Nigeria’s central bank will migrate to a single exchange rate for the
naira by collapsing the multiple exchange rate policy that determined
the value for the local currency, people with direct knowledge of the
matter said.
The West African nation will merge the official
rate, the rate for importers and exporters and rate for foreign-exchange
bureaus, among others, according to the people who asked not to be
identified because they are not authorized to speak publicly about the
matter.
Africa’s largest oil producer has seen its currency come
under pressure this year after oil prices slumped to around $30 a
barrel, below the government’s $57 target, amid global fight against
spread of coronavirus and a price war between Saudi Arabia and Russia.
Earnings from sales of crude account for 90% of foreign-exchange
earnings and more than half of government income.
“Today we
allowed the rate at the importer and exporters (I&E) window to
adjust in response to market developments,” said a senior central bank
official, confirming the bank changed the rate at the window for foreign
investors to 380 naira per dollar from 366 naira per dollar.
This
is a big step forward if it means a convergence of all existing rates
as it removes the opaqueness of Nigeria’s foreign exchange policy,
Yvonne Mhango, sub-Sahara Africa economist at Renaissance Capital said
by email.
The central bank has also allowed the official rate,
which was pegged at 307 naira to the dollar to weaken closer to the
market rate. Government dollar earnings from oil will now be converted
to naira at the higher rate, a huge boost to revenues which has been hit
by lower crude prices.
“It will cushion the impact the lower
crude price will have on government revenue as it will increase the
naira revenue Nigeria will get from oil exports,” Ayodeji Ebo, managing
director at Afrinvest Securities in Lagos said by phone.
Nigeria
operates a system of multiple exchange rates in a bid to control demand
for dollars. The system, which has been criticized by the International
Monetary Fund, has kept the official rate at about 307 naira per
dollar.
It uses this to supply cheap foreign exchange to government
departments and select companies, including fuel importers. It created
an importers and exporters window in 2017, in which the naira was
allowed to weaken after an economic contraction in 2016.
There
has long been a consensus among essentially everyone other than the
central bank that their multiple rate exchange system was inefficient,
unnecessarily complex, and prone to corruption, said John Ashbourne,
Africa Economist at Capital Economics by email.
“Hopefully the
transition to a more simple, flexible rate is the first step in
unpicking the trade-destroying policies that have held back growth in
recent years,” Ashbourne said.
Source: Bloomnberg