The naira should not be devalued
further, President Muhammadu Buhari said on Wednesday, despite the
Central Bank of Nigeria’s growing struggles to keep the naira at current
levels.
The nation’s revenue has been hit hard
by the fall of global crude prices, and the CBN has imposed increasingly
strict foreign exchange rules to save the external reserves and avoid
what would be the third devaluation in one year.
The central bank had devalued the naira in November last year and February this year.
Despite the CBN’s uphill struggle to keep the naira from falling further, Buhari believes the naira must not be devalued.
“I don’t think it is healthy for us to have the naira devalued further,” Buhari said in an interview with France 24.
“That’s why we are getting the central
bank to make modifications in terms of making foreign exchange available
to essential services, industries, spare parts, essential raw materials
and so on – but things like toothpicks and rice, Nigeria can produce
enough of those,” he said.
The naira had fallen to as low as 242
per dollar on the parallel market in July, versus the official rate of
197. It has lost around 15 per cent against the dollar over the past
year with the official devaluation in November and a de facto one in
February.
In June, the CBN restricted access to
foreign exchange for the import of 41 items ranging from rice and
toothpicks to steel products and glass.
The stringent restrictions have not gone down well with investors, who have called for a relaxation.
Last week JP Morgan said it would remove
Africa’s biggest economy from its influential emerging markets bond
index by the end of October, citing a lack of liquidity and the central
bank’s currency restrictions.
But Buhari’s position conflict with
those of some local and foreign economists and analysts, who believe the
naira must be devalued.
Economist and Chief Executive Officer,
Financial Derivatives Limited, Mr. Bismarck Rewane, said the expulsion
of Nigeria from the global bond index by JPMorgan might have reduced
pressure on the CBN to devalue the naira but the ultimate issue might be
for the CBN to devalue the naira.
He said, “With the battle to stay on the
index having been lost it, there is less urgency to devalue the
currency and remove forex restrictions. Further FX restrictions may even
be imposed in the near term as the CBN tries to conserve foreign
reserves. Nevertheless, we believe a devaluation has become even more
imminent considering the need to boost investor confidence in an economy
heavily reliant on dwindling oil revenues.”
The external reserves fell by three per
cent to $30.69bn by September 14, from $31.63b a month earlier, central
bank data showed on Wednesday.
The reserves were down 22 per cent from a year earlier.
The central bank ate up much of its
reserves to support the local currency, selling dollars to bureau de
change operators twice weekly in a bid to narrow the gap between the
official and unofficial exchange rate. The bank cancelled the auctions
in February.
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