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Naira is one of Africa’s worst-performing currencies, according to the World Bank

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The Nigerian naira is one of the worst-performing currencies in Africa, according to the World Bank.

Since a devaluation in mid-June, the currency, according to the study, has fallen by almost 40% versus the US dollar.

 

In a report by the global bank titled, ‘Africa’s Pulse: An analysis of issues shaping Africa’s economic future (October 2023 | Volume 28),’ it stated that so far this year, the Nigerian naira and the Angolan kwanza are among the worst performing currencies in the region, saying that the currencies have posted a year-to-date depreciation of nearly 40 per cent.

According to the report, “The weakening of the naira was triggered by the central bank’s decision to remove trading restrictions on the official market.

“For the kwanza, it was the decision of the central bank to stop defending the currency as a result of low oil prices and greater debt payments.”

Other currencies, according to the World Bank report with significant losses so far in 2023, included South Sudan (33 per cent), Burundi (27 per cent), the Democratic Republic of Congo (18 per cent), Kenya (16 per cent), Zambia (12 per cent), Ghana (12 per cent), and Rwanda (11 per cent).

The report explained that the Central Bank of Nigeria in June 2023, directed Deposit Money Banks to remove the rate cap on the naira at the official Investors and Exporters’ window of the foreign exchange market, and allow the free float of the naira against the dollar and other global currencies.

Since then, the naira has fallen from N473.83/$ to around N800/$ officially, the report said.

The bank stated that this had been the case from March 2020 until June 2023 with the widening difference between the parallel and official exchange rates of the naira.

The report stated that the Central Bank’s interventions to restrict foreign exchange demand and keep the exchange rate artificially low were met with declining FX supply from oil revenues, stressing that the parallel rate premium increased to 80 per cent in November 2022, and then to about 60 per cent in June 2023.

It added that the unification and liberalisation of the exchange rates in June 2023 allowed the NAFEX rate to converge to the parallel one, closing the gap, saying that the resistance toward the increasing pressure on the Nigerian naira coupled with limited supply of FX at the official window has led to the reemergence of the parallel market premium.

The Washington-based bank highlighted that the Nigeria’s growth rate would decelerate from 3.3 per cent in 2022 to 2.9 per cent in 2023

The country’s oil production, according to the report, had remained below OPEC quota amid capacity issues and lower international oil prices and while non-oil economic activity, particularly industry and services still supported growth, policy actions to remove fuel subsidies and unify the exchange rates might be weighing on those activities in the short term.

It noted that the weak business confidence and rising input costs are driving the contraction of activity as business confidence appears to have weakened in Nigeria.

The World Bank noted that activity in Nigeria’s manufacturing and services’ sector contracted in August.

The global bank disclosed that purchasing power of households was expected to suffer in the short term following the recent reforms of the new administration of Bola Tinubu.

It stated that the incoming Tinubu administration implemented a series of reforms that included the removal of fuel subsidy and the devaluation and unification of the exchange rate system, stressing that petroleum prices have more than tripled since the subsidies were lifted at the end of May.

It said that the naira has weakened by nearly 40 per cent against the US dollar since the mid-June devaluation.

The bank noted that the measures were intended to improve the fiscal and external accounts of the nation but their inflationary effects in the near term can erode the purchasing power of households and weigh on economic activity.

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