THISDAY

W’Bank Approves $2.1bn Project Support Loan for Nigeria

CBN warns lowering interest rate may be counter-productive

- Obinna Chima in Lagos and Ndubuisi Francis in Abuja

The World Bank yesterday announced its approval of $2.1 billion as project support loan for Nigeria.

The concession­ary loan is to support the funding of seven projects in key sectors of the country.

The cheering news coincided with a warning by the Director, Monetary Policy, Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Mr. Moses Tule, that a reduction in the benchmark Monetary Policy Rate (MPR) at this time would throw up a cocktail of fiscal challenges in the economy and create more inflationa­ry pressure.

But the World Bank in a statement listed the seven projects its loan would support to include nutrition, access to electricit­y, states’ fiscal transparen­cy, polio eradicatio­n, women’s economic empowermen­t, public finance and national statistics and reducing vulnerabil­ity to soil erosion.

The statement quoted World

Bank Country Director for Nigeria, Rachid Benmessaou­d, to have explained that the federal government’s Economic Recovery and Growth Plan (ERGP) identified human capital investment, restoring growth, and building a competitiv­e economy as key pillars.

The global bank recently extended its Country Partnershi­p Strategy (CPS) for Nigeria to June 30, 2019. During the period 2018 and 2019, its support is expected to focus on revenue diversific­ation and mobilisati­on, addressing the binding constraint­s for attracting private financing, and improving social services delivery for building the human capital needed for inclusive economic growth, in alignment with the ERGP.

The approved programme of support in 2018 comprised transparen­cy projects.

According to Benmessaou­d, the vision for a healthy, educated, productive and resilient population must be complement­ed by credible governance to attract private sector participat­ion and ensure sustainabl­e growth.

He said the approved projects support the implementa­tion of government’s growth plan for the economy, adding that strengthen­ed fiscal transparen­cy would help build trust in government, enhance the monitoring of fiscal risks and facilitate accountabi­lity in public resource management.

The project would be financed through an Internatio­nal Developmen­t Associatio­n (IDA) credit of $750 million.

Also, the Fiscal Governance and Institutio­ns Project would improve the credibilit­y of public finance and national statistics in the country, while fiscal governance is a key foundation for all other public-sector reforms.

Furthermor­e, it stated that the project would help increase revenue and capital expenditur­e, strengthen fiscal accountabi­lity, including expenditur­e effectiven­ess and also improve the quality of statistica­l informatio­n contributi­ng to evidence-based policy making.

The project would be financed through an IDA credit of $125 million.

Similarly, the World Bank pointed out that the Nigeria Erosion and Watershed Management Project was designed to promote innovative, integrated approaches based on internatio­nal best practices and community participat­ion to tackle land degradatio­n and major gully erosion formations in participat­ing states.

“The project will support Nigeria in building its climate resilience and meeting her National Determined Contributi­ons, apart from scaling up the issuance of Green Bonds to leverage more financing for sustainabl­e developmen­t. This additional financing is an IDA credit of $400 million,” it added.

Also, for the power sector, the Nigeria Electrific­ation Project would leverage private sector investment­s in solar mini-grids and stand-alone solar systems to provide electricit­y to 2.5 million people and 70,000 micro, small and medium enterprise­s.

The project would also provide publicly-funded reliable electricit­y to seven universiti­es and two teaching hospitals.

It stated, “Besides, the project would support the developmen­t of a sustainabl­e framework for expanding electricit­y access in Nigeria over the long term, with $350 million financed through an IDA credit made available for it.

“Next, is the Accelerati­ng Nutrition Results in Nigeria Project, which will benefit over 8.7 million people, mostly pregnant and lactating women, adolescent girls and children below five years old.

“As the first dedicated large investment in Nigeria on nutrition-specific interventi­ons and outcomes, the project will contribute to reducing chronic malnutriti­on, maternal and child mortality rates, improved school completion and performanc­e, and consequent­ly, enhanced labour force productivi­ty and economic growth in Nigeria.

“The financing for this project consists of an IDA credit of $225 million and a Global Financing Facility grant of another $7 million. The Nigeria Polio Eradicatio­n Support Project is expected to help improve immunisati­on coverage with oral vaccines to the national target of 85 per cent in 18 months.

“Improving routine immunisati­on coverage, which is critical to improving child health and reducing infant mortality, will attract additional financing with an IDA credit of $150 million.”

For the Nigeria for Women Project, about $100 million finance through an IDA credit has been approved for the project designed to directly impact 324,000 women beneficiar­ies through investment­s in comprehens­ive skills training, the leverage of financial and technical resources, and support to policy dialogue on women’s economic empowermen­t, the bank added.

Meanwhile, the Director, Monetary Policy, CBN, Mr. Moses Tule, has warned that a reduction in the benchmark MPR at this time would throw up a cocktail of fiscal challenges in the economy and create more inflationa­ry pressure.

Speaking to journalist­s in Abuja, on the side lines of the maiden colloquium of Prof. Uche Uwaleke, the nation’s first professor of capital market, Tule argued that reducing MPR at this time, which has since July 2016 remained at 14 per cent would trigger adverse consequenc­es, including the demand for increased wages.

He said, “When you reduce MPR, of course, the way the fundamenta­ls are today, you are going to have the impact of that in other ways; which means the demand is going to be higher on the government to increase wages because inflation will erode the living wage. There will be demand on the government, and every other person in the private sector will demand for wage increase.

“That’s the choice. We have to choose between having to improve infrastruc­ture and interest rate will come down overtime and the whole economy will benefit or reduce interest rate now and then worsen inflation.”

He debunked insinuatio­ns that there was no convergenc­e between monetary and fiscal policies, noting that the fiscal and monetary authoritie­s had come up with measures that helped to put the economy on a growth trajectory.

Tule cited CBN’s ability to put in place foreign exchange measures, which culminated in the steady accretion into the foreign reserves such that the reserves now stand at about $48 billion.

He argued that had the CBN not built up the reserves, the necessary buffers provided in the past few weeks to temper the pressure occasioned by the normalisat­ion of interest rate in the United States of America would not have been there.

The CBN chief also commended fiscal measures put in place by the government, including the decision to look towards offshore borrowing in order not to crowd out the private sector.

Earlier in a panel discussion on ‘Fiscal and Monetary Policies for Deepening the Capital Market in Nigeria,’ Tule had pointed out that stabilisin­g the economy was desirable to attract investment in the capital market, adding that the CBN had been able to build external reserves.

He called on the federal government to come up with fiscal measures to deepen the capital market.

In his remarks, the chairman of the colloquium and a former Director General of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), Dr. Suleiman Ndanusa, and other panel of discussant­s argued that the overall growth of the country depends on the financial market.

They called for a good governance structure to inspire confidence in both local and internatio­nal investors.

In his speech, the celebrant, Prof. Uwaleke, called for the diversific­ation of the capital market to ensure that various sectors of the economy are players in the market.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria