The naira tumbled against the United
States dollar to 428 on Wednesday, down from 424 on Tuesday, as
persistent dollar shortage continues to weigh on the economy.
The major decline in the local currency
against the greenback came a day after the Central Bank of Nigeria’s
Monetary Policy Committee retained the benchmark lending rate at 14 per
cent.
The MPC had risen from its two-day
bi-monthly meeting and left the Monetary Policy Rate unchanged, contrary
to calls for its reduction by analysts, stakeholders and some
government officials, including the Minister of Finance, Mrs. Kemi
Adeosun.
At the interbank official market, the
local currency dropped to 310.08 on Wednesday, down from 307.25 on
Tuesday, according to data on the FMDQ OTC platform.
Some foreign exchange analysts believe
the decline in the value of the naira has nothing to do with the MPC
decision to leave the lending rate unchanged.
They said the decline in the value of
the naira against the US currency would have been more significant if
the MPC had announced a cut in the MPR on Tuesday.
“The developments in the official and
parallel markets are a reflection of the usual pressure on the naira. It
has nothing to do with the MPC’s decision to leave the interest rate
unchanged. We would have seen a major decline in the naira if the
committee had announced a rate cut,” a currency analyst at Ecobank
Nigeria, Mr. Kunle Ezun, said.
“We can see that the dollar-naira
exchange rate has been stable over time now. It is partly because the
CBN has been able to meet its futures obligations. It has brought some
relative calmness to the market. Again, the demand for forex by players
in the oil and gas sector has been taken from the interbank market. This
has also brought calmness to that market,” he added.
Meanwhile, the CBN said on Wednesday
that interest rate cut alone would not help to pull the economy out of
recession amid rising inflation.
The Director, Monetary Policy, CBN, Mr.
Moses Tule, said policymakers would need to act together on fiscal,
monetary and trade policies to jump-start economic growth.
He told Channels TV, “It’s not
sufficient for the monetary policy committee to just meet and say we are
reducing interest rates to address a stagflation.
“In a situation where we have negative interest rates, what we have to do is to overcome negative interest rates.”
He said Nigeria’s policy rate had been
stuck at six per cent in the past but it didn’t spur credit growth,
because the banking system did not respond to the move.
Tule explained that inflation was rising
not due to excess money supply, but because of recent reforms, which
included a hike in electricity tariffs, fuel price and a currency float
that led to a 30 per cent drop in the value of the naira in one day.
“If we were merely in a recession, then
we could say we would spend our way out of the recession. For an economy
like Nigeria, where there are key structural deficiencies, there’s an
urgent need to harmonise the policy mix,” Reuters quoted him as saying.
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