for the economy; it will not hurt an import-dependent economy like
ours the way some people have perceived it. When we devalue the naira,
it will make some imported goods to be so expensive that some local
substitutes will begin to spring up; this will help to stimulate
domestic production.
“Again, when we devalue, it makes our
exports as a country to be cheaper such that they will become more
competitive in the international market.”
Last year, the former Governor of CBN,
Mallam Lamido Sanusi, said Nigeria needed to devalue the naira because
the CBN might not be able to sustain its current forex control polices
on the long run, especially in the face of the depleting forex earnings
by the nation.
Another former CBN Governor, Prof.
Chukwuma Soludo, in a paper presented at a forum last year, said history
had shown that forex restriction had not worked in many countries in
the past.
While the naira sells for 306 against
the dollar at the parallel market currently, the CBN still keeps the
official rate at between 197 and 199.
Economists said the widening gap between
the official and parallel market rates would continue to breed all
manner of sharp practices in the forex market.
Punch
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