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Excited Man Flaunts Bundle Of Naira After Exchanging 800 Cedis (Photos/Video) - Business (4) - Nairaland

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Re: Excited Man Flaunts Bundle Of Naira After Exchanging 800 Cedis (Photos/Video) by lightwind(m): 4:30pm On Jan 10
PDPdestroyer:
That’s just 108,000 naira, how is that a bundle of cash? Poverty die by fire
That's a very big money bros, and it's not supposed to be like that normally.

How can 800 Ghanian cedis be equal to 108,000 Nigerian nairahuh

Normally it's not supposed to be so....

800 cedis supposed to be around 1,200 naira normally...

Apc government don drag Nigerians back to poor, it's very sad bros.

Make we de try to de talk truth give ourselves, no matter what even though na our Kingsman be President.
$
Re: Excited Man Flaunts Bundle Of Naira After Exchanging 800 Cedis (Photos/Video) by reddingtonblack: 4:38pm On Jan 10
njokuuche77:
Let’s be factual and not emotional. Ghana’s currency situation is often misunderstood. Ghana redenominated its currency in 2007 (₵10,000 old Ghana cedis became ₵1 new Ghana cedis), which reduced note volume but did not magically make the economy stronger. What matters is the purchasing power and macro-economic stability, not how many notes you hold.

Nigeria, on the other hand, did not redenominate the naira, and combined with heavy import dependence, FX shortages, inflation, and weak productivity, the naira has lost significant value over time. That’s why you see large bundles of cash that buy less in real terms.

In practical terms, Ghana’s economy is smaller than Nigeria’s, but it has benefited from relatively better fiscal discipline, clearer monetary signaling, and export diversification (gold, cocoa, oil). Nigeria’s economy is larger but structurally weaker due to over-reliance on oil, low industrial output, and FX mismanagement.

So this video is not a victory. It’s a reminder that currency strength is about confidence, production, and policy, not bundle size.
Bro stop confusing english ... No country is better without leaders being " intentional"

what excuses you are tryin to brew up to defend Nigeria understand is appalling .. the fact is our leaders are not intentional about economic growth, nothing concrete no discipline to depict we want growth

When i look at Taiwo oyedele blowing grammar, blowing theories are just shake my head for him ... those that employed him to draft Tax reform is it really about National interest or a decoy motive for them to widen loot net more money to misappropriate what can Oyedele do to mitigate politician interior motive .. So many people can speak grammar, they tell you i went to harvard, oxford .. buh in sphere of politics its all nunsense
Re: Excited Man Flaunts Bundle Of Naira After Exchanging 800 Cedis (Photos/Video) by Vision101(m): 4:44pm On Jan 10
Jakarta:
Way you fly lost from my mention. Folks like you are the problems of this country. Given our vast natural resources and human capital, should we be comparing anything with Ghana? So if they ask you what is the exchange rate for NGN - GHS you will say it is ₦133 - 1000GHS? A failure will never run out of excuses.
Poor you and empty assumptions. Check political and economic history. Natural resources alone don't make nations rich. If it is African countries wouldn't have been the richest. Who is comparing Ghana and Nigeria. Is there any basis for such? Lagos economy is the fifth largest economy in Africa.

Someone like you that rides on degrading Nigeria and hyping anything from other countries brought up an unintelligent comparison just to mock Nigeria for whatever they think that they gain and some people like me showed the emptiness of his economic logic.
Re: Excited Man Flaunts Bundle Of Naira After Exchanging 800 Cedis (Photos/Video) by qtx(m): 4:52pm On Jan 10
Richtaiwo:
Contrary to the drama he’s trying to stage, nothing, absolutely nothing, is easy anywhere in the world. Life is not a roadside promo where currencies are exchanged with vibes and confidence.

So, since he’s proudly waving that bundle of naira and announcing it equals 800 cedis, perhaps he should also enlighten us, how long did it take him to earn it? Or is he implying that the same sweat that coughs out N800 in Nigeria will magically summon 800 cedis in Ghana?

Yes, a thousand dollars today is roughly N1.5 million. Very impressive. But let’s not insult basic reasoning, is the effort required to earn N1,000 the same effort needed to earn $1,000? Is it equally likely that someone will casually gift you N1,000 the same way an American will casually gift you $1,000? If that were true, birthdays in Lagos would look like Wall Street bonuses.

We constantly hear of people earning $2,500–$3,000 monthly abroad. Fair enough. But has anyone ever heard of someone in US, same job category, same skill level as Nigeria, earning $300,000 monthly in the US? If yes, please provide evidence, not vibes.

Yes, the naira is weak. Nobody is disputing that. But turning every exchange rate comparison into a circus act is unnecessary exaggeration. Currency value is not a comedy skit, and economics is not impressed by social media mockery. Let’s tone down the theatrics and apply a little sense, just a little.

Meanwhile, Ghana redominated its currency not quite long ago. I know most don't even understand what that means.
Make Una just de console unaselves . Wetin the guy talk na true. If U don dey visit those African countries before de change money and you know how e take be that time, den U go now, U no go write all those consolation epistle Wei you write. Call a spade a spade Una govt no get a clue of how to manage the economy. Leave stories jare.
Re: Excited Man Flaunts Bundle Of Naira After Exchanging 800 Cedis (Photos/Video) by Jagabanfromcali: 5:02pm On Jan 10
Richtaiwo:
Contrary to the drama he’s trying to stage, nothing, absolutely nothing, is easy anywhere in the world. Life is not a roadside promo where currencies are exchanged with vibes and confidence.

So, since he’s proudly waving that bundle of naira and announcing it equals 800 cedis, perhaps he should also enlighten us, how long did it take him to earn it? Or is he implying that the same sweat that coughs out N800 in Nigeria will magically summon 800 cedis in Ghana?

Yes, a thousand dollars today is roughly N1.5 million. Very impressive. But let’s not insult basic reasoning, is the effort required to earn N1,000 the same effort needed to earn $1,000? Is it equally likely that someone will casually gift you N1,000 the same way an American will casually gift you $1,000? If that were true, birthdays in Lagos would look like Wall Street bonuses.

We constantly hear of people earning $2,500–$3,000 monthly abroad. Fair enough. But has anyone ever heard of someone in US, same job category, same skill level as Nigeria, earning $300,000 monthly in the US? If yes, please provide evidence, not vibes.

Yes, the naira is weak. Nobody is disputing that. But turning every exchange rate comparison into a circus act is unnecessary exaggeration. Currency value is not a comedy skit, and economics is not impressed by social media mockery. Let’s tone down the theatrics and apply a little sense, just a little.

Meanwhile, Ghana redominated its currency not quite long ago. I know most don't even understand what that means.
First reasonable thing I ever read from this moniker lol
Re: Excited Man Flaunts Bundle Of Naira After Exchanging 800 Cedis (Photos/Video) by soojar(m): 5:23pm On Jan 10
Glimpsetv:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cz9sAS6rLeE?si=iFVow9KJYgwzhhoe





https://gtvdaily.com/excited-nigerian-man-flaunts-naira-bundle-800-ghana-cedis/
Can somebody ask him how many months it took him to make that 800 cedis (approximately N100k)

Fuel in Ghana is above 13 cedis
cheap ghetto one room/month is 200 cedis and above
cheap mama put food is from 20 cedis
Transport of the distance from Ojota to VI is over 15 cedis
Average electricity a month (1 tv, 1 fridge, 3 bulbs) is 100 cedis
The only thing that is not taxed in Ghana is the air they breath

Average minimum pay is around 500 cedis a month.

So please can somebody ask the man capping **** that what exactly is the point he is trying to make?



We learn every day
Re: Excited Man Flaunts Bundle Of Naira After Exchanging 800 Cedis (Photos/Video) by quadraheem(m): 5:33pm On Jan 10
Let him be deceiving himself. Let him show us what can 800cedis buy and the naira equivalent buy and let's sew the purchasing power of each currency.
Re: Excited Man Flaunts Bundle Of Naira After Exchanging 800 Cedis (Photos/Video) by boxypane: 5:55pm On Jan 10
For a devalued currency fa...
Re: Excited Man Flaunts Bundle Of Naira After Exchanging 800 Cedis (Photos/Video) by KingOfAmebo(m): 5:59pm On Jan 10
Richtaiwo:
Contrary to the drama he’s trying to stage, nothing, absolutely nothing, is easy anywhere in the world. Life is not a roadside promo where currencies are exchanged with vibes and confidence.

So, since he’s proudly waving that bundle of naira and announcing it equals 800 cedis, perhaps he should also enlighten us, how long did it take him to earn it? Or is he implying that the same sweat that coughs out N800 in Nigeria will magically summon 800 cedis in Ghana?

Yes, a thousand dollars today is roughly N1.5 million. Very impressive. But let’s not insult basic reasoning, is the effort required to earn N1,000 the same effort needed to earn $1,000? Is it equally likely that someone will casually gift you N1,000 the same way an American will casually gift you $1,000? If that were true, birthdays in Lagos would look like Wall Street bonuses.

We constantly hear of people earning $2,500–$3,000 monthly abroad. Fair enough. But has anyone ever heard of someone in US, same job category, same skill level as Nigeria, earning $300,000 monthly in the US? If yes, please provide evidence, not vibes.

Yes, the naira is weak. Nobody is disputing that. But turning every exchange rate comparison into a circus act is unnecessary exaggeration. Currency value is not a comedy skit, and economics is not impressed by social media mockery. Let’s tone down the theatrics and apply a little sense, just a little.

Meanwhile, Ghana redominated its currency not quite long ago. I know most don't even understand what that means.
Stop justifying nonsense, just 15 years ago before APC took over the government Naira was stronger than Cedi, the difference is just too wide now. Secondly, you guys should stop defending rubbish and think everything including the life you breath is about politics... people are not so senseless not to feel the reality on ground.

Next thing some morons will be thinking the only problem Nigeria has is the Igbo or Peter Obi...or anybody against the government is an Igbo or an Obedient...I have never seen people with such a derialed mentality in my life, I am proudly Yoruba and I don't support this APC government of wickedness even if the President is my tribesman. Quality of life over tribalistic politics.

Re: Excited Man Flaunts Bundle Of Naira After Exchanging 800 Cedis (Photos/Video) by amAZEing: 6:01pm On Jan 10
That,is actually 8,000,000 cedis
Re: Excited Man Flaunts Bundle Of Naira After Exchanging 800 Cedis (Photos/Video) by sorepco(m): 6:05pm On Jan 10
Re: Excited Man Flaunts Bundle Of Naira After Exchanging 800 Cedis (Photos/Video) by Konskott(m): 6:18pm On Jan 10
Meaning that Ghana cedis is stronger than the naira.
Re: Excited Man Flaunts Bundle Of Naira After Exchanging 800 Cedis (Photos/Video) by Jakarta: 6:22pm On Jan 10
Vision101:
Poor you and empty assumptions. Check political and economic history. Natural resources alone don't make nations rich. If it is African countries wouldn't have been the richest. Who is comparing Ghana and Nigeria. Is there any basis for such? Lagos economy is the fifth largest economy in Africa.

Someone like you that rides on degrading Nigeria and hyping anything from other countries brought up an unintelligent comparison just to mock Nigeria for whatever they think that they gain and some people like me showed the emptiness of his economic logic.
Way you fly lost you hear, no time for kids.
Re: Excited Man Flaunts Bundle Of Naira After Exchanging 800 Cedis (Photos/Video) by lawani(m): 7:00pm On Jan 10
What is needed is a stable in value currency meaning low inflation not a high value currency.
Re: Excited Man Flaunts Bundle Of Naira After Exchanging 800 Cedis (Photos/Video) by ruffhandu: 7:21pm On Jan 10
Richtaiwo:
Contrary to the drama he’s trying to stage, nothing, absolutely nothing, is easy anywhere in the world. Life is not a roadside promo where currencies are exchanged with vibes and confidence.

So, since he’s proudly waving that bundle of naira and announcing it equals 800 cedis, perhaps he should also enlighten us, how long did it take him to earn it? Or is he implying that the same sweat that coughs out N800 in Nigeria will magically summon 800 cedis in Ghana?

Yes, a thousand dollars today is roughly N1.5 million. Very impressive. But let’s not insult basic reasoning, is the effort required to earn N1,000 the same effort needed to earn $1,000? Is it equally likely that someone will casually gift you N1,000 the same way an American will casually gift you $1,000? If that were true, birthdays in Lagos would look like Wall Street bonuses.

We constantly hear of people earning $2,500–$3,000 monthly abroad. Fair enough. But has anyone ever heard of someone in US, same job category, same skill level as Nigeria, earning $300,000 monthly in the US? If yes, please provide evidence, not vibes.

Yes, the naira is weak. Nobody is disputing that. But turning every exchange rate comparison into a circus act is unnecessary exaggeration. Currency value is not a comedy skit, and economics is not impressed by social media mockery. Let’s tone down the theatrics and apply a little sense, just a little.

Meanwhile, Ghana redominated its currency not quite long ago. I know most don't even understand what that means.
Bro, your argument is in the right direction but the numbers don't really align. What should be looked at is the quality of life, and the value of what you have left at the end of the month.
$1,000= N1,500,000
An average minumum wage person can earn $1,000 where usd is used, pay rent of say $400, feed and clothe, and manage to keep $100-$200 in a month.
$100= N150,000

Check out the same person living in Nigeria with his frugality.
Cannot earn N1,500,000
Let's say he earns about N200,000. After rent and feeding will he be able to save up to N150,000?

I think this is how to torchlight this matter.

No matter how expensive stuff are where you live, the bottom line is how much you are able to keep at the end of the day, valued according to international standard.
Re: Excited Man Flaunts Bundle Of Naira After Exchanging 800 Cedis (Photos/Video) by prophetfire: 7:24pm On Jan 10
Richtaiwo:
Contrary to the drama he’s trying to stage, nothing, absolutely nothing, is easy anywhere in the world. Life is not a roadside promo where currencies are exchanged with vibes and confidence.

So, since he’s proudly waving that bundle of naira and announcing it equals 800 cedis, perhaps he should also enlighten us, how long did it take him to earn it? Or is he implying that the same sweat that coughs out N800 in Nigeria will magically summon 800 cedis in Ghana?

Yes, a thousand dollars today is roughly N1.5 million. Very impressive. But let’s not insult basic reasoning, is the effort required to earn N1,000 the same effort needed to earn $1,000? Is it equally likely that someone will casually gift you N1,000 the same way an American will casually gift you $1,000? If that were true, birthdays in Lagos would look like Wall Street bonuses.

We constantly hear of people earning $2,500–$3,000 monthly abroad. Fair enough. But has anyone ever heard of someone in US, same job category, same skill level as Nigeria, earning $300,000 monthly in the US? If yes, please provide evidence, not vibes.

Yes, the naira is weak. Nobody is disputing that. But turning every exchange rate comparison into a circus act is unnecessary exaggeration. Currency value is not a comedy skit, and economics is not impressed by social media mockery. Let’s tone down the theatrics and apply a little sense, just a little.

Meanwhile, Ghana redominated its currency not quite long ago. I know most don't even understand what that means.
After trying to defend failure incompetence and mediocrity, remember that 10 Cedi is just $1 while $1 is a homongous N1500.
Compare very well Mr Comparison.
And Ghana is just next door neighbor that doesn't have anything near what Nigeria have and used to depend on Nigeria for handouts.
Stop defending failure incompetence, mediocrity and corruption.
Re: Excited Man Flaunts Bundle Of Naira After Exchanging 800 Cedis (Photos/Video) by prophetfire: 7:27pm On Jan 10
Konskott:
Meaning that Ghana cedis is stronger than the naira.
Far stronger than it. Last time I exchanged Cedi to dollars early last year, it was $1 to 10Cedi.
Re: Excited Man Flaunts Bundle Of Naira After Exchanging 800 Cedis (Photos/Video) by deltapikin(m): 7:31pm On Jan 10
This is just a show. What the value can buy in Nigeria, 800 cedis cannot afford same in Ghana. Why can't he build house in Ghana with the 800 cedis as he claimed that na to build house in Nigeria. If you have lived in Ghana you will know that Nigeria is not so bad the way we portrayed our country to be. I have lived in both Accra and Kumasi for official assignments for 5 years so I know the difference
Re: Excited Man Flaunts Bundle Of Naira After Exchanging 800 Cedis (Photos/Video) by Richtaiwo(m): 7:31pm On Jan 10
ruffhandu:
Bro, your argument is in the right direction but the numbers don't really align. What should be looked at is the quality of life, and the value of what you have left at the end of the month.
$1,000= N1,500,000
An average minumum wage person can earn $1,000 where usd is used, pay rent of say $400, feed and clothe, and manage to keep $100-$200 in a month.
$100= N150,000

Check out the same person living in Nigeria with his frugality.
Cannot earn N1,500,000
Let's say he earns about N200,000. After rent and feeding will he be able to save up to N150,000?

I think this is how to torchlight this matter.

No matter how expensive stuff are where you live, the bottom line is how much you are able to keep at the end of the day, valued according to international standard.
Please which country pays minimum wage of $1k?

In the case of the Ghana Cedis, are you aware what you call 10 Cedis is actually 100,000 Cedis?

The country redominated its currency not quite long. To explain this redomination, let me use the Naira to illustrate.

If Nigeria redominate the Naira exactly how Ghana did, N10,000 will be equivalent to 1N. A person earning minimum wage of N70k will start earning N70 and will still have exactly the same value as N70k. That is what happened there.
Re: Excited Man Flaunts Bundle Of Naira After Exchanging 800 Cedis (Photos/Video) by Markkito: 8:04pm On Jan 10
Richtaiwo:
Contrary to the drama he’s trying to stage, nothing, absolutely nothing, is easy anywhere in the world. Life is not a roadside promo where currencies are exchanged with vibes and confidence.

So, since he’s proudly waving that bundle of naira and announcing it equals 800 cedis, perhaps he should also enlighten us, how long did it take him to earn it? Or is he implying that the same sweat that coughs out N800 in Nigeria will magically summon 800 cedis in Ghana?

Yes, a thousand dollars today is roughly N1.5 million. Very impressive. But let’s not insult basic reasoning, is the effort required to earn N1,000 the same effort needed to earn $1,000? Is it equally likely that someone will casually gift you N1,000 the same way an American will casually gift you $1,000? If that were true, birthdays in Lagos would look like Wall Street bonuses.

We constantly hear of people earning $2,500–$3,000 monthly abroad. Fair enough. But has anyone ever heard of someone in US, same job category, same skill level as Nigeria, earning $300,000 monthly in the US? If yes, please provide evidence, not vibes.

Yes, the naira is weak. Nobody is disputing that. But turning every exchange rate comparison into a circus act is unnecessary exaggeration. Currency value is not a comedy skit, and economics is not impressed by social media mockery. Let’s tone down the theatrics and apply a little sense, just a little.

Meanwhile, Ghana redominated its currency not quite long ago. I know most don't even understand what that means.
it's quite 'easy' to make that 800 cedi actually. A by-day construction labourer is paid 150, 200 cedis. He does 4 days of construction work, he makes 800 cedis
Re: Excited Man Flaunts Bundle Of Naira After Exchanging 800 Cedis (Photos/Video) by lansha2006: 8:10pm On Jan 10
You sabi book jare!!!
njokuuche77:
Let’s be factual and not emotional. Ghana’s currency situation is often misunderstood. Ghana redenominated its currency in 2007 (₵10,000 old Ghana cedis became ₵1 new Ghana cedis), which reduced note volume but did not magically make the economy stronger. What matters is the purchasing power and macro-economic stability, not how many notes you hold.

Nigeria, on the other hand, did not redenominate the naira, and combined with heavy import dependence, FX shortages, inflation, and weak productivity, the naira has lost significant value over time. That’s why you see large bundles of cash that buy less in real terms.

In practical terms, Ghana’s economy is smaller than Nigeria’s, but it has benefited from relatively better fiscal discipline, clearer monetary signaling, and export diversification (gold, cocoa, oil). Nigeria’s economy is larger but structurally weaker due to over-reliance on oil, low industrial output, and FX mismanagement.

So this video is not a victory. It’s a reminder that currency strength is about confidence, production, and policy, not bundle size.
Re: Excited Man Flaunts Bundle Of Naira After Exchanging 800 Cedis (Photos/Video) by omanzo02: 8:30pm On Jan 10
Richtaiwo:
Contrary to the drama he’s trying to stage, nothing, absolutely nothing, is easy anywhere in the world. Life is not a roadside promo where currencies are exchanged with vibes and confidence.

So, since he’s proudly waving that bundle of naira and announcing it equals 800 cedis, perhaps he should also enlighten us, how long did it take him to earn it? Or is he implying that the same sweat that coughs out N800 in Nigeria will magically summon 800 cedis in Ghana?

Yes, a thousand dollars today is roughly N1.5 million. Very impressive. But let’s not insult basic reasoning, is the effort required to earn N1,000 the same effort needed to earn $1,000? Is it equally likely that someone will casually gift you N1,000 the same way an American will casually gift you $1,000? If that were true, birthdays in Lagos would look like Wall Street bonuses.

We constantly hear of people earning $2,500–$3,000 monthly abroad. Fair enough. But has anyone ever heard of someone in US, same job category, same skill level as Nigeria, earning $300,000 monthly in the US? If yes, please provide evidence, not vibes.

Yes, the naira is weak. Nobody is disputing that. But turning every exchange rate comparison into a circus act is unnecessary exaggeration. Currency value is not a comedy skit, and economics is not impressed by social media mockery. Let’s tone down the theatrics and apply a little sense, just a little.

Meanwhile, Ghana redominated its currency not quite long ago. I know most don't even understand what that means.
Redominating currency is one thing but management and economic prudence should match the redomination, I remembered Turkey did the same thing few years ago but the Lira performance has made the redomination a futile effort with the worst inflation rate in their history.
Re: Excited Man Flaunts Bundle Of Naira After Exchanging 800 Cedis (Photos/Video) by Princelumide: 8:31pm On Jan 10
You don talk am finish and I hope they can ce dis coming already… grin cool cheesy

StoryHaven:
And that 800 cedis is 8million cedis in the original value. Just add four zeros that their Central Bank struck out of cedis back and Gbam! Yould get the original value.
The government did that to make movement of money easy. That guy would have carried loads of cedis notes. He would have needed a whil-barrow.

So the guy changed 8 million cedis to 100,624naira not 800 cedis.
So which currency is stronger.

So,If Nigerian government decides to strike four zeros off naira too. That means the fake 800 cedis would be new Nigerian naira= 10naira.
Re: Excited Man Flaunts Bundle Of Naira After Exchanging 800 Cedis (Photos/Video) by Abee79(m): 8:51pm On Jan 10
We really need to do something about the value of the Naira
Re: Excited Man Flaunts Bundle Of Naira After Exchanging 800 Cedis (Photos/Video) by pafun(m): 10:09pm On Jan 10
Stephen0mozzy:
Even in analysis of earning power against purchasing power, the naira is STILL useless. Let's call a spade a spade. Make una no dey formm rubbhesh patriot.

The dollar you're talking about, at an average of $17/hr; that 17dollars can get you a decent lunch or some groceries ( so you can work one 8hr-day and and be able to feed yourself for almost 4 days - in Nigeria, at minimum wage of #70k (#2,500 per day, roughly #300 per hour - #300 can only buy you two coaster biscuits of 4pieces each).

So if you're calculating, be detailed.
$17 / hr is $11/hr in your pocket after tax so assuming you have no other deductibles eg health insurance. By the time you pay rent and transportation related costs you’ll find that the only place you can buy your groceries is Walmart. A decent lunch will certainly set you back more than $17 unless you going to McDonald for food I wouldn’t feed to my dog.
Re: Excited Man Flaunts Bundle Of Naira After Exchanging 800 Cedis (Photos/Video) by ruffhandu: 9:57am On Jan 11
Richtaiwo:
Please which country pays minimum wage of $1k?

In the case of the Ghana Cedis, are you aware what you call 10 Cedis is actually 100,000 Cedis?

The country redominated its currency not quite long. To explain this redomination, let me use the Naira to illustrate.

If Nigeria redominate the Naira exactly how Ghana did, N10,000 will be equivalent to 1N. A person earning minimum wage of N70k will start earning N70 and will still have exactly the same value as N70k. That is what happened there.
This kain question wey you ask get as e be. Well, check Australia, Belgium, Canada, Germany and others for their minimum wages. Besides, i was just trying to point out that your method of comparison get as e be.
There is no argurement regarding redenomination, we aee talking about what is. Let Nigeria redenominate make we see. For now, $1 =N1,500,000, and 800 Ghana cedis =N106,000 period.
Re: Excited Man Flaunts Bundle Of Naira After Exchanging 800 Cedis (Photos/Video) by Quaddafi29: 10:14am On Jan 11
The so-called bundle can’t even purchase any
Meaningful thing for him. Naira is an apology
Re: Excited Man Flaunts Bundle Of Naira After Exchanging 800 Cedis (Photos/Video) by internationalman(m):
ruffhandu:
Bro, your argument is in the right direction but the numbers don't really align. What should be looked at is the quality of life, and the value of what you have left at the end of the month.
$1,000= N1,500,000
An average minumum wage person can earn $1,000 where usd is used, pay rent of say $400, feed and clothe, and manage to keep $100-$200 in a month.
$100= N150,000

Check out the same person living in Nigeria with his frugality.
Cannot earn N1,500,000
Let's say he earns about N200,000. After rent and feeding will he be able to save up to N150,000?

I think this is how to torchlight this matter.

No matter how expensive stuff are where you live, the bottom line is how much you are able to keep at the end of the day, valued according to international standard.
Bro you are even comparing a minimum wage earner abroad with high income earners in Nigeria. Why not compare likes for likes. The population of people that earn 200k is low. Most people fall between 70k and 150k.

Trust me, if those people in Nigeria are to feed with enough proteins included in their meals like people abroad do, their 150k won't feed them for month.
Re: Excited Man Flaunts Bundle Of Naira After Exchanging 800 Cedis (Photos/Video) by Caseless: 12:30pm On Jan 11
Dreal1247:
When the head is valueless, every other part of the body automatically be comes valueless. We need to go back to the drawing board and upgrade the value of the Nigerian Naira.
Redecimalization is thought of as an option when there is hyperinflation. Soludo almost did it. If our export outweigh our imports, Naira will naturally grow in strength.
Re: Excited Man Flaunts Bundle Of Naira After Exchanging 800 Cedis (Photos/Video) by ruffhandu: 12:50pm On Jan 11
internationalman:
Bro you are even comparing a minimum wage earner abroad with a high income earners in Nigeria. Why not compare likes for likes. The population of people that earn 200k is low. Most people fall between 70k and 150k.

Trust me, if those people in Nigeria are to feed with enough proteins included in their meals like people abroad do, their 150k won't feed them for month.
My dear, i was just being conservative, very conservative. The guy has npt even really grabbed my point, he still argued this.
Re: Excited Man Flaunts Bundle Of Naira After Exchanging 800 Cedis (Photos/Video) by internationalman(m): 6:46pm On Jan 11
ruffhandu:
My dear, i was just being conservative, very conservative. The guy has npt even really grabbed my point, he still argued this.
Their problem is that they have not been to other places. I was like that too. I used to always rush to defend Nigeria ignorantly out of passion I have for the country. But the truth must not be ignored because of patriotism..

The one that baffles me most is fueling your car tank Nigeria. You will have to cough up 40k at least to fill your tank. That's like 25% to 50% of average monthly income in Nigeria. And some mumu will come out to say fuel is cheaper in Nigeria than US after converting dollar to naira forgetting the earning power of average workers in America.

I fill my tank here with just $46 dollars (that's just the change on my paycheck) and that is way less than my daily income even as a low earner here.😂😂😂

Nigerians are funny people. It's no wonder politicians are having a field day.
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