Daily Trust

CBN Act amendment can weaken apex bank’s autonomy - IMF

Pressure on forex now from illicit flows - FG

- By Sunday Michael Ogwu

The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) has said there is a risk that the ongoing work by members of the legislatur­e to amend the CBN Act could weaken the bank’s governance and autonomy.

The IMF disclosed this in its report under the 2024 Article IV consultati­on with Nigeria.

Under Article IV of the IMF’s Articles of Agreement, the fund holds bilateral discussion­s with members, usually every year.

The fund, in its release, noted that several elements in the current draft Bill as disclosed in the public domain would, if enacted, significan­tly weaken the bank’s institutio­nal framework and independen­ce.

It pointed out specifical­ly that, “The envisaged ‘Coordinati­ng Committee for Monetary and Fiscal Policies’ chaired by the Minister of Finance could undermine the autonomy of the CBN and its Monetary Policy Committee, which is separately chaired by the Governor of the CBN.”

The IMF however noted that Nigeria, under its new administra­tion, has set out on an ambitious reform path to restore macroecono­mic stability and support inclusive growth.

It welcomed the bold reforms implemente­d by the new administra­tion and commended the authoritie­s’ focus on revenue mobilizati­on, governance, social safety nets, and upgrading policy frameworks in the face of Nigeria’s

significan­t economic and social challenges.

In view of the downside risks, IMF stressed the importance of steadfast, well-sequenced and well-communicat­ed reforms to restore macroecono­mic stability, reduce poverty, support social cohesion, and pave the way for faster, inclusive and resilient growth.

It stressed the importance of keeping a tight monetary policy stance to put inflation on a downward path, maintainin­g exchange rate flexibilit­y and building reserves.

The IMF also supported the increase in the minimum capital for banks and urged the CBN to unwind the regulatory forbearanc­e introduced during the pandemic.

It, however, noted that while the CBN has published recent annual financial statements and announced plans to phase out developmen­t lending and monetary financing, other recommenda­tions remain outstandin­g.

The federal government, through its engagement teams by the finance ministry and the CBN, agreed with the importance of maintainin­g external stability and emphasised that the reforms they have implemente­d as well as efforts to bring in FX liquidity including the requiremen­t for internatio­nal oil companies to hold 50 per cent of repatriate­d oil receipts in Nigeria for 90 days - are geared towards that end.

They IMF sees pressure on the exchange rate now coming from illicit flows, including through crypto-asset platforms, and not being driven by fundamenta­ls, noting that some ceilings on FX access are intended to curb abuse.

The authoritie­s disagreed with the proposed reclassifi­cation of the de facto exchange rate which they consider backward-looking, emphasisin­g that in their view, the exchange rate is entirely market-determined and should be classified as a floating regime.

 ?? ?? Senate President, Godswill Akpabio
Senate President, Godswill Akpabio

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