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What Osinbajo’s Call For Naira Devaluation Could Mean For The Future - Politics - Nairaland

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What Osinbajo’s Call For Naira Devaluation Could Mean For The Future by dre11(m): 8:03am On Oct 12, 2021
Nigeria is on auto-replay. Events of the past find a clever way of repeating themselves. Very few things that happen in this African giant are new. Conversations around the naira and dollar are definitely not new, and we are back at a familiar junction: let’s call it the naira devaluation avenue.

On Monday, at the midterm review of President Muhammadu Buhari’s second tenure in office, the conversation about naira devaluation found a good place to grab centre stage. For about 45 minutes, Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo explained how the country’s Economic Sustainability Plan helped Nigeria get out of recession. At the end of his presentation, Osinbajo told a hall full of ministers, captains of industries, diplomats, and civil servants, how he expects the Central Bank of Nigeria to devalue the naira to reflect the state of the market.

The professor of law did not mince words when he said the CBN’s demand-management strategy needs a rethink.

“As for the exchange rate, I think we need to move our rates to [be] as reflective of the market as possible. This, in my own respective view, is the only way to improve supply,” Osinbajo said.

“We can’t get new dollars into the system, where the exchange rate is artificially low. And everyone knows by how much our reserves can grow. I’m convinced that the demand management strategy currently being adopted by the CBN needs a rethink, and that is just my view.”


The boldest part of Osinbajo’s call for devaluation was that he did it right before his principal, President Muhammadu Buhari. Buhari is known to be against the devaluation of the naira, even when market forces clearly necessitate the shift.

WHAT HAPPENED WHEN OSINBAJO CALLED FOR DEVALUATION IN 2016

When Buhari and Osinbajo took office in 2015, one of the first demands of the investing community was for the government to devalue the naira and maintain a single exchange rate system. President Buhari strongly opposed this position. He famously said he will not kill the naira.

Osinbajo stood with Buhari. He told diplomats that Nigeria will not be devaluing the naira, suggesting that devaluation was not the solution to the currency crisis.

“I don’t agree on devaluation and it is not that I am doctrinaire about it. In the first place, it is not a solution — we are not exporting significantly. And the way things are, devaluation will not help the local economy,” he told ambassadors from Italy and Canada, who visited him in October 2015.

Some months down the line, the vice-president who chairs major economic committees in the Buhari government, called for a “substantial revaluation for the foreign exchange policy”.

“There has been a sharp decline in foreign exchange earnings. The executive is not responsible for monetary policy but we have made the point clearly that demand management will not take us out of the woods,” he said in May 2016.

Just as Osinbajo said in 2016, he has said again in 2021 that the CBN’s “demand management” strategy needs to be reevaluated.

A month after Osinbajo’s call in 2016, the CBN removed its peg on the naira from 197 per dollar. The local currency went as high as 283 per dollar in a matter of hours. Osinbajo said this would help boost dollar supply and encourage capital inflows. He was right. Nigeria recorded a 138.7 percent increase in inflows. But the story did not end there.

WHAT 2016 TEACHES US ABOUT 2021

If we follow the 2016 script to the letter, then the authorities would walk back on this call for devaluation starting from today. We would find many reasons why devaluation is bad for the economy. But the devaluation will eventually happen.

Look at it like this; we are back at that time in 2015 when the official rate of the dollar was N197, and the parallel market rate was N260. There was more than a 20 percent gap between the parallel market and the official side. Today we have 411 vs 570, which is also more than a 20 percent gap.

If the CBN goes with Osinbajo’s suggestion to “move our rates”, what immediately happens is that we see a devaluation at the official market, which may drive up prices of goods and services in the short term. If the CBN employs some of the lessons from the past, it can strengthen the naira at the parallel market. The naira will dramatically recover from N570 per dollar to anywhere between 450 and 500. There would be a unification of rates at a new midpoint. But the big question is: what happens next?

After the 2016 devaluation and some sort of unification, the parallel market began to shift again. The CBN adjusted for unification. By 2017, the parallel market had taken the naira to 520 per dollar. CBN had to devalue again to 360 to firm up rates. The naira recovered from 520 to 360 at the parallel market. But this was not sustainable due to the nature of the Nigerian economy.

Since 2017, we have moved from a unified 360 to 570 as of Monday. If we devalue again, the naira will firm up for a bit, and if we don’t do something different with the economy, we would be back again at devaluation avenue in a few years. That is how the Nigerian auto-replay works.

https://www.thecable.ng/heres-what-osinbajos-call-for-naira-devaluation-could-mean-for-the-future

12 Likes 2 Shares

Re: What Osinbajo’s Call For Naira Devaluation Could Mean For The Future by thorpido(m): 8:13am On Oct 12, 2021
Artificial management won't work. They will have to devalue eventually.

20 Likes 1 Share

Re: What Osinbajo’s Call For Naira Devaluation Could Mean For The Future by SmartPolician: 8:13am On Oct 12, 2021
Please let's not devalue the naira because we run an import-dependent economy. If we devalue the naira, people will get poorer, crime rates will increase and prices of goods will rocket.

I don't know who advised Buhari but the worst decision he ever made was borrowing to invest in railways over epileptic electricity supply. We cannot experience industrial revolution with 3-5kmegawatts of electricity.

106 Likes 8 Shares

Re: What Osinbajo’s Call For Naira Devaluation Could Mean For The Future by richmond500: 8:16am On Oct 12, 2021
Wetin we wan devalue inside money weh no get value again?

42 Likes

Re: What Osinbajo’s Call For Naira Devaluation Could Mean For The Future by MuchAdo: 8:30am On Oct 12, 2021
What a game changer it will be!

Speculators need to be extinguished by all means. angry
Re: What Osinbajo’s Call For Naira Devaluation Could Mean For The Future by TheRareGem1(f): 8:40am On Oct 12, 2021
VP never call for Naira devaluation. He only called for an official rate reflective of market reality. The current dual exchange rates allows for arbitrage and blocks inflow/supply of dollars from investors.

51 Likes 7 Shares

Re: What Osinbajo’s Call For Naira Devaluation Could Mean For The Future by Shooyie: 8:41am On Oct 12, 2021
Prof Osinbajo was trying to call the attention of the CBN governor to those who buy at official rates and sell at the parallel market which allows them make huge profit at the expense of unsuspecting Nigerians.

9 Likes 2 Shares

Re: What Osinbajo’s Call For Naira Devaluation Could Mean For The Future by madmohamed(m): 8:50am On Oct 12, 2021
Nigeria prepare for what it seems will be the greatest corrupt government for nest two years

We just discovered something most wicked and evil government of Nigeria under buhari this is grave consequences

We discover that this buhari government and Fulani cabal's have secret account where they transfer 35% of the money they borrow from foreign country (not including China) and most likely from oil money billions of dollars are transferred to some of this accounts


They open this account in case of if something happens to Nigeria they will use that billions to survive mind you the north Sentral is not part of this only Fulani cabal's knows about this accounts

The account was opened in the name of northern development management just to confused the borrower's that the money is mean for development of northern Nigeria

The signatory of this accounts in Saudi Arabia have ellofi signature the governor of Kaduna state and baba amed the Northern Elders volume and two other people we can't get their name.

They also have tow account in Qatar Yusuf buhari is one of the signatory of one of the account and about seven others.

If you don't stop Fulani Nigeria will cry time is coming when you will not see any money for any developments you will be only paying for Dept

They the Fulani are making plan to install another Fulani man and you people are there shouting 2023 Powe must return to south whit out any action. By nest year you will see how they will use efcc and DSS to against Southerners special the people who don't agree with them some of Southern politicians will run away

Stop Fulani known or unknown is coming

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Re: What Osinbajo’s Call For Naira Devaluation Could Mean For The Future by okefranci: 8:51am On Oct 12, 2021
Osinbajo said as for the exchange rate, we need to move our rates to as reflective of the market as possible and that is the only way to improve supply.
and we can’t get new dollars into the system, where the exchange rate is artificially low.

2 Likes 2 Shares

Re: What Osinbajo’s Call For Naira Devaluation Could Mean For The Future by joyandfaith: 8:53am On Oct 12, 2021
dre11:





https://www.thecable.ng/heres-what-osinbajos-call-for-naira-devaluation-could-mean-for-the-future


Lalasticlala




If we devalue to $1=#1000, nothing will improve if we don't work on productive economy.

5 Likes

Re: What Osinbajo’s Call For Naira Devaluation Could Mean For The Future by ItsGoodToBeGood: 8:54am On Oct 12, 2021
We are getting there,, grin




Osinbajo after seeing "Squid Game" and realizing how fu*ked up their money was whereas they are still doing well thought it will work in this country...

Ndi Mgbu

5 Likes 1 Share

Re: What Osinbajo’s Call For Naira Devaluation Could Mean For The Future by Sundaypaul12345: 11:19am On Oct 12, 2021
Na wah
Re: What Osinbajo’s Call For Naira Devaluation Could Mean For The Future by money121(m): 11:20am On Oct 12, 2021
Ok
Re: What Osinbajo’s Call For Naira Devaluation Could Mean For The Future by BruncleZuma: 11:20am On Oct 12, 2021
grin grin grin grin
Re: What Osinbajo’s Call For Naira Devaluation Could Mean For The Future by Xadan: 11:20am On Oct 12, 2021
grin
Re: What Osinbajo’s Call For Naira Devaluation Could Mean For The Future by JosephXavier: 11:21am On Oct 12, 2021
We've experienced the worst economic development in this regime

The worst is that there is no pathway or blueprint to cubbing all these except theoretical quotations while the government still go on doing things that will counter their agenda

You complained about economic sustainability but will still go ahead to borrow from IMF, China, pension board, dormant account and every possible place

With the number of clueless people running our economy for us in this country, Dollar will still 1000

2 Likes

Re: What Osinbajo’s Call For Naira Devaluation Could Mean For The Future by Emu4life(m): 11:21am On Oct 12, 2021
OSINBAJO should STFU already.
APC has failed............... Woefully.

It's only in a place like Nigeria you see;

Fish farmers advising the CBN,

Lawyers heading Ministry of Power, Work and Housing when we have Engineers,

Politicians heading Ministry of Science and Technology,

And professor of Law ordering the Central Bank.

Which kind Country be dz abeg

7 Likes

Re: What Osinbajo’s Call For Naira Devaluation Could Mean For The Future by Saskay44: 11:22am On Oct 12, 2021
Ok
Re: What Osinbajo’s Call For Naira Devaluation Could Mean For The Future by Bluffly: 11:22am On Oct 12, 2021
Why are we so fixed on Consumption. Can't our goverment focus on stimulating massive local production in all spheres and set us up for a top exporting nation. By this external reserves should'nt be a problem. The goverment is only measuring itself from Crude oil. Haba

1 Like 1 Share

Re: What Osinbajo’s Call For Naira Devaluation Could Mean For The Future by Lordofalmajiri(f): 11:23am On Oct 12, 2021
grin
Re: What Osinbajo’s Call For Naira Devaluation Could Mean For The Future by BigDawsNet: 11:23am On Oct 12, 2021
I trust this prof to lead nigeria...

His so smart with lots of brains upstairs

1 Like

Re: What Osinbajo’s Call For Naira Devaluation Could Mean For The Future by ATEAMS: 11:24am On Oct 12, 2021
Smart talk

1 Like

Re: What Osinbajo’s Call For Naira Devaluation Could Mean For The Future by Xeedorf: 11:24am On Oct 12, 2021
Confused Government.

1 Like

Re: What Osinbajo’s Call For Naira Devaluation Could Mean For The Future by CocoaOla: 11:25am On Oct 12, 2021
Poverty is a tools for 2023 elections

They can declare zero tax duties for Nigeria made good exports but no they know what they are doing they are weaponizing poverty to rigged the system

6 Likes 1 Share

Re: What Osinbajo’s Call For Naira Devaluation Could Mean For The Future by Nobody: 11:25am On Oct 12, 2021
I'm having serious headache right now mehn. embarassed

They deducted almost 5k from my small salary due to numerous queries.

With each query comes a deduction of #500. angry .

The day I decide I'm done, I will beat up the stupid principal.

As for Nigeria's numerous problems, we were running in circles before Buhari. Moving forward today, backward tomorrow.

Now we are moving backward at break neck speed. It's hard to imagine we can ever recover as a nation again.

Nigeria is a failed state!

5 Likes 1 Share

Re: What Osinbajo’s Call For Naira Devaluation Could Mean For The Future by abumeinben(m): 11:25am On Oct 12, 2021
Reading...

Done!

If they're to make the Naira value reflect the true nature of the market, then their policies should be made to reflect the true nature of the economy, starting with the payments made to politicians, then budgets to health, education, infrastructure and any other implementations that should be basic amenities.

From the analysis, devalue Naira to 570 means about 689 at aboki shop. Naija na farmland, we're the cash crops. They harvest us anyhow.

5 Likes 1 Share

Re: What Osinbajo’s Call For Naira Devaluation Could Mean For The Future by Kingluqman(m): 11:26am On Oct 12, 2021
Make dem sell the country sef

2 Likes

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