• Saturday, April 27, 2024
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BusinessDay

Central banking as a printing business

Nigeria officially dumps multiple exchange rates as full unification beckons

A rather illiberal debate took place a fortnight ago between Edo State Governor Godwin Obaseki and the CBN and Finance Ministry. Governor Obaseki revealed that some N60 billion were allegedly printed by CBN for distribution under the monthly FAAC process. Finance Minister Zainab Ahmed declared that what the Governor was alleging is “very sad because it is not a fact…it is not true to say we printed money to distribute at FAAC”.

But the Governor was adamant: “Zainab Ahmed should rally Nigerians to stem the obvious fiscal slide facing our country. Rather than play the ostrich, we urge the government to take urgent steps to end the current monetary rascality, so as to prevent the prevailing economic challenge from degenerating further.”

On his part, Governor Emefiele argued that the “The concept of printing of money is about lending money and that is our job…It will be irresponsible for the CBN or any Central Bank or Fed to stand idle and refuse to support its government at a time like this”.

The CBN of today is not what we used to know. It has been hijacked by vested interests in government and the private sector

The CBN Act 2007 makes currency printing one of its mandates. Monetary authorities normally print legal tender currencies to replace old ones while printing a few more to meet increased needs for cash in a growing economy. What they make from such printing – the face value of the money over and above the cost of producing it – is known as seigniorage.

In the nineties, the Bank of Japan (BOJ) invented a new monetary policy instrument known as “Quantitative Easing” (QE). This entails printing money to buyback securities from the capital markets as a means of injecting liquidity into the economy during stagflation. Remarkably, it worked. And it was not inflationary.

During the Great Recession of 2008—2010, western central banks, particularly the American Fed, Bank of England and European Central Bank, implemented successful QEs of their own.

The CBN has structured more than a trillion naira “intervention funds” ostensibly to bolster economic recovery. However, there is a qualitative difference between the classic QE approach and what CBN has been up to. The advanced countries never printed money directly to support budgets or for consumption. They instituted QE to shore up liquidity in the economy via the capital markets. What CBN is allegedly doing is printing money for direct consumption.

The late Chief S. B. Falegan, former Director of Research of the CBN who passed away in February, confessed that in the nineties, under the military dictatorship, the Mint was put on overdrive; printing naira, which were then loaded into waiting trucks and driven into the mist of the night.

Apart from the penchant for printing, there have been cases of criminal recycling of old naira notes. It was also alleged that billions of new notes disappeared from the Mint, including, alarmingly, one of the steel plates for minting our currency. But this was before Emefiele.

The CBN of today is not what we used to know. It has been hijacked by vested interests in government and the private sector. The cabal and the sharks have a game-theoretic interest in maintaining multiple exchange rates for their own corrupt and rent-seeking interests. And they would do anything and pay any amount to ensure that no reforms are made that undermine this “exorbitant privilege”.

In the 1970s, N1 exchanged for $2. In 1980, N1 exchanged for 80 cents. By 1985, naira declined to N1 = $1. The Gowon military administration, despite its shortcomings, ran an innately clean government. The Minister of Finance at the time was Chief Obafemi Awolowo. He managed the public finances with sagacity. Nigeria did not borrow a dollar from the international financial markets for the war effort or for the post-bellum rehabilitation and reconstruction. We were on the verge of industrial take-off.

To paraphrase a social media influencer, during the glory days of the naira, we were net exporters of refined petroleum, but today we are net importers; we drove locally assembled vehicles, with a Peugeot plant in Kaduna, Volkswagen in Lagos, Leyland in Ibadan, ANNAMCO in Enugu and Steyr in Bauchi. Many of the automobile components were produced locally, such as car seats by Vono in Lagos and Exide producing the batteries, Ferodo producing the brake pads and discs, Dunlop and Michelin producing the tyres and Isoglass producing the windshields. Companies such as Sanyo were producing our radios and TV sets; Thermocool was producing our fridge-freezers and air conditioners; we had pipe-borne water distributed through pipes made by Kwalipipe in Kano and Duraplast in Lagos. We wore clothes produced by a dozen textile mills in Kaduna and other cities, employing almost a million people; electricity was relatively stable and was distributed through cables manufactured by NOCACO in Kaduna and Kablemetal in Lagos and Port Harcourt. We had a national carrier with over 50 relatively new planes plying the entire world; and most of the food we consumed was locally grown.

By 1986, N2 exchanged for $1. By 1992, $1 exchanged for N10. Misguided policies of structural adjustment, linked to profligacy, mindless printing of currency, round-tripping by commercial banks and rent-seeking behaviour by financial regulators were to blame.

In 2014, the naira exchanged at $1 to N164. Inflation stood at 8% annually. The national debt was $67.7 billion (N11.24 trillion), of which the domestic component was $10 billion and the foreign $9.7 billion.

Under the current APC administration, the debt rose to $86.3 billion (N32.9 trillion), of which the domestic component is $53 billion and the foreign $33.3 billion. In 2014, our total national debt was 20% of GDP. Today, it stands at 35.51% of GDP.

What is even more worrisome is the foreign component of the debt, which has increased by a staggering 243.3 percent. Most of these loans are owed to the Shylock Chinese, for which we have allegedly pledged our national sovereignty and key national assets as collateral. The naira has plummeted to N480 to the dollar while the Euro exchanges for N577 and the pound sterling at N672.

The classic scaffoldings underpinning a sound monetary system are: macroeconomic and geopolitical stability, diversified exports, low indebtedness, stable inflation, national competitiveness, economic growth, robust public institutions and a central bank reputed for both integrity and competence.

Economic science and the lessons of the German, Zimbabwean and Venezuelan hyperinflations make it clear that there is a point beyond which you cannot continue to print currency without destroying your economy entirely. Prudence is therefore imperative. The competence and trustworthiness of the central bank leadership matters; as does their integrity, patriotism and single-minded commitment to the Common Good.