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Buhari Cuts Down Trees In Abuja To Protect The Naira.financial Times London - Politics - Nairaland

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Buhari Cuts Down Trees In Abuja To Protect The Naira.financial Times London by flyingsnail(f): 2:30pm On Jun 05, 2017
Nigeria adopts unorthodox measures to defend the naira

The Muhammadu Buhari administration has reportedly resorted to cutting down trees in Abuja in a bid to save the Naira.



According to Financial Times, the Buhari-led FG is cutting down trees lining the streets of Abuja to ''thwart black market money changers, one of a range of unorthodox measures it is deploying to defend its weakening currency''.

The chopping down of the trees is part of the holistic plan to discourage black market operators of forex who carry out their businesses under the trees.

Some labourers hired by the Abuja city government cut the trees spoke to Financial Times. One said, ''The government does not want the trees because people are doing illegal work under them,” as he cut down branches from a tree with a chainsaw.

''The man was referring to money changers from the north of the country who rest under the shade of the trees and sell US dollars, British pounds, and even Saudi riyals to customers hungry for hard currency,” the report concluded.


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The Nigerian government has resorted to chopping down trees lining the streets of its capital to thwart black market money changers, one of a range of unorthodox measures it is deploying to defend its weakening currency.

On an August morning in Abuja, a labourer who said he was hired by the city government cut branches from a towering tree with a chainsaw. Nearby other workers hacked away at smaller trees with machetes.

Asked what they were doing, one, who did not want his name published, replied: “The government does not want the trees because people are doing illegal work under them”.

The man was referring to money changers from the north of the country who rest under the shade of the trees and sell US dollars, British pounds, and even Saudi riyals to customers hungry for hard currency.

Another worker who gave his name as Alex said: “People change dollars on the road here and it’s not supposed to be like that. People are supposed to go to the banks to do transactions”.

But a series of central bank decrees issued this summer has instead increasingly restricted how Nigerians can use their banks, seemingly encouraging black market activity. For example, money changers in Abuja say the new rule barring Nigerians from depositing hard currency into banks only boosts unofficial trade.

The naira, still reeling from an oil price of less than $50 a barrel and political uncertainty in the run-up to this year’s elections, has lost a fifth of its value in the past year and has been devalued twice. In import-dependent Nigeria, demand for dollars remains high yet the fall in the price of crude has cut the flow of currency as income from oil exports has dwindled.

The central bank’s new controls, combined with its contentious move in June to restrict imports of critical goods such as rice and rubber, has hit foreign investor confidence in the administration of new president Muhammadu Buhari, who remains without a cabinet more than two months since his inauguration.
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On August 11 the central bank lowered the ATM withdrawal limit, cutting the maximum naira limit by more than half, to 60,000 naira ($301) a day. Those with “domiciliary accounts” which are denominated in foreign currency can now take out only $300 a day. Earlier this month, the central bank banned Nigerians from depositing US dollars into their domiciliary accounts, angering people who had children at school abroad and had to pay school fees in foreign currency.

“Anything to strengthen the naira is important, but personally I need to transfer money to my family abroad, that’s why I opened a domiciliary account,” said a man in a suit after withdrawing the maximum daily amount of naira from a cash machine in the wealthy district of Ikoyi in Lagos. He did not want his name to be published. “In Nigeria we need these accounts because many of us work in foreign currency.”

At another row of cash machines at a nearby bank, 36-year-old car importer Babatunde Gbanga said the “liquidity challenges” and the new restrictions were hurting his business because he relied on being able to send and receive foreign currency from abroad.

The naira was in a “crisis situation” partly because of high demand for dollars, said Kunle Ezun, treasury researcher for Ecobank in Lagos. “In trying to control the FX market, the central bank is starving the money market of liquidity.”

Bank governor Godwin Emefiele has defended his policies, arguing that the measures are intended to stop speculation, decrease illicit financial flows and defend the naira. Mr Emefiele told the Financial Times this month he thought the naira was still appropriately priced, despite the spread between official and black market rates, and said his policies would help prepare Nigeria for a possible interest rate rise by the US Federal Reserve later this year.

Still, many economists disagree. Given that oil prices will remain low, the central bank’s naira policy raises the risk of more controls and even import bans, all of which could undermine growth, said Yvonne Mhango, Africa economist at Renaissance Capital.


https://www.nigerianbulletin.com/threads/financial-times-buhari-cuts-down-trees-in-abuja-to-protect-the-naira.116106/

https://www.ft.com/content/a83e54d0-425c-11e5-9abe-5b335da3a90e?mhq5j=e2

Re: Buhari Cuts Down Trees In Abuja To Protect The Naira.financial Times London by Seeker17(m): 2:33pm On Jun 05, 2017
undecided undecided
Re: Buhari Cuts Down Trees In Abuja To Protect The Naira.financial Times London by TruthNigeria(m): 2:34pm On Jun 05, 2017
Ok
Re: Buhari Cuts Down Trees In Abuja To Protect The Naira.financial Times London by OlujobaSamuel: 2:36pm On Jun 05, 2017
this one weak me. make someone give me a better explanation abeg

1 Like

Re: Buhari Cuts Down Trees In Abuja To Protect The Naira.financial Times London by lilfreezy: 2:42pm On Jun 05, 2017
Wait wait, so if go to my backyard and cut down a tree, I'll be protecting the naira

3 Likes

Re: Buhari Cuts Down Trees In Abuja To Protect The Naira.financial Times London by Iamwrath: 2:44pm On Jun 05, 2017
I still can't wrap my head around this news

Me i go carry my hard earned money enter one bush say i wan change money ? I dey craze ? and how much he dey cost to cut each tree are we making profit ?

1 Like

Re: Buhari Cuts Down Trees In Abuja To Protect The Naira.financial Times London by dadavivo: 3:23pm On Jun 05, 2017
Buhari have no sense. An illiterate beast.

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Re: Buhari Cuts Down Trees In Abuja To Protect The Naira.financial Times London by Daviddson(m): 3:28pm On Jun 05, 2017
I hope we will not hear that Buhari is trying to prevent Igbos from trading (at least 99% of BDCs are abokiis), like we heard when a certain market in Lagos was demolished?
That aside, I doubt the credibility of this news write up.
Re: Buhari Cuts Down Trees In Abuja To Protect The Naira.financial Times London by Paperwhite(m): 3:57pm On Jun 05, 2017
Otondo policy by an Otondo government. angry

1 Like

Re: Buhari Cuts Down Trees In Abuja To Protect The Naira.financial Times London by Nobody: 4:41pm On Jun 05, 2017
..... no no no.... this story must have been fabricated....
Re: Buhari Cuts Down Trees In Abuja To Protect The Naira.financial Times London by jesse8048(m): 5:26pm On Jun 05, 2017
Lol cheesy

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