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Nigeria: Running On Empty – Financial Times by NavierStokes(m): 8:19am On May 31, 2016


Critics say President Buhari’s policies are adding to its worst economic crisis in generations


by: Maggie Fick

In his former role as the managing director of one of Nigeria’s leading banks, Godwin Emefiele had a reputation for being soft-spoken and unassuming. In the year since he became governor of the central bank, he has stood out for the opposite.

The change is being put down to one thing: the control he wields over the most scarce commodity in Africa’s biggest economy today: dollars. One businessman says Mr Emefiele has become so central to the running of the country that “no one can operate without him”.

Business, economists and indeed former peers are blaming the policies he has introduced — restrictions on imports and tight control of the foreign exchange market including its artificially pegged foreign exchange rate — for compounding the worst economic crisis Nigeria has experienced in generations. Many are equally critical of President Muhammadu Buhari’s endorsement of the governor’s unorthodox policies and say his repeated public backing of them has undermined the independence of the central bank.
[b]
“The economy was a mess anyway and Nigeria was heading for a hard fall, but … should the fall be this hard?” [/b]asks Kayode Akindele at TIA Capital, a Lagos-based investment firm.

That question is nagging at a growing section of the public, angered that Mr Buhari, the ascetic former military ruler elected on a wave of optimism last year, has not only failed to react fast enough to the changing climate but made matters worse by experimenting with outmoded remedies that have not stemmed the economy’s freefall. Supermarkets in Lagos are struggling to keep their shelves stocked, fuel is rationed and food prices have soared.

“The pain level is going up,” says Olisa Agbakoba, former head of the Nigerian Bar Association. “Everything is in short supply.”

‘Self-inflicted’ wounds

The fortunes of Africa’s most populous nation and leading oil producer have long ebbed and flowed with the price of oil, on which Nigeria depends for more than 90 per cent of hard currency earnings. But economists list several factors that make the current downturn markedly more worrying.

The structural change in the global oil industry since shale reserves were opened up by the development of new fracking techniques in the US makes it unlikely that major oil producers like Nigeria will see a significant price recovery any time soon.

In 2008, the last time crude prices crashed, Nigeria had savings to fall back on. This time it doesn’t: the administration of former president Goodluck Jonathan squandered the proceeds of the boom years in a bonanza of profligacy and corruption before he was voted out of office.

Chart: Nigeria data
Then there is what critics describe as the “self-inflicted” wounds — the currency policies and associated import controls set up to conserve hard currency by prioritising strategic imports when Mr Buhari took power 12 months ago. These have starved existing businesses of inputs, leading to a collapse in supplies of everything from medicines to spare parts, while incidents of price gouging have risen. The policies are also blamed for encouraging capital flight while forestalling fresh investment. Inflows dropped by nearly 75 per cent to $711m in the first four months of 2016.

No one, even investors like us with a long-term view, is going to put money into Nigeria in the expectation of losing a third of the value of that investment,” says a senior partner in a UK-based private equity fund. He and other investors say that despite the president’s visceral opposition to devaluation, it appears inevitable.

The impact has been chilling. Nigeria’s economy, which grew annually at an average rate of 7 per cent in the decade to 2014, contracted by 0.36 per cent in the first quarter. According to most forecasts it is heading into recession.

The import controls and restrictions on foreign exchange have hit the manufacturing sector hard, eroding the credibility of the Buhari administration’s ambition to diversify the economy.

“Growing non-oil income is a key economic strategy of this government,” says Keith Richards, a veteran of Nigeria’s consumer goods industry who used to run a subsidiary in the country of Guinness, the brewer. “Blocking manufacturers manufacturing will have the opposite effect.”

More than half a million workers lost their jobs in the first four months of this year, according to official statistics. The livelihoods of tens of millions more people employed in the informal sector have been hit by inflation of nearly 14 per cent, spurred by escalating shortages of basic goods and the rapid devaluation of the naira on the parallel market, where most traders are now compelled to source their foreign exchange.

And while a new wave of militancy in the oil-producing Niger Delta has triggered a rally in the global price — it hit $50 per barrel last week for the first time in seven months — the violence is making matters worse at home, with any gains offset by production losses. In recent weeks, pipeline attacks have cut production to 1.45m barrels a day — far short of the 2.2m assumed in this year’s expansionary budget.

Oil revenues typically account for more than two-thirds of government income. Collapsing prices and falling production mean the government is now operating on about one-quarter of the $5bn in monthly revenues it had before the price fall began in mid-2014. Many state governments are now unable to pay salaries while power generation levels are at their lowest in years.

“Investors fear Nigeria is on a stagflationary road to Venezuelan-style multiple exchange rates and eventual meltdown,” says Charlie Robertson, chief economist at Renaissance Capital. “[But] we think reformists will help Nigeria swerve in time and avoid that car crash,” he said, after a government decision earlier this month to raise the price of fuel by 67 per cent in response to months of crippling shortages.

Chart: Nigeria data
The price rise was interpreted as the government accepting the reality of severe dollar scarcity. But it fell short of the deregulation of state-set fuel prices that has long been urged by economists seeking to ease the chronic distortions in the economy. It left many observers saying shortages will return unless the government loosens its grip on the price of both fuel and the naira.

In a speech on Sunday marking his first year in office, Mr Buhari said he had inherited a “state near collapse”, ill-equipped for the strain of low oil prices. Insecurity was widespread, “corruption and impunity were the order of the day” and the treasury had been emptied. The initial challenge for his government had been to block leakages and reconstruct “the spine of the Nigerian state”.

The central bank last week admitted that the exchange rate cap — defended by Mr Emefiele as a way of protecting strategic imports from the low oil price and shielding the poor from inflation — is failing and should be abandoned. The comments fuelled speculation of a policy switch. Mr Buhari, on Sunday, appeared defensive about the approach taken so far but acknowledged that he had been forced to listen to advice to change course. He said he supported the central bank’s new strategy “to ensure alignment between monetary policy and fiscal strategy”.

The president also hinted in a briefing with local media that he was open to considering his options. “The … economists come and talk things to me, and when I raise issues they talk over my head instead of inside my head,” he was quoted as saying in Nigeria’s ThisDay newspaper. “On the value of the naira, I’m still agonising over it … I need to be educated on this … I am under pressure and we’ll see how we can accommodate the economists.”

Mr Emefiele has been crucial to the president’s defence that tight currency controls are the best response to the economic crisis. The two men meet frequently at the presidential villa, according to one of Mr Buhari’s spokesmen, and statements on monetary policy by the two over the past year are virtually indistinguishable.

Business argues that a controlled devaluation would allow manufacturers and traders to make informed pricing decisions, less dependent on the central bank governor’s will. Despite the recent comments, however, companies are not holding their breath.

Others in the government insist that the new budget will kick-start the economy. External borrowing to finance it has yet to be secured, h[/b]owever, and business remains unconvinced that government spending alone will be enough.

“[b]It’s a monumental waste of money to be trying to stimulate the economy on the one hand and slowing it down on the other,” says Oyin Anubi, an Africa economist at Bank of America in London.


Losing allies

The damage is not just economic. The country’s travails have overshadowed progress the president has made on the problems he most wanted to tackle: the Islamist insurgency of Boko Haram and pervasive corruption in government.

Most damaging though is the political impact that is beginning to cost Mr Buhari allies. His decision-making style appears, even to senior members of the administration, overly secretive. Some criticise him for failing to consult with his cabinet and view his refusal to listen to alternative points of view.


Obiageli Ezekwesili, who served as a minister in two previous administrations and once led the World Bank’s Africa division, recently criticised Mr Buhari’s economic policies as “opaque” and “archaic”, [/b]saying that something that “did not work in 1984 cannot possibly be a solution in a global economy that’s much more integrated”.

[b]Advisers to the president say his original priority was to lift people out of poverty. It was not to please the wealthy business community and skittish foreign portfolio investors. But those close to the administration claim there are signs of a shift in ideology within government: from the unbridled crony capitalism of the past to a more state-driven vision for promoting industry and jobs.


Industrial revolution

Mr Buhari’s initial instinct, say advisers, was to batten down the hatches, and pursue capital and import controls similar to those pursued by China in the 1980s, while gradually building up export capacity in sectors beyond oil.

Chart: Nigeria data
The aim was to engineer the beginnings of an industrial revolution, create jobs and dedicate investment towards rebuilding infrastructure. Ethiopia, on the other side of the continent, has spurred the beginnings of an economic transformation using similar methods.

In Nigeria’s case, however, it could already be too late. The government’s ability to control the capital account — the deficit doubled to 3.7 per cent of GDP in 2015 — and restrict imports in a country rife with smuggling is questionable.

A Venezuela-style meltdown — once dismissed out of hand — now no longer seems such an outlandish prospect. [/b]Some observers argue that this doomsday scenario is forcing officials, including the president, to accept the need for a course correction.

“The bunker mentality has changed [in the past month] to a more open-to-discussion one” says Bismarck Rewane, chief executive of Financial Derivatives, a consultancy in Lagos. [b]“Even if the change [in policy] is involuntary, the combination of inflation, slowing GDP, exchange rate pressure and the drop in oil production … will bring change.”



Source: https://next.ft.com/content/2f5e5d2c-2338-11e6-9d4d-c11776a5124d
Re: Nigeria: Running On Empty – Financial Times by NavierStokes(m): 8:19am On May 31, 2016
Cc: lalasticlala Mynd44 OAM4J

Seun is there anyway it can be pushed to the government, to go through posts here on nairaland spanning a few months back, they can chose to assemble a think tank group from our own nairaland or compile some of those ideas that had already and accurately pointed out today's economic scenario months back.
I am afraid it appears the big boys (appointees) eating money at the villa are hell bent on driving us into the ground with their cluelessness and ineptitude.

Also it's high time the forum begins to ban the curse word "Wailer" used to shout down opposing view. All parties across divide will benefit from this country working. I don't think the supporters of this government are more/less patriotic than the opposition, especially those in the opposition without any political affiliations but who just want the country to work.
I would implore all hands to be on deck, bury all differences and even Mr President should toe the path of Nelson Mandela. Forget the things behind like he initially promised, before he decided to look back into the NEAR past. Assemble all stakeholders and see how everyone can make their contributions to moving the country forward.

We both know the past administration got some things wrong but they also got other things right and could be consulted or engaged in those areas, so it's not too late for Mr President to run an inclusive government as the father of the nation, where everyone can contribute to pulling our country through this emergency. If the government is hell bent on fighting, they can fight mych later but for now we have an emergency on our hands. Two wrongs don't make a right.

I really hope Mr President would see the wisdom to steer this ship (Nigeria) away from the iceberg of indigence.

God bless everyone
God bless our heroes past
God bless Seun
God bless all Nairalanders irrespective of political or religious leanings.

We shall be great again!!!

1 Like

Re: Nigeria: Running On Empty – Financial Times by nnachukz(m): 8:33am On May 31, 2016
Buhari is a curse.

3 Likes

Re: Nigeria: Running On Empty – Financial Times by mustmust(m): 8:36am On May 31, 2016
wey day wait . fp. the person above me took weeds. we are admonished to pray for those in authority.
Re: Nigeria: Running On Empty – Financial Times by Mikehell(m): 8:42am On May 31, 2016
. grin
Re: Nigeria: Running On Empty – Financial Times by NavierStokes(m): 11:01am On May 31, 2016
Mods I think the article deserves a wider read. Kindly move to Frontpage.
Re: Nigeria: Running On Empty – Financial Times by Sall(m): 1:50pm On May 31, 2016
You are a foolfool. Animal.
Re: Nigeria: Running On Empty – Financial Times by Sall(m): 1:51pm On May 31, 2016
nnachukz:
Buhari is a curse.
you are a fool . Animal.

2 Likes

Re: Nigeria: Running On Empty – Financial Times by todayboy: 1:54pm On May 31, 2016
Nigeria is running on auto pilot all hail emperor dictator buhari
Re: Nigeria: Running On Empty – Financial Times by Nobody: 1:54pm On May 31, 2016
FT why una take panodol for somebody else's headache?

in other words, mind your own business.
Re: Nigeria: Running On Empty – Financial Times by nnachukz(m): 1:55pm On May 31, 2016
Sall:
you are a fool . Animal.
Why are you vomiting? Buhari na your father? Dey there dey shout. The man doesn't even know you exist. tongue

1 Like

Re: Nigeria: Running On Empty – Financial Times by Sall(m): 2:04pm On May 31, 2016
nnachukz:
Why are you vomiting? Buhari na your father? Dey there dey shout. The man doesn't even know you exist. tongue
if you ever had someone like buhari in your entire village of which you don't and will never have You wouldn't have come here to type rubbish. Go back and learn how to respect your elders.

1 Like

Re: Nigeria: Running On Empty – Financial Times by Nebuchadnezar: 2:13pm On May 31, 2016
grin

down down Buhari grin
Re: Nigeria: Running On Empty – Financial Times by nnachukz(m): 2:19pm On May 31, 2016
Sall:
if you ever had someone like buhari in your entire village of which you don't and will never have You wouldn't have come here to type rubbish. Go back and learn how to respect your elders.
Sorry! Respect is earned and not a fundamental right of anybody. A man like buhari in my village will be a disaster, we don't need such. A man who values cattle's life over human life. A man who has power to stop his Fulani men from killing my people but chooses to look away while they kill my people. Who will not just keep quiet but will tell me they are Libyans and not Fulani which is an indirect support of the atrocities committed by the Fulani. Such a man can never be respected by me. I repeat he is a curse but I don't expect you to understand until herdsmen burn down your house and wipe every living thing there, one day. Just one day.

3 Likes

Re: Nigeria: Running On Empty – Financial Times by plaetton: 2:43pm On May 31, 2016
NavierStokes:
Cc: lalasticlala Mynd44 OAM4J

Seun is there anyway it can be pushed to the government, to go through posts here on nairaland spanning a few months back, they can chose to assemble a think tank group from our own nairaland or compile some of those ideas that had already and accurately pointed out today's economic scenario months back.
I am afraid it appears the big boys (appointees) eating money at the villa are hell bent on driving us into the ground with their cluelessness and ineptitude.

Also it's high time the forum begins to ban the curse word "Wailer" used to shout down opposing view. All parties across divide will benefit from this country working. I don't think the supporters of this government are more/less patriotic than the opposition, especially those in the opposition without any political affiliations but who just want the country to work.
I would implore all hands to be on deck, bury all differences and even Mr President should toe the path of Nelson Mandela. Forget the things behind like he initially promised, before he decided to look back into the NEAR past. Assemble all stakeholders and see how everyone can make their contributions to moving the country forward.

We both know the past administration got some things wrong but they also got other things right and could be consulted or engaged in those areas, so it's not too late for Mr President to run an inclusive government as the father of the nation, where everyone can contribute to pulling our country through this emergency. If the government is hell bent on fighting, they can fight mych later but for now we have an emergency on our hands. Two wrongs don't make a right.

I really hope Mr President would see the wisdom to steer this ship (Nigeria) away from the iceberg of indigence.

God bless everyone
God bless our heroes past
God bless Seun
God bless all Nairalanders irrespective of political or religious leanings.

We shall be great again!!!

The things he should do to at least revitalise the economy are there. But we don't know whether his economic advisers are inept, afraid to tell him or simply given up on trying to teach him basic economic principles.

For example, the much celebrated TSA implementation.
That was a nuclear bomb thrown into the economy.
They should reverse it immediately.
In this age of technology, programs and software exists or can be crafted to keep track and manage of all Federal government accountsin commercial banks in REAL TIME.

Sweeping N3 trillion from commercial banks, and by extension, the entire economy was economic suicide, similar to applying a jackhammer to remove a pesky fly from one's Scrotum.
Whilst you may kill the fly, you will also irreparably damage Your family Jewels grin , and be worse for it.

The government should also facilitate the inflow of capital into country by removing unnecessary restrictions in bringing money into the country as well as loosening the free flow of money in banking system.
I say this because each time I transfer foreign currency into my domiciliary account, I would have to explain the source before I can get access to my funds.

This is counter productive. No other country in the world does that.
You need to remove all barriers and encourage diaspora Nigerians, who are in the millions, to repatriate their earnings into the economy.

These are just 2 of the many steps that could be taken to buffer and stabilize the economy.

1 Like

Re: Nigeria: Running On Empty – Financial Times by NavierStokes(m): 3:02pm On May 31, 2016
plaetton:


The things he should do to at least revitalise the economy are there. But we don't know whether his economic advisers are inept, afraid to tell him or simply given up on trying to teach him basic economic principles.

For example, the much celebrated TSA implementation.
That was a nuclear bomb thrown into the economy.
They should reverse it immediately.
In this age of technology, programs and software exists or can be crafted to keep track and manage of all Federal government accountsin commercial banks in REAL TIME.

Sweeping N3 trillion from commercial banks, and by extension, the entire economy was economic suicide, similar to applying a jackhammer to remove a pesky fly from one's Scrotum.
Whilst you may kill the fly, you will also irreparably damage Your family Jewels, and be worse for it.

The government should also facilitate the inflow of capital into country by removing unnecessary restrictions in bringing money into the country as well as loosening the free flow of money in banking system.
I say this because each time I transfer foreign currency into my domiciliary account, I would have to explain the source before I can get access to my funds.

This is counter productive. No other country in the world does that.
You need to remove all barriers and encourage diaspora Nigerians, who are in the millions, to repatriate their earnings into the economy.

These are just 2 of the many steps that could be taken to buffer and stabilize the economy.

I recall having a discussion with a friend,last year. We had both gotten in to Nigeria at about the period of implementation of the TSA, we both agreed that in principle it was an excellent idea but in practice it's a big shock on the system. Well the government of the day went ahead, this is one of the major issues that has brought us to where we are. Today liquidity is like a fish in an aquarium, we gather around to admire it but have no access to the money, just nice enough for government to read out some huge trillion figures to the admiration of the public, but having no impact on them.

For mein addition to the forex controls, the governments should be able to stay the course with policy implementation. For business men, doing business is business, so the idea of policy reversals everynow and then can not encourage any invesments of any form. Imagine doing business with a man who has amnesia, you discuss something one moment, the next moment he forgets and says something else.

This thread alone can not address the short comings of this government but believe if the president comes down from his high horse, stays open to reason and new ideas, enter a action with boldness and be ready to see how actions yield results over time, then we will have been on our way to true progress.

For now it's all trial and error for short periods of time.

2 Likes

Re: Nigeria: Running On Empty – Financial Times by omenka(m): 3:27pm On May 31, 2016
They keep mentioning "restriction on forex" as though the government really has a choice at the moment. Would they rather the CBN throw its doors and windows open to all forex applicants including those who seek to import toothpicks, and empty the treasury precipitation a total collapse of the system just to sustain imports??

Other times when such drastic measure wasn't taken, we had sufficient forex (over $60billion) in our reserves and when the storm came, we used a good part of it to "protect" ourselves- imports were sustained and the naira remained firm.

Today, we are grappling with less than 50% of what we had back then (about $30billion) and they are still talking about granting forex to every John Doe who seeks to get it for whatever purpose. How sensible is that

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