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Osinbajo’s Prescription And Painful History Of Naira Devaluation - Investment - Nairaland

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Osinbajo’s Prescription And Painful History Of Naira Devaluation by okefranci: 6:43am On Oct 18, 2021
In 1981, one could get less than N6.1 million in exchange for $10 million. Then, a dollar was equivalent to 61 kobo. But four decades later, the naira has lost 99.8 per cent of its value against the greenback, going by how N4.1 billion now exchanges for $10 million. This is perhaps the steepest fall any currency has witnessed.


In the intervening years, the naira has witnessed dozens of devaluations, most of which were implemented with the hope of achieving fair value for the naira, which interestingly has suffered a fate common to commodity currencies across the globe. In March last year, the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) adjusted the official rate from N307/$ to N360/$. Subsequently, in the same year, the exchange rate was lowered to N380/$. That rate subsisted till this year when the CBN’s official rate was replaced with the Investors’ and Exporters’ (I & E) Window rate – a creation of the currency crisis itself.

Managing a commodity currency anywhere in the world, comes with the challenge of a terminal ailment. Just when one thinks there is a breather, it breaks down. From the 1980s till date, the apex bank has experimented with all known currency management approaches while the naira wobbled against its peers even within the African sub-region. Each newly-adopted promise makes so much but delivers little or nothing.


The apex bank under the leadership of Prof. Charles Soludo, contemplated revaluation – a proposal that was meant to simply strike out two zeroes from a denomination to return the currency to its heydays. A 500 bill was to be revalued as N5, for instance. But like other policies, the proposal did not survive the many political intrigues that trailed its implementation. Probably, the Soludo solution is one of the few ideas Nigerians do not have the hindsight of.

Many Nigerians have traced the historical trouble of the naira to the infamous Structural Adjustment Policy (SAP). Indeed, naira jumped from 89 kobo to a dollar in 1985 to N4/$ in the latter days of the SAP, which many experts have dismissed as ill-conceived.

The World Bank and the International Monetary Fund (IMF), as typical of them, demanded certain conditions among which was the adjustment of the exchange rate, to approve facilities for Nigeria. Since then, that currency has been on a roller coaster with several major liquidity crises in-between. In each crisis, a devaluation is put forward with an argument that a fair value would encourage the inflow of foreign capital, which an overvalued naira tends to scare away.

The argument has taken a firmer root in the foreign exchange debate in recent years than at any other time. When naira was adjusted to N193/$ in 2015, the decision was taken on the strength of expected massive capital importation. A year later, a similar thought was advanced in defence of another devaluation.

Last year’s devaluation decisions were also taken to attract the capital inflow required to shore up liquidity. Yet, the naira is considered overpriced, an argument that has been publicly echoed by the Vice President, Prof. Yemi Osinbajo.

Certainly, the strength of a currency is determined by interrelationship among certain factors including the demand and supply, the volume of exports in relation to imports and performance and competitiveness of the domestic economy.


As often noted by a former governor of the Central Bank, Kingsley Moghalu, a stronger currency does not produce a stronger economy. On the other hand, a stronger economy will eventually produce a stronger currency. Following this logic, at some point, China was accused of deliberately undervaluing its currency to gain a competitive edge in the global market.

It follows, thus, that a weaker currency is better for an economy that wants to be competitive in the international market. But if the naira has lost over 99 per cent of its value against the dollar in 40 years and it is still considered overvalued, at what price is its fair value going to emerge?

As much as Nigeria could also leverage the opportunity in expanding the foreign demand for its goods to create more jobs and increase local capacity, there is no debate about the fact that there are other entrenched challenges a weaker naira cannot address. If a dollar is exchanged for N5,000 tomorrow and other Africans flood Nigerian markets to grab the extremely cheap made-in-Nigeria products, the manufacturers can only sell the volume the many constraints permit them to produce.

This suggests that a much weaker naira may not address the endemic insecurity challenge that has scared the farmers away. It will not address the poor local input sourcing. A suddenly weaker naira will probably not address the historical logistics challenges. It costs more to transport some raw materials from, maybe north, to Lagos than to bring the same from Asia or Europe. A weaker naira will only make the cost of importation of such materials less affordable and the local industries relying on them less competitive than their counterparts in different parts of Africa.

Nigeria aspires for regional economic dominance – a position South Africa and Egypt are also jostling for. By the sheer size of its gross domestic product (GDP), and not by any qualitative measures, the country leads the continental economies, followed by South Africa and Egypt. But, interestingly, naira is among the weakest currencies on the continent. Among the top 10 economies, naira is only ahead of Angolan kwanza and Tanzanian Shilling in par value. An Egyptian Pound exchanges for N26 while the rand is even stronger at N28/R. Kenyan Shilling, Ghanaian Cedi. Ethiopian Birr, Moroccan Dirham and Algerian Dinar are also stronger than the naira.
But it was not so from the beginning; naira once commanded perception of strength and stability, which means it has consistently lost its value against its peers. While an economy earns an advantage in the marketplace when its currency is perceived cheap, the dollar is not allowed to swing, neither is news of a weaker dollar received with cheers. Even China has realised that it cannot lay claim to a regional leader with a weak currency.

https://guardian.ng/business-services/osinbajos-prescription-and-painful-history-of-naira-devaluation/

Re: Osinbajo’s Prescription And Painful History Of Naira Devaluation by TheRareGem1(f): 6:50am On Oct 18, 2021
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Re: Osinbajo’s Prescription And Painful History Of Naira Devaluation by Joylove2324(f): 6:52am On Oct 18, 2021
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