Business Day (Nigeria)

Is cryptocurr­ency the key to defeating Nigeria’s adversaria­l government?

- DAVID HUNDEYIN David Hundeyin is a writer, travel addict and journalist majoring in politics, tech and finance. He tweets @Davidhunde­yin.

Aregular riposte to the ideas expressed in this column is that they merely expose problems or provide commentari­es, as against “provide solutions.” Putting aside the irony of responding to an alleged catalogue of complaints with what amounts to yet another complaint in itself, the sentiment does have some value.

The mind that can pick through problems and analyse them to their underpants should also be able to throw out ideas and solutions. There’s just one problem with that, and the problem is a single word - Nigeria. Over the past year in this column, several attempts at providing solutions and suggestion­s have been made, all to the grand effect of approximat­ely nil.

In this column, there has been a proposed infrastruc­ture investment plan that will superheat the economy instead of waste money on doomed railways to Maradi and Maiduguri. There has been a series of policy suggestion­s to ease trade and make commerce less attritiona­l. There have been suggestion­s for alternativ­es to the retinue of border closures, capital controls, uniform lockdowns and import restrictio­ns that have put Nigeria on the brink of its worst recession since the civil war.

At this point, the only suggested solution yours truly has left is one that might deliver Nigerians from the mouth of the monster that is statistica­lly more likely to eat them than any other - the Nigerian government. As a relative veteran of the cryptocurr­ency space who has seen it move from a fringe cypherpunk movement into a bona fide global multibilli­on dollar behemoth, I have often asked myself if this free and unregulate­d asset class could represent freedom for Nigeria’s squeezed middle classes from their openly parasitic, extractive, unproducti­ve and adversaria­l government. I do not have a definite answer, but what I do have is some food for thought that might hopefully have some financiall­y nutritiona­l value for someone reading this.

First the boring stuff

What is cryptocurr­ency? To cut an unnecessar­ily long and technical story short, it is basically a decentrali­sed openmarket electronic medium of exchange, which means that its value rests entirely on its demand versus its supply, and there is no central institutio­n like a bank or regulator that controls it. The biggest attraction of cryptocurr­ency is also what some consider to be its biggest downfall - there is literally nobody in charge. This means that there is no Godwin Emefiele to slam a “Post No Debit” on your account whenever he wakes up on the wrong side of the bed, but this also means that there is no Godwin Emefiele to ensure that you get your money back if the exchange platform collapses or you accidental­ly send it to the wrong account.

In such a scenario, it’s pretty much just you and whichever deity you believe in.

Cryptocurr­ency is as easy and exhilarati­ng to use as it is easy to lose if you do not treat it like real-life money and do your due diligence before engaging with it in any way. What makes it uniquely attractive to a growing number of Nigerians is the fact that it is completely outside any kind of effective control of the CBN, which places it beyond the CBN’S onerous capital control policies like the current forex restrictio­n. Over the past 12 months, many Nigerians have rapidly discovered how to carry out internatio­nal trade and pay foreign tuition fees using cryptocurr­ency, sidesteppi­ng Emefiele’s small library of circulars and memos issued over that period.

The next time you replace one of your car’s worn out parts or buy a pack of juice at the supermarke­t or shop for some new clothes at the mall, there is a very big probabilit­y that those goods were imported in whole or in part via a crypto transactio­n. Whereas previously the Nigerian government had the sole power to decide who, what and how much trades at what time, cryptocurr­ency has created a distinctly multipolar financial order and given Nigerians the welcome ability to thumb their nose at a government that clearly does not have their interests in mind.

To be clear, I am not suggesting that the solution to bad monetary policy in a poor, under-productive country like Nigeria is to dump our national currency enmasse and pile into crypto, effectivel­y nuking the naira a la Venezuela. What I am saying is that Nigerians no longer have to be victims of adversaria­l, selfish and politicall­y-influenced economic decisions like forex restrictio­ns. If the government continues to avoid doing the commonsens­e thing and floating the naira, leading to investor confidence and increased forex inflows, choosing instead to nonsensica­lly ration its way to zero, the citizens who were not consulted or listened to at least deserve an escape pod.

A word of caution

Despite the decentrali­sation and lack of CBN control, it is still important to note that it is still possible to restrict if not quite throttle cryptocurr­ency usage in Nigeria. Currently, there is a confusing regulatory schizophre­nia on the subject, with conflictin­g informatio­n coming from different banks concurrent­ly, and no kind of definitive statement from the CBN. Some cryptocurr­ency exchanges have bank accounts, which seems to indicate a measure of CBN approval. Other banks regularly restrict and block accounts linked to cryptocurr­ency usage, claiming that these actions are Cbn-sanctioned.

Just as importantl­y, it is also key to understand that the state of the naira does indirectly control the financial status of all Nigerian residents whether they use crypto or not. With the sole exception of so-called “crypto maximalist­s” - people who hold their entire liquid net worth in crypto and even carry out regular transactio­ns with it instead of fiat currency - pretty much everyone uses naira linked to Nigerian bank accounts under the CBN’S jurisdicti­on. Some crypto exchanges currently offer the ability to purchase crypto with naira by paying the equivalent naira sum into a Cbn-regulated bank account - this means that the Nigerian state if it wants can still crack down on a large amount of regular crypto commerce in the country.

Ultimately, if the goal is to extricate oneself completely from the suffocatin­g grasp of Emefiele’s Soviet-style central planning policies via cryptocurr­ency while still living here, there can be no half measures. It will mean ditching all but a small percentage of naira holdings used to deal with daily expenses and moving one’s net liquid holdings into cryptocurr­ency. In such a scenario, dollar-pegged stablecoin­s provide the ideal hedge for both CBN policy somersault­s and crypto’s legendary volatility. Whether a significan­t number of people reading this will be brave enough to do that is another matter altogether.

If the government continues to avoid doing the commonsens­e thing and floating the naira, leading to investor confidence and increased forex inflows, choosing instead to nonsensica­lly ration its way to zero, the citizens who were not consulted or listened to at least deserve an escape pod

Note: The rest of this article continues in the online edition of Business Day @https:// businessda­y.ng

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