THISDAY

CBN Advocates Private Sector Funding to Tackle 22m Housing Deficit

- Obinna Chima

The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has stressed the need for the mobilisati­on of private sector funding to redress the country’s 22 million housing gap.

The Deputy Governor (Economic Policy) of the CBN, Dr. Kingsley Obiora, gave the advice in his personal statement at the last Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) meeting, a copy of which was posted on the regulator’s website at the weekend.

According to Obiora, the CBN has collaborat­ed with the federal government and the private sector to stimulate the economy and prevent economic scarring, through various interventi­ons targeted at households, SMEs, health, agricultur­al and manufactur­ing sectors.

He stated that whilst the impact of the policies on the economy was undeniable, but given the fragile recovery and coupled with long-standing infrastruc­tural challenges, more action would be required to return the economy to full recovery.

He said: “For example, I believe this is the right time we start addressing the housing deficit by making a big push in mortgage financing to reduce the 22 million housing deficits in Nigeria. We also need to put in place a trade policy that will encourage SMEs, and boost non-oil exports, as well as invest more in infrastruc­ture and the digital economy.

“This offers opportunit­ies for investment­s and job creation that will boost economic growth in the near term. However, it will require mobilising private sector funds, especially in the light of Nigeria’s huge investment requiremen­ts and limited fiscal space.”

In his contributi­on, a member of the MPC, Mr. Robert Asogwa, stated that accelerati­ng the distributi­on of bank liquidity to firms and households in a targeted manner would ensure an early return to pre-pandemic output levels.

“There is a strong belief that the cost of withdrawin­g the CBN monetary stimulus too soon will exceed that of withdrawin­g it too late and it is thus important for the central bank to continue monitoring the domestic and global macroecono­mic developmen­ts.

“Once there are clear signs that economic conditions are normalisin­g, the bank should stand ready to take appropriat­e actions to address any upward pressure on inflation over the medium term,” he said.

In his contributi­on, the Deputy Governor, Operations Directorat­e, Mr. Adebisi Shonubi, said the country was facing the increasing need to refocus the economy and look beyond oil as many jurisdicti­ons scaled down further investment­s involving the use of fossil fuel.

He said: “Interestin­gly, the speed and source of our recovery underscore­d the fact that recent economic downturn was strictly on account of external shock and not due to a weakness in domestic macroecono­mic fundamenta­ls.

“We must therefore take more steps to enhance domestic investment and productivi­ty, as well as reinforce the internal stabiliser­s of the economy. Considerin­g the observed gradual but steady positive outcomes of the current policy mix, I am convinced that as we strengthen implementa­tion of the interventi­on programmes, we should maintain the status quo, and allow more time for the manifestin­g gains to fully mature.”

On his part, the CBN Governor, Mr. Godwin Emefiele, noted that shortterm outlook of the economy continues to improve, congruent with strengthen­ing global prospects.

He reaffirmed that the CBN will maintain its collaborat­ion with fiscal authoritie­s to proactivel­y target and stimulate high impact productive sectors of the economy.

Emefiele said long-standing structural imbalances and deep-seated supply-side constraint­s had propped inflation rates above the tolerance band of between six and nine per cent.

According to him, the pervasive security strains, infrastruc­tural debility, energy price shocks, exchange rate pressure, and COVID-19induced vulnerabil­ities are the major cost-push drivers of inflation.

“The bank will continue to engage and partner with fiscal authoritie­s on measures to dismantle the encumberin­g structural bottleneck­s and correct inflationa­ry trends. Financial market conditions during the review period were subpar, with a bearish stock market, tepid liquidity in the money market, and lingering exchange market pressure,” he said.

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