Shock As Ex CBN Deputy Gov. Reveals Naira Will Never Rise Against Dollar Again

According to Kingsley Moghalu, a former deputy governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria, people who desire for the Naira to exchange for N400 against the US dollar are living in a fantasy land.

Mar 24, 2024 - 11:01
 0  7
Shock As Ex CBN Deputy Gov. Reveals Naira Will Never Rise Against Dollar Again

He felt that the exchange rate ought to accurately represent the currency's market value.

According to Moghalu, the Central Bank maintained artificiality throughout the Godwin Emefiele era in an effort to appease politically powerful but economically illiterate individuals at the time.

In a post on his X Twitter on Sunday, Moghalu revealed this and stated that artificiality allowed speculators to engage in enormous arbitrage, which drained the economy.

The sooner the nation concentrated on developing a manufacturing export economy with value addition that generated foreign exchange beyond oil in a meaningful and tangible way, the better, he said.

In his words, 

“Those who want the Naira to be N400 to the $ are living in a dream world. Even discounting for the negative impact of speculative attacks on the value of the Naira, the exchange rate will (and should) reflect its market value in reality, not the artificiality that the Emefiele era central bank sought to maintain to please economic illiterates in political power at the time.

“That artificiality created room for massive arbitrage by speculators, which bled the economy. Nigeria does not (yet) have a productive export economy. That’s the heart of the matter.

“And we do not have $100 billion in foreign reserves. So on what basis would the Naira forex rate return to some fantasy land soon? It will also take time to regain or achieve full investor confidence such as we had when we were there (and the rate was N150-165 to the $.

“The sooner we focus on a painstaking creation of value-added manufacturing export economy that earns forex beyond oil in real and significant terms, the better. Key to this is the electricity conundrum in which we are at less than 4,000 megawatts of generation for a population of 200 million for decades now.

“Take power to even 20K megawatts (let’s not talk of 50K for South Africa’s 60 million population or Brazil’s 181K megawatts for a population only slightly larger than Nigeria) and you will see what the Nigerian entrepreneurial spirit is capable of.”

What's Your Reaction?

like

dislike

love

funny

angry

sad

wow