Business a.m.

CBN’s key policy benchmarks slip as fiscal burdens weigh

- CHARLES ABUEDE

IT IS WELL PAST 5 YEARS AND counting since the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) announced plans to control inflationa­ry pressures in the economy and bring this key monetary policy objective back to a single-digit, within a target range of 6-9 per cent.

But with the recent efforts by the apex bank to intervene in every sector of the economy, eye brows are being raised in many quarters, forming a ball of criticisms leading to suggestion­s that it is being motivated by factors outside its core remit for which its independen­ce cannot be assured. One sarcastic observer asks: “Who’s chasing the rabbit” and influencin­g its policy behaviour and assumptive messiahnic stance?

Indeed, the CBN’s many moves to intervene in some areas of the economy have been labelled in some quarters to mean an abandonmen­t of its monetary duties and meddling or usurpation of the fiscal side of the economy, it has been robustly defended on this score by some who laugh at the utter incompeten­ce of the fiscal management since 2015 when President Muhammadu Buhari came to office.

It is obvious that Nigeria’s fiscal side is weak, prompting the CBN to partially take over the fiscal responsibi­lity of dissipatin­g a lot of energy creating all manner of funds and spending on variegated interventi­on projects. Yet, the primary responsibi­lity of the CBN as contained in the CBN Act remains to ensure monetary and price stability, of which inflation and exchange rate are key drivers.

Key monetary policy areas are suffering

The monetary tightening strategy introduced by the apex bank has brought some benefits though. Since CBN cut interest rate to 12.50 per cent from 13.50 per cent in May 2020, inflation has rallied around 12 per cent on the average, from reaching a low of 11.02 per cent in august 2019 to 12.56 per cent for a tenth straight month in June 2020.

Conversely, since inflation doubled from 9.5 per cent in 2015 to above 12 per cent in 2020, CBN has attempted to use a contractio­nary policy strategy to reduce it to a single digit, which till date it is yet to achieve. Although it can be easily argued that there are factors outside the control of the CBN, but many counter arguments include that the apex bank appears not to be concerned since it does not really get asked to show its report card especially as its functions are clearly spelt out in its Act. As a country that mostly trades and does not produce or invent things, a lot of things get buried in the details. Don’t ask; Don’t tell!

But does it really mean that the CBN has abandoned the respon- sibility of containing inflation and bringing it to that single digit object and that its Governor could spend 10 years on the thrown and not be bothered whether or not this is achieved?

A number of analysts Business A.M. spoke to for this story offered divergent positions on this concern. According to Uche Uwaleke, a financial economist and professor of capital markets at Nasarawa State University Keffi, “CBN’s inflation rate target band of 6-9 per cent represents the desired level, but may not be realizable in the near term in the light of the present structural bottleneck­s in the economy especially the overall poor state of power and transport infrastruc­ture which contribute to the high cost of goods and services.

“Also, the insecurity situation, incessant farmers-herders conflict and its negative impact on agri- culture represent downside risk to inflation. Even the inflation rates projection­s of over 10 per cent in the 2021 - 2023 Medium Term Expenditur­e Framework which has just been submitted to the National Assembly acknowledg­es this fact,” Uwaleke explained in defence of the defence of the CBN’s inability to attain its mon- etary policy mandate.

Recently, the CBN veered com- pletely off Route 65 (an imaginary route that leads to good monetary policy behaviour), by attempting to go into healthcare research. It released guidelines for healthcare research and developmen­t, which many have said ought to have been appropriat­ely handled and executed by the health ministry in conjunctio­n with NAFDAC and other stakeholde­rs in the health sector.

However, CBN Governor, God- win Emefiele, in collaborat­ion with the federal government (fis- cal authoritie­s) set up the board of experts (BoE) chaired by the NAFDAC director-general. This further sparked reactions given that the research initiative is to be fully implemente­d by the CBN, citing that FG has shifted focus on non-existent items, while the monetary authoritie­s focus on FG’s functions. In attracting all these to its plates, many say the CBN may have inadverten­tly taken its eyes off the balls – key monetary policies.

John .C. Anyanwu, a professor of economics and retired lead research economist at the AfDB told Business A.M in response to questions for this story that there was an ironic abandonmen­t of monetary policy by the apex bank.

“The CBN has ironically abandoned monetary policy and had been unproducti­vely meddling with fiscal policy and so-called developmen­t projects,” Anyanwu said.

According to him, “The CBN is dissipatin­g energy in creating numerous funds and spending lavishly and directly on so-called projects (normal fiscal and executive actions) that are white elephant in nature, with little or no coordinati­on with other relevant agencies. Very soon, the NDDClike stories will break and some people will be faking fainting,” Anyanwu said.

But Uwaleke, who holds a contrary view to Anyanwu’s, told Business A.M that: “I think the CBN has performed fairly well in the discharge of its functions, especially in recent times. I do not think the CBN Governor has taken his eyes off the ball. On the contrary, the apex bank is very much on track with respect to having a grip on the three prices: inflation, exchange rate and interest rate, there is a limit to what a Central Bank can do.

“At best, the CBN can only control the two and not the three at the same time. I am referring to the Monetary Policy Trilemma which all central banks face. In the case of Nigeria, the situation is made worse by the poor transmissi­on mechanism owing in part to a relatively weak financial sector,” Uwaleke, who is also a chartered accountant and former finance commission­er (a fiscal manager), explained.

In the words of the capital markets professor, he does not consider the various CBN interventi­ons in critical sectors of the economy as interferen­ce in the fiscal space, but rather complement­ary since the CBN Act also recognizes that the apex bank equally has a developmen­t role to play in the economy.

 ??  ?? History-making Olumide Akpta, the new president, Nigerian Bar Associatio­n, who defeated two Senior Advocates of Nigeria in last week’s NBA election
History-making Olumide Akpta, the new president, Nigerian Bar Associatio­n, who defeated two Senior Advocates of Nigeria in last week’s NBA election

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria