₦airaland Forum

Welcome, Guest: RegisterLoginWith GoogleTrendingRecentNew

Stats: 3,326,854 members, 8,428,377 topics. Date: Wednesday, 17 June 2026 at 10:50 AM

Toggle theme

Paraman's Posts

Nairaland ForumParaman's ProfileParaman's Posts

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 ... 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 (of 233 pages)

BusinessRe: Naira Is 1270/$1 In The Parallel Market by Paraman: 3:41pm On Apr 21, 2024
Birdbyrde440:
The naira is currently trading at N1270/$1 in the online market as futher downturn is expected.
Which one be "online market"?
PoliticsRe: 2024: Gov Aiyedatiwa is selfish, Ondo South Must Govern For 8 Years - Group by Paraman: 3:30pm On Apr 21, 2024
garfield1:
https://sunnewsonline.com/ondo-guber-ondo-south-must-govern-for-8-yrs-group/
Base on some of the results I saw yesterday on nairaland, Ayedatiwa will be the APC flagbearer
PoliticsRe: 2024: Gov Aiyedatiwa is selfish, Ondo South Must Govern For 8 Years - Group by Paraman: 3:26pm On Apr 21, 2024
ejimatic:
. Ondo South truly has never ruled in Ondo State.I think Lucky Ayedatiwa cannot start by calling for second term in office now It will be too early. If he performs well he may contest for another term.Granted there is no presence of government in Okiti pupa ,Igbokoda and other riverine areas . No electricity in those places for more than 8 years.
Agagu is from okitipupa

If he contest and win, he can't recontest again.
PoliticsRe: Port Harcourt Refinery: Marketers Eye ₦‎500/litre Petrol, Set To Load by Paraman: 3:21pm On Apr 21, 2024
YourKarma:
Fool, no dey talk nonsense. He asked you a question, how many states did tinubu win in the SS apart from rivers state due to Wike's abracadabra.

Shameless Yoruba cretin who thinks everyone who doesn't support this useless government is an Igbo man. Obi won in Lagos and Abuja, I'm sure that means Lagos and ABJ is igbo land.

Ewedu-munching slowpoke trying to force everyone to like a geriatric fossil🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
🥱🥱

K
PoliticsRe: Why Is Coastal Road More Important Than Electricity,of What Value is the Road? by Paraman: 3:01pm On Apr 21, 2024
Brendaniel:
I may have taken your words seriously if only your Tinubu and most of you did not support Buhari for 8 years even when people like us where calling out all the damages Buhari was doing.

Instead you guys kept attacking us that Buhari was in the right part doing good for Nigerians and that we should give him more time till he left office and you guys including Tinubu are now talking about the damage he did...

Same thing you people are doing for Tinubu now and you want Nigerians to take you guys seriously...

And for Tinubu 1 year is enough for people to start seeing improvement no matter how little, instead the power situation has gotten worse even worse than when Buhari was there..

In my area before we get steady power supply at least 12 hours daily sometimes 72 hours without interruption during Buhari's time, but now we get about 6 hours power supply in almost 48 hours and sometimes we could stay up to 72 hours without even a flash...
k
PoliticsRe: Port Harcourt Refinery: Marketers Eye ₦‎500/litre Petrol, Set To Load by Paraman: 3:01pm On Apr 21, 2024
Trueprophet91:
When you were making campaign promises you don't intend to keep you didn't know about dollar rate abi?
Did I tell you that, I am Tinubu?
PoliticsRe: Peter Obi's Romance With North Raises 2027 Permutations - The Guardian by Paraman: 2:59pm On Apr 21, 2024
O
PoliticsRe: Why Is Coastal Road More Important Than Electricity,of What Value is the Road? by Paraman: 2:38pm On Apr 21, 2024
PoliticsRe: Why Is Coastal Road More Important Than Electricity,of What Value is the Road? by Paraman: 2:35pm On Apr 21, 2024
100millionGoal:
Some of you need to be picked up and stoned

I stay in the federal capital and we barely get any Ligh

Shiiit for brains
That's what you have
I can see where you stay in the FCT is where Nigeria start and end kid
PoliticsRe: Why Is Coastal Road More Important Than Electricity,of What Value is the Road? by Paraman: 2:32pm On Apr 21, 2024
Brendaniel:
This is part of the reason why Nigeria is where is is today, when you see white and call it black and you see black and call it white....
Base on the two links I have shared with you on this thread, I do not expect you to write this kind of comment.

Tinubu has not spend up to 1 year in power, but you want him to do what Jonathan and Buhari couldn't do all over Nigeria in 6 and 8 years respectively.

I do have at least 15hrs power supply per day.

The power sector is still a work in progress, before December 2026, majority of Nigerians should be having at least 15hrs power supply daily.
PoliticsRe: Ondo APC Governorship Primary Declared Inconclusive by Paraman: 2:26pm On Apr 21, 2024
Is there a need for this rerun in okitipupa? The governor totally destroyed his opponents
PoliticsRe: Port Harcourt Refinery: Marketers Eye ₦‎500/litre Petrol, Set To Load by Paraman: 2:20pm On Apr 21, 2024
onuman:
Anytime the 5 Southeast states leave Nigeria, the rest of the oil producing areas of the southsouth will also leave Nigeria by any means.
You foolishly believe that the SS states will stay with you in Nigeria without the SE? For you to impose your obsolete Sharia criminal laws upon the SS areas.
Why don't you Agbadorians have common sense?

You're not the spokesperson of the south south.
PoliticsRe: Why Is Coastal Road More Important Than Electricity,of What Value is the Road? by Paraman:
Brendaniel:
So you are saying Nigeria is generating more power than Buhari and Jonathan's time?
Brendaniel:
And has the light improved?
Yes! The light is improving
PoliticsRe: Why Is Coastal Road More Important Than Electricity,of What Value is the Road? by Paraman:
Brendaniel:
And has the light improved?
Yes, is improving
PoliticsRe: Why Is Coastal Road More Important Than Electricity,of What Value is the Road? by Paraman: 1:52pm On Apr 21, 2024
Brendaniel:
Thats is why I am asking you want have they done and if they have done anything has it improved?
You're a shameless person

You asked me what the government is doing and I gave you a reply.

Brendaniel:
What is the government doing?
Well

https://www.google.com/amp/s/pmnewsnigeria.com/2024/03/23/adelabu-fg-to-boost-power-supply-to-6500mw-in-6-months/%3famp=1

https://punchng.com/fg-hands-over-zungeru-power-plant-to-concessionaire-2/?amp
PoliticsRe: Why Is Coastal Road More Important Than Electricity,of What Value is the Road? by Paraman: 1:48pm On Apr 21, 2024
Brendaniel:
I have read it, it is even an old news, that was the Siemens deal Kyari signed during Buhari's time, it was just delivered in Tinubu's time, but I am telling you that it will not increase the mega watts generated....

That is like feeding 200 children with food of 10 people, instead of buying more food, you buy more plates to share the food that is not up to...

Is it going to increase the supply?
Lol

So you know about the siemens deal, yet you asked me what the government is doing... You're a 🤡.

Now, you're now writing another ignorant comment as if the government is doing nothing to increase the MW we generate.
PoliticsRe: Why Is Coastal Road More Important Than Electricity,of What Value is the Road? by Paraman: 1:41pm On Apr 21, 2024
Brendaniel:
Transformers are not generators, the major problem with Nigeria power sector is Nigeria is not genratinf enough power as at now, 4000 mega watts for 200 million people, even if they buy 1 million transformers it will not increase the mega watts...
So government is not doing anything to generate more mega watts?

A lot of you just love making ignorant statements
PoliticsRe: Why Is Coastal Road More Important Than Electricity,of What Value is the Road? by Paraman: 1:40pm On Apr 21, 2024
Brendaniel:
Transformers are not generators, the major problem with Nigeria power sector is Nigeria is not genratinf enough power as at now, 4000 mega watts for 200 million people, even if they buy 1 million transformers it will not increase the mega watts...

The problem with you guys and the leaders you support is you guys leave the real problem and start chasing shadows, minor on the major and major on the minor....
I showed you what the government is doing, but look at the clownish talk you dey talk

So government will increase electricity generation with a wand abi?

Power supply has been decentralize, what's your state of origin governor doing in providing power supply for your people?
PoliticsRe: Tinubu Wife Commissioning Navy Vessel Is Bad by Paraman: 1:39pm On Apr 21, 2024
shortgun:
Wrong!
Don't speak out of ignorance, the only people that can represent and act on behalf of the president are only official office holders appointed by the president and the vice president.
It is unconstitutional for any other category of persons to perform the functions of the president
It's not wrong

It's done even in the USA

https://www.google.com/amp/s/amp.cnn.com/cnn/2022/04/02/politics/jill-biden-uss-delaware-commissioning

PoliticsRe: Tinubu Wife Commissioning Navy Vessel Is Bad by Paraman:
Khyrvxjzy:
bad news


yes i condemned it, the first lady have no place in our constitution, what kind of thing is this, why cant the vice president do that... so bad, president i condemned you
There's nothing wrong with it. It's done even in western countries

G00dharddick:
Imagine trump's wife going to commission US naval ship! America would have exploded and trump would have resigned.

But over here, seeing some fools praising and defending Tinubu for this is grossly stupifing. Was remi Tinubu elected?

By the time the okpolor eyes is done with SW people their eyes go clear
G00dharddick
https://www.google.com/amp/s/amp.cnn.com/cnn/2022/04/02/politics/jill-biden-uss-delaware-commissioning

PoliticsRe: Why Is Coastal Road More Important Than Electricity,of What Value is the Road? by Paraman: 1:27pm On Apr 21, 2024
PoliticsHow Naira Transformed From Worst Curency To Best-performng In Six Months–cardoso by Paraman(op): 1:26pm On Apr 21, 2024
The Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, Mr Yemi Cardoso, shares his vision on how he intends to shape Nigeria’s monetary policy, address FX issues, and tackle inflation in an interview with the International Monetary Fund African Department Director, Abebe Selassie, at the IMF/World Bank Spring Meetings in Washington DC, United States of America, held between April 11 and 20, 2024. GODFREY GEORGE brings excerpts

It has been a period of many challenges and huge important reforms in the monetary area in Nigeria. You inherited tightly managed and overvalued exchange rates and have made some really bold decisions to end the issue of multiple FX rates that you had. How did you approach the sequencing of reforms and what gave you much concern?

That is quite a jam-packed question but I will try to unpack it as best as I can. I would say that with respect to Nigeria and the sequencing of events and reforms, I think in terms of context, it is clear, for those who don’t know, that I came in at a time of very very great difficulty for the Central Bank and monetary authorities. Of course, inflation was high and the exchange rate was under tremendous stress. There was a crisis of confidence. In such a situation, the biggest challenge, as far as I can see, was that of trust and deficit in trust. People simply had the impression that things were bad. There was fear and somehow they did not see any end in sight to what seemed like a gloomy situation. So, it was very important to understand that, and in terms of sequencing, do whatever was possible by taking the necessary steps to begin the process of building back trust, and that is not something that happens overnight. I recall that when I went for the Senate hearings in Nigeria, one of the things I said at the time was that I recognised that there was a huge backlog at the time of about $7bn in forward transactions that had not been met, and which seemed to provide a lot of apprehension to Nigerians. I made a commitment to take care of them. How I was going to do that, I didn’t know. But, I thought it was very important to make that commitment there to build back the trust deficit that one was going into. And also, I had to reach out to various stakeholders, particularly, international investors. The first day I started as governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, one of the first groups I dealt with was the international investors. They had been following activities and were very keen to know what was going on. I felt that there was a need to continue to have that kind of dialogue and use that as an opportunity to rebuild trust with people and various stakeholders.

Of course, the next thing in terms of sequencing was to make it abundantly clear that the era of interventions, which really hadn’t taken us anywhere, was over. I intended to go back to orthodox monetary policy. I think those were very important things to make very clear. I think that helped to set the stage for what came after. It was very important to continue to reemphasise those things in the process of building trust.

Communication was also very key, and it also has to be sequenced. I know that at the outset, there was concern that one was not saying enough. There was a strategy to that. I felt it was important to, at the outset, come out and say things you need to say when you need to say them. I remember that a particular forum – the Chartered Institute of Bankers – held yearly, I used that opportunity to communicate very strongly. That is a forum that the governors talk for around 15 minutes to 30 minutes. But, I took over an hour, but I made sure I got everything including giving forward guidance with respect to the banking sector and letting people know that we were going to have a recapitalisation exercise. This was in November and the guidelines didn’t come out until recently, so they had plenty of time to start thinking that through.

In terms of some of the issues that I was concerned about and how I approached them; there was a lot of worry with respect to excess money supply. One had to take bold measures with respect to mopping up liquidity and hiking interest rates. I know that at the first monetary policy committee meeting that we had, I did a 400 basis point increase, which was unprecedented, but we had to do it. We had to do it. We had no choice. We followed that up also with another 200 basis points. We had to do that also. We were convinced that we had to do whatever was necessary to ensure that prices and inflation were reduced. It is important to recognise that whatever policies we make that do not impact the man on the streets, we have not done anything.

How do you influence expectation – behaviour and price setting – to the man on the streets?

I think the answer to that is that one is also reasonable in expectation, knowing full well that all these things will not transform overnight. In actual fact, when we look at the situation of Nigeria, a lot of problems that have happened on the monetary side have taken place over a long period of time. I think continuous dialogue and communication are essential in letting people understand why we are doing certain things, and where we intend to get to, and continuously going back to reinforce what we have done. We have used the opportunity of the MPC to have a question and answer session which basically allows everyone to ask all the questions they want, and for us to reemphasise the certain measures we are taking and why we are doing that, and we would continue to do so. In actual fact, we will strengthen the communication mechanism that we have in place. We will certainly not take it for granted that people understand what we are doing and why we are doing them because it is quite a complex subject, to be honest, that even for those who are the most enlightened; they sometimes struggle. We can use different platforms to make sure we can reach out to as many as possible. I do think that what we have seen recently with regard to the exchange rate has given people hope. When I started, we had a situation where within a month or two, we were regarded as the worst-performing currency of any country. Six months later, we are judged to have the best-performing currency of any country. So, I think those things speak for themselves. A situation where in the recent past, the greatest amount of liquidity on a daily basis was in the region of $200m to $300m; in six months, we have traded over $1bn. FX liquidity has taken a centre stage in the activity of the monetary side, and I think people see that; they also see the exchange rate coming down and they understand that there is a lag. Ultimately, the objective is that we can moderate inflation.

There is a fairly sizeable fiscal policy that the Federal Government runs and the financing of that deficit has been a major source of pressure for the monetary policy. How is it that you are calibrating policies with the Minister of Finance, Wale Edun? Are you coordinating better with Wale on how the FG would be able to fund itself on a sustainable basis?

This is a very good question and one that comes up quite regularly. Let me be up front to say that the monetary policy is just one side of it. With the whole inflation-targeting objective that you spoke about earlier, we cannot do it without successfully collaborating with the fiscal side; it will not work. It is clear to us that we need to have a very good handshake with the fiscal side and a handshake that takes us in the direction that we want to go. We understand, of course, that, again, breaking that down, food inflation – we can use that as a good example – is something that is not within the purview of the monetary side. But, we definitely work and rub minds together, and recently, we had some fertilisers which had come out of the previous administration. We have pushed that to the Ministry of Agriculture to help them going into the next planting season with respect to meeting their overall objectives.

In the MPC, we have the presence of very senior leadership from the fiscal side as members of the MPC in the person of the Permanent Secretary of the Ministry of Finance, who is here today, and we always have very good and open dialogue on issues so we are able to hear the different sides of the situation. Beyond that, we have set up different committees that work hand-in-hand with respect to ensuring that we are on the same page with respect to taming inflation.

It is also commendable that the Ministry of Finance has begun that process of securitising the outstanding Ways and Means, and I think that is extremely commendable. I think it is less of an issue now, and we can work better together, bearing in mind that as we move towards inflation targeting, there has to be a strong partnership for it to be successful.

It strikes me that you have achieved quite a bit in six months. Stepping back a bit, as a policy maker, what are one or two lessons that you take over from your first six months in office?


Hmmm… I cannot overemphasise the importance of trust. When I look back at it – irrespective of the courage, boldness to do certain things, and the understanding of issues that many may not understand by virtue of the fact that one has access to data and some other things – if the trust isn’t there, you would suboptimise. So, it is clear to me that trust is critical in successfully anchoring a major task like this. It is very very important.

In terms of lessons also, I think, it is a bit surprising, quite frankly, that perhaps, one had expected that there was a greater understanding of some of the issues. Complex, though they are, I expected a greater understanding. I also found out that communication is also very important in all this. The expectation from the Central Bank of Nigeria was that one could wave a wand and that would be the end of the problem. In fact, in many cases, many blamed me for the woes that I had nothing to do with other than the fact that I was there to try and find solutions. On one or two occasions, I had to remind people that I didn’t do this; I am part of the solution.

So, please, let’s roll up our sleeves and work together to show that we can surmount them (our problem).

Credibility and trust are important. How much of that was garnered during the new policies that you put in place? Or, was it your words that allowed you to build that confidence and trust?

I think consistency in saying certain things and doing them was very important. I think we had a situation today where Nigerians were very restless and they were getting impatient and wanted results very quickly, but you had to come out and explain why it could not happen overnight. Even in the policies where certain things had to be tweaked, we needed to have the humility to tweak them.

Most developing nations including Nigeria would use external savings to finance development which makes currency risk a dominant risk factor. What are your views on developing the currency risk market to tame the inflation and pressures that Nigeria is facing?

These things need to be sequenced as and when these things come into play. We will know where we are headed in that direction soon, and it is something we are looking at.

How much has been spent on defending the naira in the first quarter of this year? Where are these defenses from? Reserves or FPI inflows?

I know that the issue of defending the naira has become an elephant in some room. I want to try to make this as clear as possible. It is not our intention to defend the naira. It is not. Much as I have read in the recent few days, some opinions with respect to what is happening with our reserves. If you think back to what our overall policy and philosophy has been here, you can see that it is counter-intuitive. Basically, what we are encouraging is for the market to be a willing buyer, willing seller, and price-discover-led one. Ultimately, I perceive a future where the CBN may really not need to intervene except in very unusual circumstances.

As long as we have a vibrant currency market, why do we need to intervene? I can understand that, especially at the outset, we have experienced that we needed to get the Bureau de Change segment going. We had to release tiny amounts of money to catalyse those happenings. Individuals must have funds to send their kids abroad and do things that are important. It is important not to keep them out of the mainstay.

What we have seen with the shifts in our reserves are the shifts that you would find in any country’s reserve situation. When debts are due and payments need to be made, they are to be made, because that is also part of keeping your credibility intact.

In two days, we had about $600m that came into the reserves account. I wouldn’t want people to be too excited. We want a market that operates on its own – willing buyer, willing seller, price discovery. That is where we are going. The shifts that we are seeing in our discovery have little or nothing to do with defending the naira, and that is certainly not our objective.

https://punchng.com/how-naira-transformed-from-worst-currency-to-best-performing-in-six-months-cardoso/?utm_source=telegram&utm_medium=social
PoliticsRe: Port Harcourt Refinery: Marketers Eye ₦‎500/litre Petrol, Set To Load by Paraman: 12:59pm On Apr 21, 2024
Trueprophet91:
Wait till you buy fuel at cheaper rates.

What's with you guys and 'Obedients' anyways?

Btw if pms pump price is not coming down to 200 or less, there's nothing to jubilate about.
@ the bolded, the joke is on you.

Base on the current exchange rate, only an idiot will feel petrol can sell for #200 or less.
CrimeRe: How I Was Scammed Through Fake Alert! by Paraman: 12:54pm On Apr 21, 2024
Thankgodiyke:
My wife said they will have to wait for confirmation she logged in through her app and couldn't see anything. Meanwhile the guy was coughing seriously and the lady started complaining that her baby is crying in the car and ask to drop her phone no. After some time
I'm surprise you and your wife fo not suspect a foul play at this point
PoliticsRe: Why Is Coastal Road More Important Than Electricity,of What Value is the Road? by Paraman: 12:11pm On Apr 21, 2024
Goodday90:
Nobody both online and offline have been able to enumerate the importance of the coastal roads and why it is more important than Electricity
Atleast Electricity will bring about a lot of development,why can’t the Government just repair the Existing roads
Anytime these question is asked,some people make
It tribal and try to make us forget about it

Personally I think this is just a white elephant project that they will use to loot trillions
You're talking as if the government is not doing anything in the power sector
PoliticsRe: Port Harcourt Refinery: Marketers Eye ₦‎500/litre Petrol, Set To Load by Paraman: 11:41am On Apr 21, 2024
sukar886:
Still high buhari left fuel for #285
What matter is that, the petrol is produce in Nigeria
PoliticsRe: Port Harcourt Refinery: Marketers Eye ₦‎500/litre Petrol, Set To Load by Paraman: 9:57am On Apr 21, 2024
StarRida:
Guy why are you this stupid the guy that you are arguing with have stated to you several times that he is not from S/East you kept on shouting Igbo Igbo may that Igbo kee you there mpama
Seun

Mynd44

StarRida just broke rule 2 and 11
PoliticsRe: Port Harcourt Refinery: Marketers Eye ₦‎500/litre Petrol, Set To Load by Paraman: 8:38am On Apr 21, 2024
YorubaForum:
Useless lies from the pit of hell, Ikwerre is Igbo, and Igbo is Ikwerre, Ikwerre can't fight Igbos. It's just like saying Ebonyi or Enugu or Anambra state is fighting Igbos, you're just so f*olish, your f*olishness is now so obvious, congratulations.

Mind you that lagos is still a no man's land, take note of that.
k
PoliticsRe: Port Harcourt Refinery: Marketers Eye ₦‎500/litre Petrol, Set To Load by Paraman: 8:37am On Apr 21, 2024
Chukwuka319:
Lol! And who are the poto poto people?
If not that tribalistic animal syndrome has damaged your mental capacity of cognitive reasoning, coordination and soundness of mind, you should have known Ikwerres are a subgroup of the " poto poto people" as you stupidly tag Igbos.
A monkey has more sense of reasoning, coordination and cognitive reasoning than you.
Even domestic fowls are better many times than Igbophobic rabid animals like you, because a local fowl with its kin will never discriminate against Broilers,Layers, Plymouth Rock breeds of chickens.
Bottom line is: Animals are a billion times better than many on this forum and beyond.
Oga, go and have sense and prove that you are better and more sophisticated than an animal and has dominion over them.
k
PoliticsRe: Port Harcourt Refinery: Marketers Eye ₦‎500/litre Petrol, Set To Load by Paraman: 8:06am On Apr 21, 2024
DestinyNigga:
Unity begger. Go and eat ur ewedu and leave SS alone.
Another clown from the south east in pain

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 ... 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 (of 233 pages)