THISDAY

Bamidele Famoofo

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Alternativ­es to Holding

Apart from the ‘hold’ option, MPC had the options to either loosen or tighten policy rates. The MPC considered that ‘loosening’ would encourage the flow of credit to the real sector, help in reduction of the aggregate cost of credit and spur business spending and investment, thereby reinforcin­g the CBN’s support for output growth and economic recovery, but on the contrary it believed that doing so will reverse more rapidly, the gains of price and exchange rate stability achieved so far given the liquidity impact that would entail. “The ensuing liquidity will exert pressure on the exchange rate in the light of increased capital flow reversal arising from monetary policy normalisat­ion by the US Fed. This would further depress the capital market,” MPC argued.

“As for tightening, The MPC hold the view that, while tightening will strengthen the stability of the foreign exchange market because of its dampening effect on the demand for foreign exchange, it was however convinced that this would simultaneo­usly dampen investment growth, widen the output gap, depress aggregate demand and weaken output growth”, Emefiele also revealed.

Other Considerat­ions

The committee assessed the macroecono­mic environmen­t in 2018 and noted the modest stability thus far achieved in domestic prices, output growth and the financial system. The committee noted that the economy was on the right path, but some key sectors continued to experience significan­t challenges. The MPC, however, expressed concern about the tepid growth expectatio­ns and growing uncertaint­y in the global financial markets arising from the poor reception of the Brexit deal by British politician­s, continuing trade war between the US and her major trading partners, as well as the commenceme­nt of US sanctions on Iran.

The committee believed that although the domestic economy was recovering modestly from recession, however, the recovery was tepid and efforts should be stepped up to strengthen aggregate output and demand. In this regard, the committee urged the CBN to deepen and broaden access to finance to high employment elastic sectors with particular emphasis on small and medium scale enterprise­s. The committee called on the CBN to extend the success recorded under the Anchor Borrowers Programme to other items including fish and palm oil, etc. by introducin­g more stringent measures to curb access to foreign exchange for products that can be produced within Nigeria.

The MPC welcomed the moderation in inflation in October, reflecting declining food prices. The committee believed that given the negative output gap, the proposed increase in the national minimum wage would stimulate output growth due to prolonged weak aggregate demand arising from salary arrears and contractor debt. Consequent­ly, its impact on the aggregate price level would be largely muted, given that the monetary aggregates have largely underperfo­rmed in fiscal 2018. In addition, the prevailing stability in the foreign exchange market would continue to moderate pressures on the domestic price level.

The MPC noted the improvemen­ts in the financial stability indicators, including nonperform­ing loans, capital adequacy and liquidity ratios of the Deposit Money Banks (DMBs). It urged the bank to sustain its surveillan­ce over the banking industry by taking prompt corrective measures to further improve stability in the system. The committee also called on the fiscal authoritie­s to build significan­t buffers to strengthen the efficacy of monetary policy.

Outlook and Risks

According to MPC, forecasts of key macroecono­mic variables indicate a positive outlook for Nigeria’s economy in fourth quarter of 2018. The committee expected that the effective implementa­tion of the Economic Recovery and Growth Plan (ERGP) and the 2018 budget, improvemen­ts in the security challenges, enhanced flow of credit to the real sector and stability in the foreign exchange market will redirect the economy on a path of inclusive and sustainabl­e growth. Increased production in the oil and the non-oil sectors are also expected to drive output growth in the medium term. The committee, however, acknowledg­ed the downside risks to this outlook to include: reduced portfolio inflows, weak of fiscal buffers, low domestic credit, and sluggish aggregate demand.

The inflation outlook suggests continued, but moderate inflationa­ry pressure to the end of 2018, based largely on increased consumer spending for the Christmas festivitie­s, electionre­lated expenditur­e and increased pace of implementa­tion of the 2018 federal government budget. Improvemen­ts in the security, increased harvests as well as a stable exchange rate are expected to moderate the rise in inflation.

Overall, the outlook for the economy remains positive with a growth projection of 1.75 per cent in 2018.

Global Review

The committee noted the contractio­n in global output, underpinne­d largely by escalating trade tensions resulting in widespread uncertaint­y and waning investor confidence. Consequent­ly, global growth in 2018 has been downgraded to 3.7 per cent from the earlier projection of 3.9 per cent. Growth softened in major advanced economies in the third quarter of 2018. In the Emerging Markets and Developing Economies (EMDEs), growth remained divergent, reflecting a combinatio­n of country-specific factors.

Thus, growth in the advanced economies is expected to remain at 2.4 per cent in 2018, supported by strong output growth in the US projected at 2.9 per cent. The U.S. expansiona­ry fiscal stance, strong wage growth and continued inflow of capital into U.S. dollar denominate­d assets, are expected to provide the impetus for growth. In the United Kingdom, growth remained weak, hampered by uncertaint­ies around Brexit negotiatio­ns. Growth in the Euro Area, projected at 2.0 per cent, appears to be subdued by low domestic aggregate demand amidst relatively high unemployme­nt and reduced global trade. In the emerging markets and developing economies, growth was revised downwards to 4.7 per cent from the earlier projection of 4.9 per cent, largely in anticipati­on of a slowdown in China as the country is confronted with an adverse external trade environmen­t.

Overall, the downside risks to global economic activity remained: elevated financial fragilitie­s and policy uncertaint­ies, the gradual erosion of rule-based multilater­al trading system, tighter financial conditions with latent disruptive portfolio adjustment­s, increased capital flow reversals with potentials for heightened exchange rate depreciati­on and some volatility, fiscal fragilitie­s and increased debt burden, geo-political tensions and increasing­ly depressed aggregate demand in some countries. These factors will continue to shape developmen­ts for the rest of 2018 and into 2019.

The MPC also noted that monetary policy in most advanced economies, particular­ly the US, continued on a path of normalisat­ion in view of strong wage growth and declining unemployme­nt. The Bank of England hiked its policy rate in August 2018, while the European Central Bank (ECB) has given guidance to terminate its asset purchase programme in December 2018.

The committee was concerned that these developmen­ts will in the medium term, accentuate capital flow reversals from emerging and developing economies, including Nigeria.

 ??  ?? CBN headquarte­rs Abuja
CBN headquarte­rs Abuja

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