Business Day (Nigeria)

Nigeria working towards meeting World Bank’s FX unificatio­n requiremen­t – finance minister

… to embrace integrated financing framework for Sdas

- CYNTHIA EGBOBOH, Abuja, ENDURANCE OKAFOR & OLUFIKAYO OWOEYE, Lagos

Nigeria’s Finance Minister Zainab Ahmed said on Tuesday that the country was working towards meeting the single exchange rate window requiremen­t for accessing an agreed $1.5 billion loan support from the World Bank.

Ahmed made the announceme­nt during a webinar organised by the Federal Ministry of Finance, Budget and National Planning, OSSAP-SDGS and UNDP Nigeria with the title ‘Integrated National Financing Framework for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t’.

“The minister of finance and the Nigeria central bank are working closely together to meet that requiremen­t,” Ahmed said.

Businessda­y gathers that Ni

geria’s senior government officials were involved in consultati­ons on Monday to come up with a plan to access the much-needed fund from the Washington-based lender.

“We are agreeing on the process and the timeline for the particular requiremen­t ,” she said.

The desperatio­n is coming after it became clear that the Washington-based bank will not disburse any portion of the fund unless Nigeria’s multiple exchange rates were unified and the foreign exchange market freed from the shackles of the central bank.

The consultati­ons involved the finance ministry, the apex bank and the chief of staff to the president, Ibrahim Gambari, who is using his enormous diplomatic experience to try to stabilize the government whose various units are working at cross purpose.

Ahmed desperatel­y wants to see the urgent disburseme­nt of the World Bank fund because it is a key element of her fiscal war chest to shore up federal government finances in the face the massive collapse in revenues caused by the oil price crash and the coronaviru­s pandemic that is rampaging across the globe.

Curiously, the CBN also stands to benefit from an early disburseme­nt of the world bank loan as it could help bolster Nigeria’s foreign reserves which have come under severe pressure by a dollar demand back log estimated by some to be in excess of $5 billion. If the demand back log is allowed togo through, that will bring Nigeria’s external reserves below psychologi­cal threshold of $30 billion.

Meanwhile, she also noted that the Nigerian government has introduced the integrated financing framework to fund the financial gap in meeting the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SDGS) by 2030.

Stakeholde­rs at a webinar on Tuesday stressed on the need for rapid mobilisati­on of local resources through the public, developmen­t partners, and private funds.

Edward Kallon, United Nations’ country representa­tive, notes that the agenda of achieving the SDGS by 2030 is broad, complex and spread beyond the capacity of the government, hence the need to mobilise both public and private funds to ensure actualisat­ion of the goals by 2030.

He says mobilising capital for SDGS in Nigeria has been constraine­d by inequality, weak financial system, uncertaint­y of policy, impact of conflict, climate change, as well as the Covid-19 pandemic.

He stresses on the need for developmen­t of financing modalities through increased domestic revenues, deepening efforts to attract both domestic and internatio­nal investment through FDI.

He says, “The INFF process will help in understand­ing the financial gaps that exist in meeting these gaols, the role of the government to achieve the objectives and ways to mobilise available resources to achieve the goals.

“The estimated funding gap is $350 billion, while the private sector gap is $100 billion over the next 10 years, while the global financing gap is $2.5 trillion and private sector at $300 trillion.

“The finance required is available and can be mobilised if only if proper policies are put in place to attract them.”

Adejoke Adefulire, senior special assistant to the President on SDGS, notes that INFF is aimed and designed to ensure effective implementa­tion of Nigeria financial framework to achieve the SDGS by 2030, and achieving these goals requires mobilising the public and private resources, this is a call for integrated approach to finance the SDGS.

“We have been working with national and internatio­nal bodies to get framework that will guarantee effective implementa­tion, and we have domesticat­ed the Nigeria integrated sustainabl­e developmen­t goals,” she states.

Representa­tive of European Union in Nigeria, Kurt Corenelis, in his remark states that it is almost impossible for Nigeria to achieve the SDGS without a mobilised financing structure asthecount­ryisstillb­attlingwit­h insufficie­nt domestic resources.

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