| CBN Governor, Mr. Godwin Emefiele |
The Governor, Central Bank of Nigeria,
Godwin Emefiele, has said the factors causing the continued fall in the
value of the naira are beyond the control of the CBN and the Federal
Government.
This, he said, informed part of the
reasons the central bank chose to devalue the naira about two weeks ago,
rather than continue in the defence of the nation’s currency from the
external reserves.
Emefiele, who spoke at the Bankers’
Dinner organised by the Chartered Institute of Bankers of Nigeria in
Lagos on Saturday night, disclosed that the bank had spent a huge chunk
of the external reserves in defending the naira from falling, adding
that the best thing to do is to devalue it.
He said although the decision to devalue the national currency would come with pains, it would lead to benefits in the long run.
The CBN boss stated, “The CBN took the
decision that it would be sub-optimal to continue to heavily deplete the
country’s reserves in defending the naira. This decision was
appropriate because neither the central bank nor the federal government
is in control of the major factors causing the depreciation of the
nation’s currency.
“In fact, the Russian central bank has
abandoned its defence of the currency and allowed the depreciation of
the currency, but only after it was said to have spent over $90bn in
defending the currency over a couple of months.”
The CBN governor also noted that in
recent time, Nigeria had faced a simultaneous dwindling supply of the
dollar and rise in demand.
This, he said, had led to a rise in the price of the dollar at both the interbank and Bureau De Change segments of the market.
Speaking further, Emefiele claimed that
the underlying factors that led to the dwindling supply of the dollar
were mainly global and not country specific.
The factors which he said were beyond the
CBN and the government included the fall in the global oil prices, the
end of the United States Quantitative Easing programme and the global
fall in the price of other export commodities apart from the crude oil.
Moreover, he said the discovery of shale oil by the US had not also helped matters.
All these, Emefiele observed, had constituted low supply of the US dollars amid high demand for them.
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