The United States said on Monday it will press Nigeria in talks this
week to adopt a more flexible foreign exchange rate to boost growth and
investment in Africa’s largest economy.U.S. Assistant
Secretary of State for Africa, Linda Thomas-Greenfield, told an audience
at the U.S. Institute of Peace that Nigeria should ensure the value of
the naira currency versus the U.S. dollar was “more realistic.”
“While
most people complain about the possibility of there being a
devaluation, people are already operating on a devalued currency, and
the only people who are not, are people who are doing it
officially,”
Thomas-Greenfield said.
“Our recommendation is, and we will have
discussions about it … that they should look at the exchange rate and
try to make the exchange rate more realistic to what the value of the
naira is to the dollar,” she added.
She spoke ahead of talks in
Washington on Thursday involving officials from the State Department,
Pentagon and Treasury and their counterparts in the Nigerian government.
Nigeria
faces its worst economic crisis in decades as the falling price of oil
has slashed revenues, prompting the central bank to peg the currency and
introduce curbs to protect foreign exchange reserves, which have fallen
to an 11-year low.
Some members of Nigeria’s central bank
monetary policy committee have said the naira should be devalued.
However, President Muhammadu Buhari has said devaluation will not bring
any benefit whatsoever to the Nigerian economy.
Thomas-Greenfield
said the parallel currency market in Nigeria was “alive and well,”
warning that a rigid exchange rate, capital controls and import bans
could undermine President Muhammadu Buhari’s efforts to expand economic
growth and fight corruption.
“Capital controls that limit access
to foreign exchange rewards insiders and undermines the stated goals of
Nigeria to increase domestic production because both Nigerian and expat
investors alike tell us many businesses are unable to obtain the capital
to purchase badly needed intermediate goods,” she said.
The
naira trades some 40 percent below the official rate on the black market
versus the dollar. The central bank last year pegged the exchange rate
to curb speculative demand for the dollar and conserve foreign exchange
reserves after it restricted access to hard currency for imports of
certain items, frustrating businesses.
The International Monetary
Fund last month called on Nigeria to lift the curbs and let the naira
reflect market forces more closely, as the restrictions have
significantly affected the private sector.
0 Comments