The Guardian (Nigeria)

Why Eco Is A Joke, Not In Nigeria’s Interest, By Experts

• Blame Nigeria For Dithering On Decision • ‘Most ECOWAS Central Banks Have Not Audited Accounts In Four Years’

- From Mathias Okwe, Abuja

ECONOMIC experts have cautioned Nigerians holding bated breath and anxiously waiting for the much-hyped Eco currency implementa­tion this year 2020, as a common currency for the ECOWAS sub- region.

They have been advised to drop their apprehensi­ons because the declaratio­n by some ECOWAS countries remains a fluke and a joke, as conditions are not yet ripe for the implementa­tion of the single currency for the region, at least not in the foreseeabl­e two years.

They also warned that Nigeria hastily signing to the new planned currency means surrenderi­ng her fiscal and monetary sovereignt­y, including her foreign reserves which is more than 60 per cent of the entire subregion to the ECOWAS Central Bank, which structure and form nobody knows yet.

One of the experts who called for the dousing of tension is frontline economist, Professor Godwin Owoh, the Executive Chairman of the Society for Analytical Economics and former advisor to former Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Prof. Chukwuma Soludo, while at the CBN. Speaking exclusivel­y to The Guardian, yesterday, the technocrat declared that evidence indicates that the basic requiremen­t for the convergenc­e of the sub-region currencies, which is the audit and verificati­on of the various ECOWAS Central Banks’ accounts has not happened.

He noted: “I know this of a fact, that even Nigeria that is the leading stakeholde­rs in this project has not have its CBN accounts audited and

verified in the past four years. And it takes a minimum of two years to achieve this. So I don’t see any magic happening with the Eco implementa­tion this year. How do you converge when you don’t know your individual countries’ balance. At best what could happen is to float a spirit currency among members, which is not the same thing as a convergent currency. “The attempt to have a common currency has been on before year 2000 and it has suffered multiple postponeme­nts because members have consistent­ly failed to meet the convergent criteria, with Nigeria always leading in the breach. So what I expected ECOWAS to do was to have reduced the criteria to say one: integrity and transparen­cy as it has been so difficult for countries to meet the about four criteria.”

Owoh then chided the Nigerian Finance Minister, Mrs. Zainab Shamsuna Ahmed for dithering on the truth by simply saying Nigeria was not ready than to say Nigeria was studying the developmen­t.

“What are you studying? Something that you are a major stakeholde­r and you are supposed to be a driver? I think she should just come out clean and tell ECOWAS that Nigeria is not ready to surrender her currency, because there is even no structure for the implementa­tion yet on ground. You need to see the way the IMF described in uncomplime­ntary terms the different styles of monetary polices in operation in the ECOWAS region countries, with Nigeria’s as the worst and I’m not surprised because the CBN in particular is operating like a political party. Is it this the kind of situation that you are converging?” Prof. Owoh further asked rhetorical­ly. Speaking in the same vein, a Developmen­t Economist and social commentato­r, Mr. Odilim Enwegbara, also advised Nigeria against signing off to the Eco, saying it would mean subjugatin­g her economic independen­ce to France. He stated: “But will Nigeria surrender its Naira to the Eco, especially Eco that has most of its monetary policy measures taken in both Munich and Paris? It is going to be most unlikely. The obvious are two. First, Nigeria cannot surrender its currency, which means surrenderi­ng its sovereignt­y, without first having to amend its constituti­on to accommodat­e that. Second, this will also require harmonisin­g the country’s banking and financial legislatio­n to match the Eco common currency realities. Given Nigeria’s peculiar economic and financial situation, which is far ahead of all the other Eco-zone member states, these inevitable changes will definitely be easier said than done.

“Given that West African countries are dependent on commoditie­s imports from the euro-zone, the fact that the prices of these commoditie­s are internatio­nally regulated and externally controlled, further subjects eco money supply, interest rates and exchange rates to be dependent on euro. “So, every diversific­ation effort in eco-zone economies will be undermined by euro monetary policymake­rs, whose only interest remains to use the monetary policy to indirectly keep eco-zone economies as exporters of raw materials in euro, especially because most of the imports from the same eco-zone economies will have to officially pass through euro.”

“This will mean permanent underminin­g of ECOWAS members’ industrial­isation. It will also mean lack of job opportunit­ies, economic prosperity and social inclusion. It will also mean low tax receipts for government, which also means social and infrastruc­ture needs unattended. But we all know that high unemployme­nt and social inequality will further trigger increased insecurity and ethno-religious conflicts. Without increased system liquidity to lower the cost of borrowing, loanable funds will never be available to small businesses. Definitely, the eco-zone economies will remain agrarian without infant industry industrial­isation,” Enwegbara further warned.

 ??  ?? CBN Governor, Godwin Emefiele and President of the Commission of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), Jean-claude Kassi Brou
CBN Governor, Godwin Emefiele and President of the Commission of the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), Jean-claude Kassi Brou
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