Jump to navigation

Nigeria

Pressure mounts on central bank as Naira tumbles again

The currency has fallen 20% on the parallel market since January driving inflation and challenging government strategy

At the heart of Nigeria's deepening foreign exchange woes is a paradox – that revenues from Africa's biggest oil and gas producer have been falling as energy prices spiral ever higher on the international market. Mainly, that's due to the lower output, militant sabotage and lack of investment which have pushed production levels down to 1.32 million barrels a day in April, compared with the state oil company target of 1.6m b/d (AC Vol 63 No 9, Oil spills and theft spike as big oil goes offshore).

The higher international prices haven't helped the federal government budget because they also push up the cost of the fuel subsidy which could run as high as US$16.2 billion next year, almost 70% higher than this year. The implications of this production-subsidy nexus means that oil earnings for the first quarter of this year were running at 1.23 trillion naira ($2.9bn), about 60% lower than treasury forecasts for the period, said Finance Minister Zainab Ahmed last month (AC Vol 63 No 14, Atiku and Tinubu clash on the economy).

Ahmed reckons the country's oil revenues will improve in the second half of the year thanks to tougher measures to combat oil theft and sabotage in the Niger Delta. But the country faces a harsh transition in the meantime – as food and fuel prices rocket (despite the subsidy) and pressure on the naira continues.

Towards the end of July, the exchange rate fell to N720=US$1 but has strengthened at the start of August. The acute shortage of foreign exchange is set to continue, testing the central bank's strategy of defending its official rate for the naira – despite the widening margin between it and the parallel rate.

The forex scarcity is hitting the productive economy hard, with manufacturers struggling to import raw materials and spare parts, driving prices up to record levels. Those factors would seem to be a secondary concern for Central Bank of Nigeria governor Godwin Emefiele, whose main focus is on maintaining his 'managed' and multiple-tier exchange rate policy.

In the short term, there is little prospect of Emefiele abandoning his managed forex policy for any of the proposed alternatives – such as a crawling peg system under which the naira depreciates against the United States dollar at a set rate each year. Neither could Emefiele float the naira under current market conditions without unleashing a rush for the exit.

Central bank officials argue that any sign that the government's resolve to defend the naira is weakening could trigger a fresh attack on the currency. That would support the bank continuing its 'batten down the hatches' strategy and restricting access to forex at the official rate. The naira will face some stormy seas over the next few months.

Emefiele's and the bank's credibility will be on the line. One glimmer of hope to watch are the central bank's boosted foreign exchange reserves – up to $39.3bn at the end of July from $33.3bn at the end of July 2021.



Related Articles

Oil spills and theft spike as big oil goes offshore

Bureaucratic rivalries and vested interests are blocking efforts to hold companies and officials responsible for the ecological destruction of the Niger Delta

Nigeria should meet its OPEC quota, due to rise to 1.753 million barrels a day next month, in a matter of weeks after months of struggling to produce...


Atiku and Tinubu clash on the economy

Spiralling prices, public debt and joblessness make living standards the top issue in the presidential race

A month after their emergence as presidential candidates, the economic programmes of Bola Tinubu and Atiku Abubakar extolling the virtues of untrammelled market economics face more serious scrutiny...


National, not regional

The military crackdown in the Niger Delta upsets the awkward balance between federal and state politics

In the two years since it was elected, the National Assembly has approved just five bills, including two budget appropriations covering members' salaries.Yet representatives of constituencies outside the...


The return of OPL 245

The government has reopened the can of worms known as Oil Prospecting Licence 245. President Muhammadu Buhari has sent investigators after the beneficiaries of the US$1.1 billion that...


Avengers assemble

As sabotage attacks and pipeline breakdowns in the Delta take as much as 400,000 barrels per day (bpd), the shadowy Niger Delta Avengers group claims it has launched...