Tag: Naira

  • New Naira: No Extended deadline, January 31 remains – Emefiele

    New Naira: No Extended deadline, January 31 remains – Emefiele

     

    The Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN, Governor, Godwin Emefiele, on Tuesday insisted that the deadline for the new naira notes would not be extended.

    Emefiele stressed that the January 21, 2023 deadline is sacrosanct.

    “No, we will not shift any deadline, what we have done is not against the law; it’s in tandem with the law.

    “We announced this programme on October 26, 2022, and we said upon release of the new currency, the legal tender status will run concurrently with the old currency till 31 January 2023.

    “That is almost 100 hundred days, 100 days is enough for any person in any part of Nigeria to deposit his money in the bank and get ready to withdraw cash when the new notes are released,” the Central Bank governor explained.

  • BREAKING: Buhari to unveil redesigned Naira notes on Wednesday

    BREAKING: Buhari to unveil redesigned Naira notes on Wednesday

    President Muhammadu Buhari will on Wednesday, November 23, 2022 unveil the Naira notes redesigned by the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN).

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports CBN Governor, Godwin Emefiele made the disclosure at a press briefing on decisions of the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) on Tuesday.

    The redesigned Naira notes to be unveiled by President Buhari are the N1,000, N500 and N200 denominations.

    The CBN had said the redesigned Naira notes would be released by December 15, adding that the existing ones would cease to be regarded as legal tender by January 31, 2023.

    The apex bank explained that counterfeiting and hoarding were the real reasons for redesigning and issuing the new naira notes.

     

    Details shortly…

  • Naira Redesign: EFCC places more Governors on watchlist

    Naira Redesign: EFCC places more Governors on watchlist

    The Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) has said the number of governors on its watchlist has increased.

    The Chairman of the commission, Abdulrasheed Bawa, revealed this while briefing news men at the State House after meeting with President Muhammadu Buhari on Thursday.

    Bawa, who declined to mention the number of governors currently under the EFCC watch, also refused to reveal the identities of the governors.

    He noted that the commission is pleased with the redesign of the naira note, saying the policy would help the Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN control the monies in the system and enable more money for people to borrow.

    The EFCC boss added that the redesigning of the naira will cause the value of the dollar currently at 890 to crash to 200 naira.

    On the sting operations to the Bureau De Change (BDC) operators, Bawa informed that the operation was successful and huge recoveries were made.

    He urged Nigerians to embrace the new policy, while also encouraging citizens to take advantage of the whistle-blower policy.

    Recall that the EFCC had earlier revealed that three serving state governors are under monitoring over moves to launder cash through table payment of salaries to workers

    The EFCC boss said two of them were from the North, while the third one was from the southern part of the country.

    He noted that intelligence at the agency’s disposal revealed that the three governors had concluded plans to inject the money into the system through table payment of their state workers’ salaries.

  • CBN issues new directives to banks over Naira notes redesign

    CBN issues new directives to banks over Naira notes redesign

    The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has instructed commercial banks in the country to work on Saturdays till January 31, 2023 to enable bank customers to return old naira notes for new ones.

    Mr Osita Nwasinobi, the Director, Corporate Communications Department of the apex bank, stated this at the CBN fair in Ilorin on Thursday.

    The fair was themed: “Promoting Financial Stability and Economic Development”.

    He explained that the new and existing currencies shall remain legal tender and circulated together until January 31, 2023 when the existing notes shall cease to be legal tender in the country.

    Nwasinobi, who was represented by Mr Akpama Uket, the Acting Director, Corporate Communications, CBN, said that Deposit Money Banks (DMBs) have been directed to immediately start returning the existing currencies to the CBN.

    “They have also been instructed to receive the existing banknotes beyond the threshold stipulated by the Cashless Policy without charges to customers.

    “Consequently, you must return all the current N200, N500 and N1,000 banknotes to your bank before the expiration of the deadline,” he said.

    The CBN boss said that the redesigning of the Naira notes was for macroeconomic stability.

    He said the aim was to build a strong, stable and resilient economy that is self-sustaining and ability to weather unanticipated shocks.

    “The bank will achieve this by applying appropriate monetary policy tools, reining inflation and continuously encouraging a productive economy through interventions.”

    Recall that the CBN has announced plans to redesign, produce, release and circulate new series of three banknotes, out of the existing eight banknotes.

    These are the N200, N500 and N1,000 denominations, which will take effect from Dec. 15, after its launch by President Muhammadu Buhari.

    The CBN also warned Nigerians of the consequences of mishandling the Naira notes.

    “The Naira remains a symbol of our national pride. Treat it with utmost dignity. Do not spray, squeeze or counterfeit the Naira, as default goes with consequences,” Nwasinobi warned.

  • Why we are going after BDC operators across Nigeria – EFCC

    Why we are going after BDC operators across Nigeria – EFCC

    The recent arrest of some Bureau De Change operators across the country especially in Lagos and Abuja by the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC) is incidental to the Commission’s overall efforts in sanitizing the foreign exchange sector.

    TheNewsGuru.com (TNG) reports EFCC’s Director of Operations, Abdulkarim Chukkol stated this on Monday, November 14, 2022 while fielding questions on Good Morning Nigeria, a breakfast programme on the Network Service of the Nigeria Television Authority (NTA).

    Chukkol who represented the Executive Chairman, Abdulrasheed Bawa, was among eminent personalities invited to discuss the topic ‘’Sanitizing Ungoverned Operators in the Forex Sector”.

    According to him, EFCC’s arrest of BDC operators and currency speculators in the parallel market was not indiscriminate but a product of intelligence.

    “At EFCC, we work with intelligence and with other stakeholders; and when we talk of illegal forex operators you cannot just invite people on the street even though sometimes you could, but generally you do not have a choice but to make arrest”.

    He stressed that the Commission considers foreign exchange malpractice as an economic crime against the Nigerian state, adding that the Commission as far back as 2016 established a full-fledge Section known as Foreign Exchange Malpractices Section and for over ten years maintained visible “presence at all airports in the country to checkmate incidences of bulk cash movement outside Nigeria which is another aspect of this menace.”

    Through the Commission’s presence at the major gateway into the country, many arrests of cash smugglers have been made and humungous sums in foreign currencies recovered.

    “Some were arrested with excess of $6 Million (Six Million United States Dollars), others with $2 Million (Two Million United States Dollars) and we know that these huge sums were not meant to be used in buying goods but stolen monies being laundered out of the country,” he said

    Chukkol further stated that EFCC not only recovered some of these monies, but secured their forfeiture to the federal government, while the culprits were prosecuted.

    He emphasized the need for active inter-agency and stakeholder’s collaboration, pointing out that many of the over 6,000 registered BDCs do not belong to the Association of Bureau De Change Operators of Nigeria and therefore out of the orbit of regulators.

    “The CBN guidelines are clear regarding returns by BDCs, but how many of them do this,” he asked.

    Other discussants in the programme which includes Director of Monitoring Policy Department of Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN Dr. Hassan Mahmud, President, Association of Bureau De Change of Change Operators of Nigeria, Dr. Aminu Gwadebe, a finance and investment analyst, Niyi Akinsuji and a commentator on financial issues and Managing Director of Timeline Consult, Shuabu Idris in their respective contributions identified the issue of Nigeria being an import driven economy, lack of adequate penalty, shortage of trained manpower, and identification of what truly constitutes ‘black market’ beyond the institutional banking system as some of the problems bedeviling the fight against foreign exchange malpractice in Nigeria.

  • TNG Deal Breakers: The Naira woes, retiree death scores, pension benefits, and other stories

    TNG Deal Breakers: The Naira woes, retiree death scores, pension benefits, and other stories

    By Ifeanyi Ugwuadu

    The aim of monthly or yearly pension payouts is to mitigate or cushion the likelihood of old age poverty. It is, for this reason, that withdrawal from pension savings after retirement is framed in such a way that the retiree gets so little each time. Whether through an annuity or programmed benefit withdrawal, each piece of the savings flies off without the possibility of another coming in. And the retirees die predictably quicker, unprepared and with little to start off a new phase after years of paid employment. But more worrisome is the fact that death in active service accounted for nearly 88% of the payouts by RSAs since inception. This high percentage of deaths should have triggered a review of the benefit structure in favour of named next-of-kin of the employee. Nigeria presents a unique scenario of the Contributory Pension Scheme owing to various factors peculiar to the country –– ranging from job insecurity, poor remuneration, and inadequate education of the retiree on pension matters. In addition, family and extended family responsibilities weigh heavily on each worker such that there is usually not enough time to plan an exit from paid employment.

    Pensions are also business for the administrators who build their profit out of the long-term management of retirement accounts. Pensions are also a huge source of investable funds and domestic borrowing for the government. So, for Nigeria’s pensions market, there are the Retirement Savings Account (RSA) holders, and then you have government regulators (National Pensions Commissions and National Insurance Commission), Pension Fund Administrators (PFAs) and Pension Fund Custodians (PFCs). Insurers and commercial banks make up the remaining parties of interest.

    Depending on what the retiree wishes to do with his savings, the other parties of interest congregate to take out of it. However, the question should be, whose benefits are being parcelled out among these stakeholders? With the free fall of the Naira, who is the loser? It must be stated that the retiree savings has been woefully eroded with unimaginable consequences to the entire system and particularly, those retiring since inception. It is impossible now to predict the worst-case scenario.

    So we have the entire pension scheme set up and supervised by the government. It is managed and run by private sector entities. The private firms are thoughtful enough to hedge their earnings from the employees’ savings but run out of ideas on how to hedge or guarantee the savings in times of hyperinflation such as we have today. Profit considerations and the need to maximize investments are the main drivers of rules to hold on, for as long as possible, the savings.  The earnings for the savers are very low but not so for the pension asset managers.

    You’re Alive only when you are working!

    The average lifespan of a retiree in Nigeria is 3 years! Death in active service accounted for 87.68% of this figure totalling 39,678 while death in retirement totalling 5,563 or 12.32 per cent makes up the balance. Adjusting the death benefits records of the 22 PFAs against duplication and other errors, about 45,241 death benefits were paid by PFAs to the Next-of-Kin of deceased RSA holders from the inception of the Contributory Pensions Scheme (CPS) to 31 May 2020. 

    Real Case

    A 64-year-old retiree who prefers to tell his story anonymously narrated his situation thus; “My PFA said the balance in my Retirement Savings Account (RSA) as at the time I was programmed in 2018 was N10.21 million and that I can only take about N2.5 million as a lump sum. The rest will be paid to me as a monthly pension.  I was diagnosed with heart problems last year, requiring about N3.5 million for surgery abroad to save my life. I returned to my PFA to ask for the balance in my RSA to enable me to pay for treatment abroad and I was told that I cannot take more than my monthly pension, it is what the law provided.  But what if I die now? I asked, and they told me the balance in my RSA will be paid en bloc to my Next-of-Kin.”

    He further queried; “Who should be the priority of PenCom and my PFA, myself that worked and saved the money, or my children who are meant to inherit my estate when I die? We contributed to the RSA so that we can take care of our needs in retirement. Unfortunately, now that my life is hanging on a balance, they are telling me that I cannot take my own money to save my life. They deceived us into saving for comfort in retirement and now that we have retired they are devising ways to hold onto our money until we die. This is deceitful!” he lamented.

    ANALYSIS OF DEATH IN RETIREMENT FROM INCEPTION – MAY 2020
    S/NO DETAILS TOTAL % OF TOTAL
    1 Total Death in Retirement 5,563 100
    2 Death Under 1 Year 2,805 50.42
    3 Death under 2 Years 600 10.79
    4 Death under 3 Years 482 8.66
    5 Death under 4 Years 418 7.51
    6 Death Under 5 Years 352 6.33
    7 Death Under 6 Years 285 5.12
    8 Death Under 7 Years 219 3.94
    9 Death Under 8 Years 168 3.02
    10 Death Under 9 Years 126 2.26
    11 Death Under 10 Years 69 1.24
    12 Death Under 11 Years 30 0.54
    13 Death Under 12 Years 8 0.14
    14 Death Under 13 Years 1 0.02
    Total 5,563 100.00

    From the above statistics, clearly, half the number of retirees die within one year after retirement while 70 per cent of them die within 3 years of retirement and the remaining die within the 10-year guaranteed period.

    These are Nigeria’s pension statistics and confirm that a different approach to dealing with the socio-economic problems should never be benchmarked with world standard methods. This scenario is the background for a groundswell of agitation by pension savers to maximize their exit from the scheme. It is totally insensitive not to pay attention to the glaring statistics that show that many working-class Nigerians do not live up to retirement and when they do eventually retire, most die three years only post-retirement. How does the system justify a 25% lump sum payment while 75% is spread over 15 to 22 years in view of the survival rate of three years? The reverse should be the case. Some retirees are so impoverished that the majority would want to cash out and have indeed approached their PFAs for the same. The time is now to propose an amendment to this regulation and the Pension Reform Act. Pencom should pay heed to the angst against the existing ratio and act quickly. A cashout regulation may also be part of the deal for retirement savings account holders within the scheme.

    Job security and structure of Nigeria’s labour market

    Aside majority of employees in the public sector, job security in the private sector is almost surreal. Figures from the National Statistics Bureau puts current unemployment, underemployment and youth unemployment at 33.3%, 22.8% and 42.5% respectively. These rates are staggering in their effect on the economy and for an uncoordinated labour market, this situation gives total control to employers. The services sector pays comparably better than the public sector and the real sector. In effect, for any existing job, no matter how paltry the salary, more than 10,000 people are willing to take it.

    In the private sector, Mergers & Acquisitions (M&As) are enlarging the already saturated labour market because new investors usually capitalize on weak labour laws and kick out existing employees to evade pension liabilities. The immediate profit target is the savings from layoffs. Thus there is an army of young retirees who are eager to draw down their entire pension savings to start some business on their own. With no possibility of getting another job, this appears to be the only option. But, pension regulation does not have a provision for drawdown by any retiree and those who have attained a minimum of 50 years, can only take a 25% lump sum.

    The Case for 75% lump sum payment

    Unarguably, most retirees prefer a higher lump sum than the 25% regulatory lump sum that the law stipulates.  A bill at the National Assembly is seeking to raise the statutory lump sum from 25% to 75%. However, PenCom and PFAs are opposed to it because it makes the business of managing pensions unattractive and confirms my earlier assertion that the pension scheme is for business owners and not for savers. But at least the system can save the “hen that lays the golden egg” to guarantee the survival of the market that trades on the weakness of savers. It is true that within the subsisting law, the retirees are entitled to only a 25% regulatory lump sum as prescribed in Pension Reform Act 2014.

    In some cases, a 50% lump sum is payable based on the basic salary of the retiree at the point of exit. Unfortunately, many retirees are not well informed about the possibility and mechanism of receiving a 50% lump sum at once. It may be necessary to cover this aspect in a fresh article. The case for a higher lump sum at retirement is justified if trends like the survival rate of retirees, negative real returns on investments, and prevalence of critical and terminal illnesses including the need to engage them in productive activities are considered. Rather than focus on the legal transfer of their savings to those who survive them, the system may be strengthened to help them transit to another productive endeavour that makes life meaningful.

    RECORD OF DEATH BENEFITS PAID BY PFAS FROM INCEPTION TO MAY 2020
    S/NO DETAILS TOTAL % OF TOTAL
    1 Total Number of Deaths Adjusted for Errors 45,241 100
    2 Death in Active Service 39,678 87.68
    3 Death in Retirement (Programmed Withdrawal) 5,563 12.32

    The table above shows the high mortality rate of retirees since the inception of CPS till May 31, 2020. With about 45,241 deaths, post-Covid-19 figures are bound to escalate the number of deaths.  . Death in active service accounted for 87.68% of this figure totalling 39,678 while death in retirement totalling 5,563 or 12.32 per cent makes up the balance.

  • Leadership is key to unlocking Nigeria’s growth potential – By Dakuku Peterside

    Leadership is key to unlocking Nigeria’s growth potential – By Dakuku Peterside

    Last week, this column discussed the need to rethink productivity and economic growth in Nigeria based on the presentation by foremost Economist Dr Ayo Teriba. This week, we shall look at leadership’s role in engendering a new economic growth model to give our country a leap forward.

    Nigeria’s adverse economic situation is stale news; many have accepted it as a norm that the country will continuously operate below its economic potential. This dire economic reality results from decades of bad economic policies and poor implementations, a chequered political history marred by a military incursion into politics, corruption, and the nascent difficulties occasioned by insecurity, economic sabotage, climate change, global pandemic crises and the Russian/Ukraine crisis. Nigeria is on her knees economically – with a high debt profile, poor revenue from the mono-product (crude oil) that is not even enough to service debts, inadequate foreign reserves, exchange rate crisis that has seen the value of the Naira hammered against other world currencies, high inflation, and high-interest rate.

    The Nigerian economic statistics are gloomy and are causing undue concerns for many stakeholders in the Nigeria project. Nigeria has navigated the murky waters of a financial quagmire for a few decades and has survived it, albeit with substantial economic bruises. The pervading sentiment is that no matter what happens, Nigeria will survive, things will continue as usual, and nothing will change for the better. William Pollard, a leading light in leadership, warned against this state of path dependency when he opined that “the arrogance of success is to think that what you did yesterday will be sufficient for tomorrow.” The economic policies and actions that kept us in our current financial quagmire must change for meaningful progress. Nigeria does not need the economics of survival anymore; we need the economics of growth, prosperity, and decent quality of life for Nigerians.

    One fundamental problem that is destabilising our economy is the lack of liquidity. Our negative balance of payment causes this illiquidity because our receipts from exports are far less than the expenditure on goods imported from abroad. This leads to a dwindling of our foreign reserves and a concomitant scarcity of foreign currency to fulfil the needs for the importation of foreign goods and services. This scarcity creates a parallel market that often aids the destruction of the Naira value. The unofficial devaluation of the Naira makes the cost of foreign goods expensive, even more so given the inflation ravaging some of these countries’ posts Covid-19. Local and Imported inflation is the bane of our economy.

    The Nigerian government needs to make more money from oil revenue and taxes and rely less on borrowed funds to cover recurrent and capital expenditures. They need to cover the budget deficits with massive loans from local and international institutions with high-interest rates, and we are still determining how our children will pay for these in the future. Even in an era of increase in the price of oil globally, Nigeria did not benefit maximally from this because of the low volume of oil production and oil theft that stopped Nigeria from meeting its OPEC quota monthly. The non-oil sector contributes little to Nigeria’s income statement because the bulk of these trades is for primary products with little or no extra value added to them in the value chain, and such goods command less revenue in the international market, adversely affecting our income statement.

    Unlocking Nigeria’s growth potential underscores, the need to, among other things, improve its liquidity to stabilise the system and grow the economy. The government must stabilise the exchange, interest, and inflation rates to make meaningful improvements in our economy. The exchange rate regime is a function of our foreign reserve adequacy. The global economy offers two pathways to increase our foreign reserves. It is either you earn more from exports, or you attract more foreign direct investment (FDI). Nigeria has historically preferred the path of exporting more. However, from 2010 to date, global exports have stagnated and even declined because of weak commodity prices. This has affected Nigeria drastically.

    Most countries are relying on a heavy inflow of FDI, which is the economic model chosen by Saudi Arabia, Brazil, India,and others. These countries get more FDI to compensate for shortfalls in exports. Foreign Direct investors will only come to Nigeria with offers to invest equity in public assets and a suitable investment climate. We offered foreign investors an opportunity in the Nigeria LNG project, which yielded substantial investment outcomes. We also did that with the liberalisation of the GSM sector, and we could see the investment inflow.

    The interest rate is another crucial factor in productivity and driving growth. Financial institutions provide interest rates on loans to businesses they need to run or expand their businesses. The higher the interest rates, the less likely companies will borrow for expansion, and the lower the interest rates, the more likely the companies will borrow for operational and growth reasons. Individuals also borrow from financial institutions for personal loans, credit cards, or product loans. The lower the interest rate, the more likely individuals will borrow to purchase goods and services that help businesses expand, mainly if local companies produce the goods and services. Another impact of interest rates is that they often are benchmarked with savings rates. The higher the interest rate on loans, the higher the interest rates on savings. When interest rates on savings are high, people tend to save, but when it is low, people tend to invest, especially in the equity market.

    The exchange and interest rates are monetary instruments influencing the inflation rate. Nigeria needs to stabilise its revenue by expanding its revenue sources, financialising its assets – especially its real estate, infrastructural, and portfolio assets – and maximising value chains across the various productive sectors. It needs to upskill its workforce to have the required skills in the knowledge economy, where knowledge and innovation are the keys to greater productivity. Therefore, human capital development is crucial in unleashing Nigeria’s growth potential.

    Unlocking Nigeria’s growth potential requires new economic thinking by leadership in the public and private sectors. Only good leadership that understands how to open the great possibilities of Nigeria in line with global realities and using tools and resources that work will lift Nigeria from its economic quagmire. Therefore, the 2023 Elections are providing an opportunity for a change in leadership, and Nigerians must look for leaders who understand the destination Nigeria must go to for growth and prosperity and who have what it takes to take Nigerians there. The intention of making Nigeria great is not enough, capacity, and intellectual ability to deliver are critical. The time for transformational leaders in Nigeria is now. Nigeria needs leaders that create a vision and use highly skilled individuals rather than politicians to run the economy of Nigeria. Gather intelligent people and develop and implement ways to improve revenue, optimise assets, and efficiently manage our liabilities.

    It is the responsibility of leadership to provide opportunities and the responsibility of individuals to contribute towards maximising opportunities. The government, on its part, must completely overhaul the economic system and structures to favour liquidity. Just like cash flow is the blood of a business, the government’s fiscal and external liquidity is vital in stabilising the economy. All avenues to improve the government’s income must be explored and used to make the government constantly liquid and viable.

    On top of managing its monetary policies, the government must tighten its fiscal policies to grow the per capita income and increase employment while reducing unemployment . They must create a business-friendly environment where innovation and creativity thrive, and productivity is encouraged. Productivity happens within businesses, and any harsh, volatile, or challenging business environment is tough on companies and hampers their growth. The better the business climate , the more profitable the business is, and the more profitable a business is, the more it attracts FDIs with concomitant expansions and increases both in the balance sheet of companies and their income statements.

    The government should understand the direct correlation between economic disempowerment and socio-political problems in the country. This is especially the case with youths, who, when unproductive for a while, tend to engage in anti-social behaviours, low- and high-level criminality, terrorism, banditry, and secessionism. The government must develop a plan to absorb most of our young people through training in new skills and upskilling them to fit into the new economic reality that rewards innovation and creativity higher than mundane production. They must use fiscal and monetary policies to stabilise consumer and equity prices, enhancing national resilience.

    There is no gainsaying the enormous potential to unleash its growth potentials Nigeria has. For a long time, Nigeria has been a country of potential – potentials that are never actualised. It is only transformational leadership that will transform and overhaul the system. We need this leadership in 2023 more than at any other time. It is foolhardy to do the same thing hoping for a different result repeatedly. We need leadership with the knowledge, capacity, intelligence, and experience to midwife the greatest economic re-engineering the country has ever gone through. All other stakeholders must contribute immensely by improving the value chains within the production sectors, consuming responsibly, and creating superior value that will attract material, financial and human resources from all over the world to Nigeria.

    We look forward to a new Nigeria!

  • Forex: Naira bounces back against the dollar, gains 20.8%

    Forex: Naira bounces back against the dollar, gains 20.8%

    The Nigerian currency naira made a massive rebound against the dollar at the parallel market. Record show that a massive 20.8% was recorded against the dollar on Thursday.

    It now exchange for 720/1 as against 910/1 that it rose to few days ago.

    Recall that Naira came under severe pressure as soon as the federal government announced that it was going to redesign the currency.

    The naira which fell consistently throughout last week against the United States dollar tumbled to an all-time low of 910/dollar last weekend.

    However, the currency began a rebound against the greenback on Monday, after a week-long clampdown on foreign exchange dealers in Abuja, Lagos, Kano and other major cities by the personnel of the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission.

    EFCC officials had arrested over 90 Bureau De Change operators across major cities in the country over allegations of currency hoarding and aiding politically exposed Nigerians and other criminal elements in money laundering.

    The naira which was bought and sold on the streets of Lagos and Abuja and some other cities within the country between 735/dollar and 745/dollar about two weeks ago began a free fall shortly after the decision of the Federal Government to redesign the local currency.

    On Monday, however, the naira rebounded and was bought and sold between 850/dollar and 860/dollar. The national currency gained significantly and steadily on Tuesday and Wednesday and closed at 720/dollar on Thursday.

    Many financial analysts and forex dealers who dealt on the matter disclosed that the surge in the difference on both currencies was as a result of market sentiment and the activities of the EFCC personnel.

    The clampdown on forex dealers was said to have forced several BDCs into hiding, a move that reportedly made many politically exposed persons and currency speculators hold back in their demand for the greenback.

    There had been a huge demand for the dollar at the parallel market in Lagos, Abuja and other cities.

    Some analysts have also posited that the scarcity of the Naira at a later time will give it strength against the dollar.

     

  • Real reason we are redesigning Naira notes – CBN

    Real reason we are redesigning Naira notes – CBN

    The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) on Thursday said counterfeiting and hoarding are the major reasons for redesigning and issuing new naira notes.

    Mrs Amina Abdulmalik, Deputy Director, Currency Operations Department, CBN, said this at the apex bank’s special day, at the ongoing 36th Lagos International Trade Fair in Lagos.

    “We have a huge challenge of counterfeiting; Nigerians have set up factories and are just churning out bank notes because those bank notes don’t come back into the banking system.

    “We are not able to fish out the counterfeits; and most central banks in the world redesign when they see the level of counterfeits growing. But if you don’t have confidence in your bank notes then there’s a problem.

    “Also hoarding is another challenge; people simply love to keep this money at home, because of that hoarding, you find out that 84 per cent of our currency in circulation is outside the bank.

    “Whoever does that is into illegal activities, like kidnapping. If you are afraid of taking your bank notes to the bank, then you have something to hide,” she said.

    Abdulmalik also said the apex bank’s major mandate, which was the issuance of currency was a serious challenge to the bank as it involved lots of activities.

    She said, “before we issue currency we have to plan, we have to determine the volume of bank notes that will be appropriate for the economy.

    “This, we have been doing over the years and once this is done we have to send it to our Security Printing and Minting company to print.

    “They are CBN’s sole printer. We have a printer in Lagos and Abuja, and that is where CBN does all the printing of currency.

    “When printing is done we have to distribute, distributing the currency around Nigeria is lots of work which involves lots of logistic and costs.

    “The bank notes we issued are meant to come back where they will be processed into fit and unfit. The unfit notes are meant to be withdrawn and the fit ones reissued.

    “Unfortunately in Nigeria, once we issue, the notes disappear. These are the challenges around currency management that necessitated us to do a redesign,” she said.

    She said redesigning of bank notes was a normal CBN process, and the responsibility of Central Banks around the world.

    She said, “we’ve done it in the past, it did not generate concerns but because of the social media, we seem to have a challenge.”

    “We registered CIT companies, if you go to our website, you will see the requirements, you can move cash, that aspect of distribution, we can outsource to the private sector.

    “So it’s something that we expect Nigerians that have the resources to do.

    “You can also participate in processing, you can go to our website, you will see the requirements, if you have the required capital, we can outsource that to you.

    “Banks can bring in the bank notes, you help them to sort clean and unclean. That will also help in currency management.

    “There’s need to reduce that cash in circulation so that we can use other channels.”

    Dr Michael Olawale-Cole, president, Lagos Chamber of Commerce and Industry (LCCI), urged the apex bank to consider converting lower currency notes into coins.

    “As regards issuance of new naira notes, the CBN should also consider converting the country’s lower currency notes into coins to facilitate highly repetitive retail transactions and avoid printing pieces of low-value notes with a short lifespan.

    “We also appeal to the CBN to adopt more innovative ways, establish appropriate policies and take actions that will drive down the inflation rate and strengthen the value of our naira,” he said.

    Olawale-Cole, was represented by Mr Gabriel Idahosa, deputy president, LCCI.

    The theme of the 2022 annual fair is, “Connecting Businesses, Creating Value.”

  • Why Naira redesign should be everyone’s cup of tea – By Magnus Onyibe

    Why Naira redesign should be everyone’s cup of tea – By Magnus Onyibe

    In elementary study of economics in secondary school,l learnt that during the global recession of 1933,inflation was so high that in then west Germany ,if someone bought a cup of tea in a cafe and he/she was having it,before finishing that one cup of tea so as to ask for another one,the price of the same cup of tea would have become higher.

    In fact l learnt that during those dark days in Germany despite re-denomination of their currency, it doubled every three (3)to four (4)days.
    That phenomenon was known as hyperinflation.

    And owing to that dramatic illustration,the phenomenon of hyperinflation got stuck in my adolescent memory.

    So,it was that idea of hyperinflation that was invoked or awakened in my mind a couple of weeks ago when my wife shared with me her experience in a cafe- Starbucks or Tim Hortons (l can not really remember which one,but somewhere in North America) where she stopped by to have some tea.

    She intended to have at least two cups while waiting for her friend to meet up with her.
    After the first cup,she ordered a second.
    When the bill arrived it was about $5 for each cup,tax inclusive.
    The total cost of $10 was paid.

    But as she exited the cafe,she quickly did a mental calculation of the value of $10 in naira terms and realized that it translated to $10×800=N8000 which was the prevailing dollar / naira exchange rate at that time,and l understand it is currently trading at about N900 which is N10 increase in less than two weeks.

    Before the current policy of naira redesign by the Central Bank of Nigeria,CBN under the governorship of Godwin Emefiele and with the express permission of president Mohammadu Buhari,my wife would not have been jolted that she is paying $5 for a cup of tea that would have been equivalent of a little more or less N500.

    In fact it would not have been my cup of tea if the CBN did not embark on naira redesign which has seen an already very weak naira crashing to an unprecedented low.

    So,my Better-Half was startled that with N800-$$1 exchange rate a cup of tea at $5 is translates to N4000 which is perhaps the cost of a whole pack of tea containing maybe 25-30 tea bags back home in Nigeria,she better keep her thirst for tea in check.

    Inevitably,the number of cups of tea that my wife buys in a cafe now matters to her,not just because of the drastic devaluation of the naira,but also owing to the rising rate of inflation at home which the National Bureau of Statistics,NBS puts at about 21%.

    However,given the reality that the cost of groceries and other essential commodities have not only also doubled,but even quadrupled in some cases,in reality inflation in Nigeria may be hovering around 30% that is at least 10% more than the number ascribed to it by NBS.

    As evidence that she has become sensitive to naira devaluation,my wife restrained herself from buying more cups of tea when the Naira/dollar exchange rate was N800/$1 irrespective of the fact that she has a fetish for tea of which she brings a wide variety back home, sometimes packed in a whole suit case whenever she travels to Europe or North America.

    What l have gleaned from that is that when the naira assumes its proper value,as it currently appears to be doing,the penchant to make purchases on impulse abroad by Nigerians would be curtailed.

    Of course,my wife’s experience can be extrapolated for millions of other Nigerians traveling abroad on business or holidays who are now more price sensitive following the dramatic and unprecedented crash of the naira.

    And it means that a devalued naira may be be compelling Nigerians to look inwards and likely become more self reliant than the policy of banning of the 41 items including tooth pick placed on import prohibition list for funding by the CBN introduced a few years ago by the apex bank governor,Godwin Emefiele.

    In effect,the metaphor of tea and the adventure of my wife in a cafe in North America is a practical illustration of the unintended,but the potential beneficial effect of the ongoing policy of naira redesign by the CBN on the economy.

    To buttress my point about the capacity of the new apex bank policy unintended positive effect,allow me share another narrative similar to the real life experience of my wife by another Nigerian to which l am a witness.

    While on holidays in Toronto,Canada,a family friend stopped by in a shop to make some purchases amongst which is a leather belt which he felt he needed.
    After making the purchase,he told the seller to bore more holes in it to enable him adjust it in the future incase he losses or adds weight around his waist.

    When he was informed that it would cost him $10 to punch each hole in his belt, totaling $20 for two holes,he demurred by telling the vendor that he had changed his mind and therefore not going ahead with the hole in the belt transaction.

    That is because he could not justify to himself why he would spend $20 cad which is the equivalent of $20 cad x N500 = N10,000 on boring two holes in his belt which can be done by a cobbler back home in Nigeria for as little as N1000.

    Hopefully,the second anecdote above would further underscore the sensational effect that the resultant naira devaluation is having on Nigerians especially as they travel around on business or holiday abroad.

    Without being told,it clearly demonstrates how a devalued naira can help our compatriots curb their unbridled taste for foreign made goods and services which are actually acquired taste that we can do without,if we chose to become more patriotic by consuming mostly what we can produce as opposed to consuming mainly what we do not produce,resulting in the bleeding of our treasury of hard earned forex which is currently dwindling,given that most of our crude oil,perhaps up to 80% is being stolen by international oil thieving syndicates.

    As readers must have noticed,l have only cited as examples micro transactions and not the mega projects like Dangote refinery and fertilizer firms construction costing multi billions of dollars to drive home the point of how Nigerians are responding to a weaker naira that is taming their taste for foreign made goods and services.

    In fact,one common reaction to the devaluation of the naira compared to other foreign currencies in the two narratives involving my wife and a family friend who is a Nigerian is their stimuli of rescinding their decisions to make the purchases abroad simply because they can be obtained for less at home.

    That is a voluntary abstinence and not compelled by rules or regulations as the CBN has done with the exemption of items to be imported via the official window and which is being circumvented through import /purchase of those banned items with foreign exchange funds obtained from the second widow,and the so called parallel or black market.

    In fact,l am tempted to believe that the black market rates that are about double the CBN rate may actually be the true value of the naira and not the CBN induced rate that is facilitated by the bi-monthly interventions with billions of dollars estimated to be in excess of $10 billion by some experts.

    Please take note that if the naira were to be N1/$1 as the ruling All Progressive Party,APC and it’s presidential candidate, now president Buhari had falsely promised Nigerians when they were seeking for the mandate of Nigerians to be the party and the candidate calling the shots in Aso Rock Villa in 2015 and 2019,the opposite of the reaction of restraint from impulsive purchases by Nigerians would occur.

    That is simply because our compatriots would not have been weaned of the exaggerated and wrong impression that the naira is strong or should be strong which is basically emotional and without fundamental economic underpinnings.

    In other words,both my wife who resisted buying more cups of tea in Starbucks/Tim Hortons and my Nigerian friend who wanted to bore more holes in his belt,but changed his mind would have respectively binged on tea and bored multiple holes in the belt if the naira had not been inadvertently devalued via the ongoing redesign initiative.

    And the interesting thing here is that these narratives are not hypothetical cases but real life situations and they could be extrapolated for multi billion dollars transactions.

    Basically,the lessons that are intrinsic in my wife and the Nigerian friend’s experiences illustrated with of a cup of tea and a belt above is that the more devalued our currency,the less Nigerians would make non critical purchases overseas. In other words,the lower the purchasing power of the naira abroad,the more they would look inwards as CBN governor,Emefiele had intended by banning 41 items for import using the CBN forex window.

    It is fascinating and critical that l emphasize that the real reason that Nigerians go on a binge abroad is because our currency- the naira is overvalued and it’s current dramatic devaluation is jarringly waking all of us up from our revelry of false confidence and exaggerated impression labout the value of the naira that has had negative effect on our economy.

    And it might astonish some Nigerians to learn that over valuation of the naira is in fact one of the two fundamental flaws (the second demon being petrol subsidy) wracking our economy and responsible for its being in turmoil and if you like on its knees.

    In the light of the reality above,the Chief Economic Adviser to president Buhari,professor Doyin Salami and my friend and brother,Professor Pat Utomi (both of whom are deans at PAN Atlantic University,Lagos) should come to my rescue in enlightening Nigerians on how a devalued naira can magnify and amplify the need for Nigerians to look inwards.

    Although,l stand to be corrected,but reportedly Utomi is the economic advisor to Peter Obi,Labor Party,LP presidential candidate.
    Just as l also understand that mr Mustafa Chike- Obi,another financial expert and former Asset Management Corporation of Nigeria,AMCON chief executive officer,may be playing the same role in the Bola Tinubu,APC presidential candidate’s team.

    They should all do well to advise their principals to add naira devaluation (not defending the naira as the CBN had been doing with an estimated $10 billion dollars) as part of the manifestos being packaged and presented to Nigerians by those jostling for the presidency of Nigeria in 2023 because it is in the best interest of Nigerians and Nigerian economy.

    That is as opposed to the N1-$1 that is the gimmick which was used to lure voters in 2015 and 2019 by the ruling party basically because majority of Nigerians believed that a stronger naira can be approximated to a stronger economy.

    In fact,as it has been demonstrated,the weaker the naira,the less interested would our nationals be in buying goods and services available in Nigeria from abroad.

    And that attitude of curtailing spending abroad would stem the hemorrhaging of the foreign exchange in the CBN treasury as it would enable us conserve our foreign exchange income as opposed to bleeding the treasury due to our uncontrollable appetite for foreign made goods.

    I urge Nigerians who may be skeptical about the proposition of the naira being better when weak to ponder why major countries of the world,especially the USA and China are always accusing each other of arbitrarily devaluing their currencies- the dollar and Yuan to make their goods more appealing to potential buyers outside of their shores.

    As Nigeria does not have finished goods and high technological services like equipment and machineries as the USA and China have to sell to the rest of the world except crude oil/gas whose price and supply is fixed by OPEC;it is unsurprising that her youthful workforce(dormant or untapped asset) has resorted to migrating to Europe,North America and some parts of the Middle East and Asia to earn foreign money which is in uncanny ways making up for the lack of capacity and ability to produce goods and services to sell to the world like the USA and China do.

    One only needs to picture the leadership position that Indians have taken in being at the helms of affairs in top ten(10) Fortune 500 companies to figure out the cumulative benefits of investing in education of our youths that would result in right tooling and equipping them to spread out throughout the world as India has done.

    For instance,foreign income remittances by Nigerians in the diaspora to Nigeria stands at N5.1 trillion in the first quarter of year 2022,according to statistics from the CBN.

    One can only imagine the exponential growth in foreign exchange income that would accrue into Nigeria if more Nigerians take up jobs abroad via proper migration processes to countries like the Uk that has been short of workforce since it’s exit from the European Union,EU.

    Based on a World Health Organization, WHO report in July this year,with remittances valued at $87 billion,India was the top remittance recipient among low- and middle-income countries,as per 2021 estimates. It is way ahead of China and Mexico’s $53 billion,the Philippines ($36 billion) and Egypt ($33 billion).

    Nigeria could earn much more than the N5.1trillion that it currently garners if our country decides to emulate India by mirroring its template in education of it’s populace.

    More so because Nigeria with a population in excess of 200m is to Africa what India is to South Asia and China is to Far East Asia.

    So,presumably,the more devaluation the naira goes through,the more determined Nigerians would be to earn foreign exchange from overseas as reflected by the current ‘japa’ syndrome (migration to foreign land to seek better livelihood ) which has sapped not just the health sector of workforce,but also the Information Technology,IT sector which is currently being drained and negatively impacting the financial services sector that is experiencing a dearth of skilled man power to manage their high technology departments.

    Brain drain in my reckoning is not really such a bad phenomenon,provided we are replenishing the workforce from our abundant potential Human Resources by equipping our youths with the right skills via education.

    Unfortunately and disappointingly,our country is not adequately funding education.
    It is such an irony that a paltry sum of N400 billion more or less is allocated to the education sector in the 2023 federal government appropriation bill/budget.

    Actually,it is such an avoidable and apparently embarrassing dilemma that a whooping N4 trillion was allocated in the 2022 budget and nearly N5 trillion had been reportedly spent on petrol subsidy ?

    The jeopardy in the education sector is further accentuated and complicated by the fact that eight (8) months of this year – from February to September students of tertiary institutions in our beloved country were out of school as ASUU,)Union of University and other higher institutions lecturers) embarked on industrial action in protest against under funding of tertiary institutions.

    News emanating from university circles is that the eight (8) months long industrial action by ASUU members that was presumed to have been resolved at the end of September,is about to be resumed because the fundamental issue which is lack of funds to settle lecturers emoluments has reared its ugly head again.
    And that is simply because authorities paid only half of the owed eighth (8th) month’s salary to the lecturers which is a failure on the part of government to fully keep to its part of the settlement bargain/ agreement which boils down to paucity of funds.

    And l had predicted in a piece that l earlier wrote on the probable solutions to the perennial ASUU strike that the funding paradigm for education should be changed from the current template, otherwise the aggrieved lecturers would be back in the trenches sooner or later if the fundamental issues of lack of adequate funding was not addressed by converting petrol subsidy to education subsidy.

    So,the imminent reoccurrence of another strike was more or less foretold.

    Going back to the issue of naira redesign and the reason it should be everyone’s cup of tea,it is worth pointing out that although the evolving outcome of the massive devaluation of the naira is not the original intention of president Buhari and CBN governor, Emefiele,it is a salutary outcome.
    That is because it has turned out to be a back door way out of the thorny issue of devaluing the naira which the incumbent government does not want to broach because it is against its campaign promises to make naira equal to the dollar and reduce petrol pump price to pre 2015 costs and these could only be achieved through subsidy.

    It may be recalled that the current ruling party at the center,APC had organized protests against the former regime that it defeated in 2015 based on those fantastic promises of making naira be at par with the dollar,with petrol pump price being reduced to single digits price if and when the party is voted into office.

    But seven (7) years and counting,it has not even been able to accomplish keeping the rate at the 2015 level as price has abysmally literally bottomed out on those two (2) campaign promises-naira/dollar rate and petrol pump price.

    The assertion above is underscored by the fact that president Buhari had rejected the proposal by his economic advisers that the naira should be devalued and petrol pump price subsidy be removed at the inception of his administration in 2015 which is about seven (7) and half (1/2) years ago.

    And it is unfortunate that the lack of will or inability of the current administration to make the painful but beneficial decisions to devalue the naira and remove petrol subsidy,has turned out to be the Achilles heels,albatross and sword of Damocles that have combined to destroy all the efforts at development made by Buhari administration in the past seven(7) and (1/2) years that it has been holding sway in Aso Rock Villa,Abuja.

    Does it make sense that our country squandered an estimated twenty (20) trillion naira on petrol pump price subsidy in the nearly eight (8) years of this administration while borrowing most of what has been spent on the much vaunted infrastructure development such as the reactivation of some railway lines and building of 3rd Niger bridge and a smattering of roads mainly in the north leading to a debt over hang of N41.60 trillion (USD100.07 billion) as at June ,2022?

    That is the reality about the financial health of our country according to data sourced from a press release from the Debt Management Office of the federal government on September 19,2022.

    When one adds the humongous sum applied in petrol subsidy to the multi trillion naira (estimatedly about ten($10) billion dollars that the CBN is believed to have spent in defending the naira against foreign currencies in the past seven (7) and half (1/2) years,readers can imagine why our country is in turmoil and the economy is in ruins.

    It is such an irony that about seven (7) and half (1/2) years after the inception of Buhari’s administration,devaluation of the naira which was despised and detested with passion by Aso Aso Rock Villa is taking place unwittingly before the very eyes of president Buhari who has inadvertently authorized its devaluation via the approval granted CBN for naira redesign.

    Imagine if that decision was made at inception of the administration seven (7) and half (1/2) years ago?
    I can bet that most likely,Nigerian economy would not be in the doldrums and Nigerians would not be in so much misery.

    Having set the naira free by default, another dramatic but positive decision that mr president Buhari should take is to bring forward the date for the end of petrol subsidy regime from June 2023 which is the date this administration is planning to end the obnoxious and economically debilitating practice to this present time and not a day or two after the exit of the current administration.

    I am unequivocally making the case that education should be subsidized not petrol simply because it would have direct positive impact on the quality of Human Resources coming out of Nigeria and like India our country could in another decade or two become what that south Asia country is currently to the world in terms of quality workforce export to the rest of the Western world.

    As most of us are well aware,education is a leveler. It is the difference between the doctor in the hospital and the cleaner working there too.That is a metaphor that l have often used to illustrate the critical need to invest heavily in education.

    It is my fervent belief that there are lots of hospitals cleaners today that could have been doctors if they had access to education via student loan programs that have proven to be workable and beneficial in the USA for instance and should be replicated here.

    Is it not telling and revealing that the pump price of petrol had already been increased multiple times under the incumbent administration,yet the common man that president Buhari is ostensibly protecting by not removing the subsidy,(although severely battered) is still surviving with his head above the water?
    Does that not suggest that our people are resilient?

    I can bet that the masses would be happier if their children can enjoy equal opportunities of receiving education to the highest level that their talent can take them like the children of the wealthy,than their offsprings being limited in their ability to attain higher educational heights due to lack of funds to pay exorbitant school fees and even inability of public schools to remain open owing to government’s incapacity to adequately remunerate lecturers etc .

    It is my good friend who is an economist and the incumbent governor of Edo state,Godwin Obaseki that recently remarked that the naira redesign initiative of the CBN is political.That may be true.

    And he probably took that position based on the perspective of his suspicion of the political agenda of the government at the center.
    But viewed from a broader prism and given the unintended outcome of devaluing the naira via the backdoor,if governor Obaseki would take a second look,he most probably would have another opinion about the naira redesign that may fortuitously result in the market correction of the value of the naira.

    My take on the naira redesign issue is that while a political game might have been the original intension,but the outcome of the action is tending towards being a market correction of some of the anomalies in Nigerian economy caused by multiple exchange rate regimes,(first and second windows)defined as official and black/parallel market rates that have been creating huge distortions in the economy.

    According to the CBN,and which is a narrative echoed by president Buhari,that he recently expressed on his way out of Nigeria for his medical check up in the United Kingdom,UK,the inadvertent devaluation of the naira denominations of N200,N500 and N1000 notes is not the intent of the authorities for the naira redesign.
    Rather president Buhari averred that:
    “People with illicit money
    buried under the soil will have a challenge with this but workers, businesses with legitimate incomes will face no difficulties at all,”

    Whether the CBN would successfully achieve its objective of getting the whopping N2.73 trillion which the apex bank’s governor,Emefiele said is 80% of cash outside the vaults of banks out of the N3.2 trillion in circulation as at September 2022,depends on if the currency hoarders that the policy is meant to trap are not effectively outsmarting them by buying up all the foreign exchange or hard currencies that they can lay their hands on and which has triggered the astronomical hike in the exchange rate of the naira to all other currencies.

    It would not surprise me if Nigerian currency hoarders,may be buying up both Indian rupees and even the very battered Ghanaian cedi just to find safe haven for the illicit money that they seem hell bent on keeping out of the purview of the CBN.

    As Oprah Winfrey,the American talk show icon once famously stated: “If you look at what you have in life,you’ll always have more. If you look at what you don’t have in your life,you’ll never have enough”

    That is a wise mindset that Nigerians must try to cultivate and imbibe.
    Nigeria has abundant Human Resources and that is what we must look at.

    Our country does not have Apple computers,iPhone, IPod, Amazon,Microsoft,Facebook and the likes from Silicon Valley,or movies from tinsel town/Hollywood as well as Boeing,cartapillar,Tesla,Ford,Chevrolet vehicles which are some of the products that the USA sells to the world;neither does she have the Huawei,Lenovo,Hisense Alibaba etc,produced in China and sold to the world.

    Taking to heart,Oprah Winfrey’s wise counsel,we should not be looking at the products that the USA and China have and we do not have.

    Rather,we should be looking at the abundant untapped Human Resources that we have (60% of our population are youths) and could be harnessed via giving them high end education in order to right-tool them to be fit for unleashing into the world as highly trained workforce in the manner that India has done and hence they are dominating the world of business by being in top leadership positions in Fortune 500 firms.
    That is what Nigerian leaders should be looking at.

    In the light of the above,if president Buhari truly wants to end his tenure in a blaze of glory,he should re-introduce student loans,remove petrol subsidy from
    Budget 2023/appropriation bill and divert the funds into intervention in the education sector now,six (6) months time.

    He should equally direct the CBN not to defend the naira after the deadline for the discontinuation of use of some of the denominations of the old currency on December 31,and the commencement of the use of the new one on January 15,2023.

    My point is that the naira should be allowed to float in order to eliminate the double windows for sourcing of foreign exchange that has made those who have special access to the top echelon of government extremely rich,while impoverishing the critical mass of Nigerians who do no have anything directly to do with the use of forex; and also do not own vehicles that use petrol, so subsidizing petrol and defending the naira have no direct impact on them.

    Why can’t government invest more in mass transit and have the labor unions operate it at subsidized rate?
    There are sundry local plants for assembling mass transit buses that could be patronized locally and in the process boost employment.

    Another money guzzling gambit of Buhari administration is the huge funds it is ploughing into its poverty alleviation scheme that entails paying of stipends to the poorest of the poor and the school children feeding farce that are enriching manipulative civil servants and their allies that are fleecing the masses in the guise of being food vendors/contractors.

    With the high level of corruption in our country,how success could have been achieved with such social welfare scheme remains puzzling to me.

    Pundits who are of the school of thought that too much intervention is distorting the economy are of the belief that other palliative measures to cushion the harsh effects of petrol subsidy removal and naira devaluation can be applied.

    And they are confident that sooner or later there will be equilibrium in the price of the dollar and petrol price.
    That mindset is hinged on the law of nature which states that what gos up must come down.

    Their reasoning is also premised on the belief that when less naira is chasing less dollars and with crude oil theft reined in or stopped and more forex is going into the CBN treasury,naira /dollar exchange rate would stabilize and petrol pump price would equally be less costly.

    And most importantly,all our children that are academically inclined and are yearning for education would be right tooled via education facilitated by student loans.

    After all when GSM or cell phone was first introduced in Nigeria in 1999,it was beyond the reach of the masses because it was way too expensive.
    Then Mike Adenuga’s GLO entered the market and introduced per second billing which made GSM telephone service more affordable and accessible to the masses.

    Today,it is estimated that over 100 million telephone lines have been sold to Nigerians and are being actively used.

    Is that not phenomenal and amazing that a service that was initially thought to be the exclusive preserve of the rich is now available to the poor ?

    If president Buhari summons the courage to take these hard,but necessary decisions,he would have changed the story of Nigeria significantly for good and history would not only be kind to him,posterity would also venerate him.

    Magnus Onyibe, an entrepreneur,public policy analyst,author,development strategist,alumnus of Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy,Tufts University, Massachusetts,USA and a former commissioner in Delta state government, sent this piece from lagos.
    To continue with this conversation,pls visit www.magnum.ng