Who is “killing” the Naira?
The assumption that Nigeria is divided between
those who “want” devaluation and those who oppose it is a false appearance. Any
rational Nigerian, especially middle class individuals, who can be assumed to
be rationally self-interested “want” a strong currency so that they can
maintain real purchasing power and lifestyles in a globalized consumerist
economy. There is no division amongst Nigerians, especially within elite and
middle class society on that erroneous basis! The real argument is over
economics and its basic principles.
Economics is all about how to reconcile “wants” and “needs” with
“resources”-the most basic principle in economics is “scarcity” and the imperative of “choice” in a real world in
which we can’t have everything we “want”. According to The Economist’s
“Dictionary of Economics”, scarcity refers to “a situation in which the needs
and wants of an individual or
group…exceed the resources available to
satisfy them. In the presence of scarcity, choices HAVE to be made between those wants that can be satisfied and those that cannot be: the available resources
must in some way be rationed, either through price or some central distribution
system. In the absence of scarcity, no difficult choices would need to be made,
no prices would need to be attached to anything, and the study of economics
would be rendered entirely unnecessary”. Exchange rates are a “price” with
which an economy rations scarce foreign currency and the entire devaluation
debate is about whether very scarce dollars should be rationed through the
price mechanism or (as the beneficiaries of the current huge N200/$ subsidy
argue) should be distributed administratively by the CBN to whomever it
pleases!!! So the question is not whether anyone “wants” devaluation, but
whether given our current “economics”, is devaluation an appropriate or optimal
policy response? The other question of course is, if you reject devaluation,
what alternative AND effective policy response do you recommend to deal with
the current policy quagmire? Just saying no and watching helplessly as the
currency slides to N400/$ everywhere except in the CBN is NOT a policy
response!!! By the way, we should take a step back and restate the facts-I
agree entirely with Emir of Kano and former CBN Governor Sanusi Lamido who
pointed out, completely correctly that devaluation of the currency HAS in fact
already occurred! The debate is now over the appropriateness or otherwise of
CBN using federation account resources (which jointly belong to the federal,
states and LGAs) to subsidise foreign
currency needs of selected businesses and middle class persons who travel
abroad, educate their children overseas or seek medical treatment outside the
country. For every other person who needs dollars in Nigeria, devaluation has
already happened! It should be noted that CBN has not provided any objective
criteria on the basis of which it is allocating the scarce dollars, and
questions may legitimately be raised on some of the published allocations! In
effect the CBN is administering a huge subsidy based on unknown and unclear
criteria, and without transparency on the basis of the allocations! The current
situation guarantees moral hazard, corruption, subjective considerations, cronyism
and crony capitalism, favouritism, influence peddling and administrative
abuses. I am willing to bet that central bank officials with the unfettered
prerogative to administer this subsidy, not being angels or saints, may already
be susceptible to one or more of these challenges!!! I have mentioned earlier
in addition that this large subsidy is being shared not from resources that
belong to the federal government or CBN, but the federation, including our
insolvent states and local governments. While it is apparent that current
policy has the concurrence of President Buhari, it is not clear that the states
and LGAs if they fully understood what is going on, would endorse the
“donation” of approximately half of their legitimate income to some businessmen
and middle class families! I cannot think of a worse national subsidy anywhere
in the world!!! With regard to the businesses currently obtaining the
tremendous FX subsidy from the national purse, it is evident that they benefit
from an anti-competitive and unfair advantage over other businesses who are
“less-fortunate” and it is not evident that the Nigerian economy benefits from
the dispensing of such subsidies. One may also ask whether beneficiaries of our
subsidized dollars discount their retail prices to fully reflect the public
subsidy, relative to their competitors? There is a fundamental economic
illiteracy emanating from some of the contra-devaluation sources, including
surprisingly from several who hold degrees and advanced degrees in economics-we
do not export anything so we wouldn’t benefit from devaluing (so we NEVER want
to export anything knowing that prices provide INCENTIVES for future
behavior?); people should stop asking for devaluation and instead should start
consuming locally produced goods and services (isn’t this argument illogical
and contradictory? If we want to discourage imports and encourage local
production, why are we so determined to protect the Naira so that imports
remain relatively cheap?); devaluation would lead to inflation (devaluation has
ALREADY happened and is already reflected in inflation which is now 9.6% since
most importers and manufacturers now get their FX from non-CBN sources and even
those who get CBN FX subsidy know the correct cost of dollars); finally they say
devaluation will hurt the poor, which is the biggest lie (the poor have nothing
to do with exchange rates; they eat local food; do not send their children to
schools abroad; get medical treatment from primary health centres; and get
absolutely no benefit from whether you devalue or not!). The truth is that the
only beneficiaries of subsidized FX are the few businesses who CBN in its grace
“allocates” dollars to, and the segment of the elites who secure PTA, BTA,
school fees and medical payments in foreign currency from the central bank!!!
As well as those now able to “round-trip” official dollars into autonomous
markets at huge profit!!! The real situation, casting aside Nigeria’s powerful
people who seek an unfair advantage through a privileged FX subsidy, is that
the country built a defective economy in which 95 percent of exports and 75
percent of government revenue came from oil. That situation is no longer
tenable and our monthly FX income has declined precipitously with the current
exchange rate simply not sustainable. Worse still the current official exchange
rates has resulted in the dry-up of foreign direct and portfolio investments;
and even diaspora remittances which are required to be made at official or
near-official rates have also dried up. Manufacturers are starved of inputs and
our banking system is increasingly not credible in the global financial system
and we may soon, if not already, return to cash-collateralized letters of
credit and the scarcity of “essential commodities” as in the 1980s and 1990s!!!
We have seen this movie before, and we know how it would end!!! In 1980, oil
prices fell due to a global oil glut. Nigeria had a fixed exchange rate and
therefore could not use the pricing mechanism to modulate between demand and
supply of dollars. Our reserves were quickly exhausted and then we started
borrowing from the Paris and London Clubs, multilaterals and commercial
creditors and soon we were trapped in debt which we could not service. We are
already replaying this sequence seeking to borrow N2.2trillion or more to fund
the 2016 budget; our debt service ratio is already 25 percent of federal
revenue, even before we take the proposed huge loans; we have fixed our
exchange rate at N197/$ and our reserves are fast declining (now at $27billion).
To deal with the scarcity of dollars in the 1980s, we tried everything except
devaluation-austerity and import licensing, which was plagued by corruption and
cronyism-we are doing the same today.
Read the Vanguard newspaper for the full story.
Read the Vanguard newspaper for the full story.
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