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November 22, 2021 IMF  Tells Nigerian Government To Remove Fuel, Electricity Subsidies Early 2022

IMF  Tells Nigerian Government To Remove Fuel, Electricity Subsidies Early 2022

The International Monetary  Fund has advised the federal government to completely remove fuel and electricity subsidies in early 2022.

The Washington-based Organisation noted that the removal of “retrogressive” fuel and electricity subsidies should be considered a priority as part of the government’s fiscal policy.

In its preliminary findings at the end of its official staff visit to the country under the Article IV Mission, IMF also called for reforms in the fiscal, exchange rate, trade and governance aspects of Nigeria.

The IMF noted that Nigeria’s past experiences with fuel subsidy removal, which have all been short-lived and reversed, underscore the importance of building a consensus and improving public trust regarding the protection of the poor and efficient and transparent use of the saved resources.

Senior Advocate of Nigeria, Femi Falana, reacting to the development, said the IMF has no right to tell Nigeria how to run its affairs.

October 26, 2021 CBN Governor Emefiele Blames Babangida For Naira Crash

CBN Governor Emefiele Blames Babangida For Naira Crash

The Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Godwin Emefiele, has blamed former military dictator Ibrahim Babangida,  for the downward trend in the value of the naira.

Mr Emefiele said this much at the State House, Abuja, during the launch of Nigeria’s digital currency, the eNaira.

“Please recall that since the advent of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) led Structural Adjustment Programme (SAP) in 1986, and the introduction of the Second Tier Foreign Exchange (SFEM) market, the Naira has been on a one-way free fall from parity to the US Dollar in 1984 to over N410/USD today,” Emefiele said.

According to the governor of Nigeria’s apex bank, “Some 35 years later, we have not been able to achieve the many promises and objectives of that programme.”

In 1985, Mr Babangida made an agreement with the IMF to receive new loans from the World Bank. As a condition for granting the loan, the IMF called for Nigeria to devalue its currency and end the practice of subsidising petroleum products for consumers.

The CBN governor added that Nigeria possesses‘strong’ external foreign reserves, saying that it currently stands at over $40 billion.

He referred to the national currency trading at 410 to the dollar, the official exchange set by the apex bank, without regarding the easily accessible parallel markets where the naira is pushing N600 to the dollar since the ban on foreign exchange transactions with BDCs.

Emefiele also blamed the devaluation of the Naira on the country’s import dependency, saying that it had “wiped out most of our production and manufacturing bases and exported all our jobs in the process.”

 

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