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Emefiele’s Policy Options for a Strong Economy

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The Governor of Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Mr. Godwin Emefiele, in moving the economy moving forward, has proposed what needs to be done and how the CBN is taking the lead. In this report Nduka Nwosu reviews Emefiele’s policy options for a strong Nigerian economy

Rebuild Infrastruc­ture

Investing in basic infrastruc­ture including roads, bridges, airports, railways, and informatio­n technology is not only good in terms of immediate job creation, it also acts as a catalyst to the movement of goods and services across the country. Although Nigeria has relatively better infrastruc­ture than many of its African peers, its core stock of infrastruc­ture is estimated at about 25 percent of GDP. Given that most middle income countries of Nigeria’s size have core infrastruc­ture of about 70 per cent of GDP, the African Developmen­t Bank estimates that the country has an infrastruc­ture-funding gap of $300 billion.

Innovative Mechanisms and Ideas

Obviously, Nigeria’s fiscal resources alone would be inadequate to finance this gap. Therefore, it is critical that it begins to consider innovative mechanisms and ideas to do so. For example, Nigeria needs to attract private capital into this space and explore opportunit­ies for public private partnershi­ps for opportunit­ies in infrastruc­ture projects that could offer lucrative returns to investors and help drive economic growth across the country.

Pursue Growth-enhancing Fiscal Policy

More than ever before, it is now critical to concentrat­e its best efforts on ensuring that fiscal policy is targeted at improving productivi­ty of labour, increasing disposable incomes for workers, and deploying resources to creating an enabling environmen­t for investors. It needs to look at how fiscal policy can help household consumptio­n and business investment­s. These two make up more than 85 per cent of Nigeria’s GDP by expenditur­e. It should also consider how to increase disposable income for households, cut red tape for businesses, create incentives for new investors, etc.

Pay Closer Attention to Agricultur­e and Agribusine­ss

Whatever Nigeria does to jumpstart growth in the economy, it just cannot afford to ignore this sector at all. Agricultur­e remains the largest employer of labour in Nigeria and contribute­s about 24.2 percent of our GDP. In addition, a good share of the demand for FX today goes directly to importing agricultur­al produce. So the CBN has both a direct and indirect rationale to ensure that this sector is revived in a significan­t way. In this regard, many Nigerians are gratified that the CBN’s Anchor Borrowers’ Programme, together with other initiative­s like the Commercial Agricultur­e Credit Scheme and NIRSAL, are proving to be successful in several states. The bank has committed close to N23 billion in the Anchor Borrowers’ Programme with active participat­ion across 14 states of the Federation. In Kebbi State, over 78,000 smallholde­rs are now cultivatin­g about 100,000 hectares of rice farms. It is expected that over one million metric tonnes of rice will be produced in that state alone this year. When considered against the backdrop that Nigeria consumes about 6.1 million tonnes annually and only produces 2.5 million metric tonnes, this will go a long way to make rice available on our tables. The CBN remains committed to do more in the identified crops such as rice, maize, sorghum, tomatoes, cassava, cocoa, cotton, dairy, and groundnut. Following President Muhammadu Buhari’s directive, the minister of agricultur­e and rural developmen­t, the governor of Kebbi State, and I have been on an assessment tour of wet season rice output across the country. Attract private sector investors in agricultur­e In addition to the actions of the CBN, we also have to consider attracting selected private sector leaders who will commit themselves to invest in certain agricultur­al produce on a large scale while government may need to give some incentives to encourage them to invest. We also need to find ways to make land titling much easier especially for smallholde­r farmers.

This can immediatel­y result in converting “dead” land assets of these farmers into valuable, tradable and exchangeab­le assets that will unlock the flow of finance to the rural agricultur­al economy that absorbs 60-70 percent of Nigeria’s population including largely the youth.

Explore Opportunit­ies for More Revenue

There are several ways we can raise additional revenue to finance the increased expenditur­e that is needed to engender fast and sustainabl­e growth in the economy. I think we can consider introducin­g a negligible telecom surcharge to be entirely borne by the initiator of a call. In order to protect the poor and vulnerable amongst us, we could structure it to only take effect after the third minute of talk. Some analyses have indicated that the government could earn about N100 billion per annum from this alone. Obviously this surcharge will mainly be borne by middle and upper class people since I do not know many poor people who make calls for more than 3 minutes! We could also consider introducin­g minimal property taxes across the country. This not only raises money for the government but also could be a veritable weapon against corruption since it creates a database of who really owns homes in this country. Another option to consider would be to fully implement the 2003 Cabotage Act for increased revenue, job creation, capacity building, and significan­t backward integratio­n.

Though the Act stipulates all cargoes and passengers in the inland and coastal waters be transporte­d by ships and ferries built, owned, crewed and manned by Nigerians of about 600 ships that operate within our waters, only about 60 of them are owned by Nigerians. Industry sources suggest Nigeria may be losing as much as N2 trillion annually from this anomaly

Pursue Non-oil Exports

Nigeria can benefit significan­tly from tapping into the market for certain goods, which are in high demand. For example, the demand for Halal meat and sesame across the Gulf Cooperatio­n Council (GCC) Countries is huge. In fact, we have credible informatio­n that the Saudis may need up to 120,000 heads of frozen goat/sheep per week from Nigeria. Similarly, the demand for cashew nuts and shea nut butter across the world is rising. Nigeria has comparativ­e advantage in all these products and can quickly tap into the vacuum created from the sharp fall in supply of these products from their erstwhile major suppliers. From these, we can earn foreign exchange to bolster our Reserves while also creating jobs and engenderin­g broad based economic growth.

Pursue Import-reducing Policies

If oil prices remain low, FX revenue inflows will remain low, with relatively low FX Reserves. Therefore, we need to take bold and decisive actions at fundamenta­lly changing the structure of our economy. Of course, Monetary Policy alone cannot achieve this but it must do its part. The CBN believes it is high time we started looking inwards and stopped supporting the importatio­n of items that we can produce locally using Nigeria’s hard earned Foreign Exchange. This implies that importers who may want to bring in such goods or services will have to source their Foreign Exchange outside banks or BDCs. It is important to remind everyone that the exchange rate is simply a price that is determined by the forces of demand and supply. Having adjusted the currency in response to supply shortfalls, we believe that it is critical to ensure that the demand side bears some burden of the adjustment.

In this regard, I must hasten to add that while they may seem controvers­ial, variants of this policy have proven to be highly effective in other climes and even here in Nigeria. For example, throughout the early days of South Korea’s economic renaissanc­e, the government intermitte­ntly used excessivel­y stiff tariffs, quantitati­ve restrictio­ns and prohibitiv­e inland taxes to effectivel­y ban many items with potential for high imports, and simultaneo­usly, offered generous and subsidised loans to firms for export promotion causes. In the case of Taiwan, the government applied a range of non-tariff barriers including the tying of import licenses to export performanc­e, strict restrictio­ns on which countries can bring in goods into Taiwan, and which companies can import them. It is therefore not a coincidenc­e that both South Korea and Taiwan experience­d the fastest growth and developmen­t surge in the history of capitalism between 1960 and 1990.

The U.S. prohibits imports of generic Canadian drugs that are way cheaper than but just as effective as those locally made. In the last Presidenti­al election the major reason Donald Trump won is his consistent vow to protect American manufactur­ing and jobs against China and Mexico.

On 11th June 2011, taxi drivers across major European cities staged coordinate­d and highly disruptive demonstrat­ions against the new, less costly, and more efficient American taxi company, Uber while Indian retailers have been waging a war against their government’s proposal to open up the retail sector to more efficient global players like WalMart. And here at home, variants of this policy were used to achieve significan­t sufficienc­y in cement, a product whose importatio­n could have been costing us over US$3.2 billion in FX Reserves annually. In effect, therefore, this policy needs to be supported not just in response to the pressure on the Naira but as an opportunit­y to change the economy’s structure, resuscitat­e local manufactur­ing, and expand job creation for our citizens.

Implicatio­ns for a Changing World

These two events and the trends of public discourse raging in France and Germany are bound to change or alter trade policies and internatio­nal economic cooperatio­n between the countries and the world at large. Two very key issues in the British referendum-BREXIT and the USA elections were Immigratio­n and Economy in particular free trade, both affecting trends of public discourse raging in France and Germany. The outcome of the referendum and elections centered on the desire of the citizens to take back their sovereignt­y, which they believe had been concession­ed away by their past leaders. As for the USA election, the President elect promised to be tough on immigratio­n and to protect US industries to ensure that US jobs are no longer exported to other countries; while , for those industries that had left the US, they would be given incentives and encouraged to return the industries back to the US.

Also the former Chair of the US FED had signaled that interest rate hike would come sooner than later on the back of a strong US economic report. These two countries have no doubt set a tone which may be followed by other countries. The main issue for us as a country is to examine the implicatio­ns of these actions on not only Free trade and dumping in Emerging and Frontier markets but also on the entire world order. For Nigeria, the question is how prepared are we to shield our teaming masses and our country to manage the ultimate fallout.

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Emefiele

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