The Guardian (Nigeria)

Economy as epicenter of elections brouhaha in 2019

- By Chijioke Nelson, Asst. Editor, Finance/economy

BARELY 24 hours to the kick off of 2019 general elections, which were botched at the last minute, the National Bureau of Statistics said the country yearly inflation dropped to 11.37 per cent in January, down from the seven-month high it reached in December, at 11.44 per cent.

The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) has had a running battle taming inflation numbers in nearly two years, with a mix of interest rate hike and foreign exchange management. By analysts’ estimates, the efforts have been largely successful.

However, the ongoing electionee­ring may have something contrary for the assessed monetary policy successes by reason of the alleged monetisati­on of voters’ interests, long standing investors’ confidence crisis and ensuing economic management issues.

Basic economics holds that increases in the money supply, arising from autonomous sources, government spending and foreign demand and growth, are naturally inflationa­ry, ultimately pulling prices higher.

Understand­ably, while payment for staff, printing of campaign and elections materials may have increased the supply of money in the system, their effects may be growthimbu­ed, because productive activities were raised, as well as employment. Besides, such transactio­ns passed through the formal financial system and would be captured for monetary policy actions.

But what about “dollars” exchanged by the roadside currency hawkers and the opening of tills/“soakaways”, where stashed funds have been lying in wait to take advantage of the non-implemente­d limit to election spendings? What about the “bountiful” cash mobilisati­on of thousands of people to attend campaign rallies, which bulk was not a formal transactio­n ab initio?

This is a typical exogenous factor that may distort monetary policy decisions before, during and after the elections.

The enormity of this menace was a continuous sub-theme in almost, if not all, of the six monetary policy meetings in 2018, where the policymake­rs rejected all options to cut benchmark interest rates to sustain price stability, citing the ongoing elections spendings, among others.

In the communiqué, at the end of the Monetary Policy Committee meetings last month, the nine-page document mentioned more than five times across different economic considerat­ions the socio-political tensions and perceived election risks hanging on the domestic economy.

CBN Governor, Godwin Emefiele, while reading the communiqué, said the committee noted the broader measure of money supply, which grew by 16.58 per cent in 2018, above the provisiona­l benchmark of 13.02 per cent and the broad money, that also grew by 12.17 per cent in December 2018 alone, over its in December 2017, in contrast to the provisiona­l benchmark of 10.48 per cent for 2018.

“The resurgence in inflationa­ry pressure in the economy was of concern to the MPC, as headline inflation (year-onyear) inched up to 11.44 per cent in December 2018, from 11.28 per cent in November 2018.

“The committee observed that the near-term risks to inflation remain- … the exchange rate pass-through to inflation due to weakening oil price and campaign-related spending towards the 2019 general elections,” he said. Already, the election-related confidence crisis facilitate­d observed decline in the equities market, which dominated the most part of 2018.

“The All-share Index (ASI) decreased by 17.81 per cent from 38,243.19 points at endDecembe­r 2017, to 31,430.50 points at end- December 2018. ASI further decreased by 1.35 per cent to 31,005.17 as at January 18, 2019.

“Similarly, Market Capitaliza­tion decreased by 13.87 per cent from N13.61 trillion at end-december 2017, to N11.72 trillion at endDecembe­r 2018. It further declined by 1.37 per cent to N11.56 trillion as at January 18, 2019.

“The committee observed that these developmen­ts largely reflected…..and the sustained profit taking activities of foreign investors, arising from perceived political risk in the build-up to the 2019 general elections,” he added.

Stock market operators and stakeholde­rs, since the period in considerat­ions, have not minced words in calling out political gladiators and their actions, as being behind the sliding fortunes of the bourse, with market players constantly on cautious mode.

The Nigerian-born Research Analyst at the Cyprus-based FXTM,

Lukman Otunuga, noting that the country’s equities market has repeatedly displayed resilience against both external and domestic risks since the start of 2019, said only a perceived market-friendly result of the election will be positive for the local currency.

He said Nigeria’s declining inflation to 11.37% in January, despite increased government spending ahead of the Presidenti­al elections, is an unexpected developmen­t, but a welcome situation to the economy.

According to him, if inflationa­ry pressures continue to ease, CBN would be prompted to cut interest rates to stimulate growth, encouragin­g businesses to increase investment­s and consumers to borrow.

“The next major event risk for Nigeria is the presidenti­al elections (this weekend). While the outcome remains uncertain, it will certainly have a significan­t impact on Nigeria’s economic outlook.

“There is mounting political risk ahead of the elections and domestic investors seen bargain hunt. While the Naira continues to witness stability against the dollar, volatility could be in the cards depending on the election outcome,” he noted. A fiscal governance campaigner, Eze Onyekpere, said the first likely effect of untamed election spending is that public money meant for developmen­tal projects will likely be frittered away.

“This can happen at the federal, state and local levels and this will contribute to poverty and enhancemen­t of the misery index.

“Those who spent recklessly from their private resources will most likely want to recoup same if they get access to state resources after the election, because no one is ‘Father Christmas’, even the ‘Father Christmas’ charges some money as entrance fee. Thus, corruption will be on the ascendancy.

“If vote buying becomes widespread and affects the outcome of elections, then the election cannot be said to be free, fair and credible. This will foist an illegitima­te government on the people and such government cannot effectivel­y mobilise all the resources required for developmen­t, as its lack of legitimacy will haunt it throughout its tenure,” he noted.

Also, Abuja-based developmen­t consultant, Jide Ojo, said research has shown that reckless election spending and vote buying retards national developmen­t as it promotes political corruption. Politician­s who engage in vote trading are not philanthro­pists. They see politics as business investment that can yield them super profit. The economy itself, is involved.

“After swearing in, the major preoccupat­ion of these reckless politician­s will not be to fulfill an articulate­d campaign promises, but to line their pockets with state funds.”

 ??  ?? Secretary, Joint Tax Board, Chief Oseni Elamah (left); Vice President, The Chartered Institute of Taxation of Nigeria (CITN), Ms. Gladys Simplice; President, Chief Cyril Ikemefuna Ede; immediate-past President, Prof. Olateju Somorin; Provost, CITN Tax Academy, Prof. M.T. Abdulrazaq, at the tax institutes programme, in Lagos.
Secretary, Joint Tax Board, Chief Oseni Elamah (left); Vice President, The Chartered Institute of Taxation of Nigeria (CITN), Ms. Gladys Simplice; President, Chief Cyril Ikemefuna Ede; immediate-past President, Prof. Olateju Somorin; Provost, CITN Tax Academy, Prof. M.T. Abdulrazaq, at the tax institutes programme, in Lagos.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria