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Emefiele CBN Governor |
Reacting to an article in the Economist Magazine, the CBN in a statement signed by its Director, Corporate Communications, Mr. Ibrahim Mu’azu, maintained that the CBN does not panic and will not take desperate measures to satisfy few misguided interests in the market.
According
to Mu’azu, the article seems to ignore the fact that the exchange rate is
simply a price that is essentially determined by the forces of supply and
demand, adding that the CBN believes that the 48 per cent decline in oil prices
may not be transitory and made bold policy changes including closure of the
subsidized Official Foreign Exchange (Forex) Window, which resulted in a 22 per
cent depreciation in the currency, the Naira.
He said, “Because the Nigerian economy is heavily dependent on imports and the exchange rate pass-through to inflation is high, we believe that this adjustment is optimal at this time.
“Contrary
to the article’s argument, adjustments to a sharp decline in supply of US
Dollars cannot all be borne by an indeterminate depreciation, without
considering the full impact on the Nigerian economy.
“The
demand side also has to be considered, not just in response to the pressure on
the Naira but as an opportunity to change the economy’s structure, resuscitate
local manufacturing, and expand job creation for our citizens.
“Take
rice imports, for example: why should we keep allocating scarce forex to rice
importers when vast amounts of paddy rice of comparable quality produced by
poor hardworking local farmers across the rice belts of Nigeria are wasted, and
farmers are falling deeper into poverty while we export their jobs and income
to rice producing countries?
“Few
decades ago, Nigeria was one of the world’s largest producers of palm oil but
today we import nearly 600,000 Metric Tonnes while Indonesia and Malaysia
combine to export over 90 percent of global demand.”
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