Muhammad Sanusi II, the emir of Kano and
the immediate past governor of the Central Bank (CBN), says President
Muhammadu Buhari’s endorsement of the CBN foreign exchange policy
encourages corruption.
Lauding Buhari’s removal of “wasteful and
corrupt fuel subsidies”, Sanusi said the current forex policy endorsed
by the president encourages similar rent seeking and corruption which
trailed the subsidy regime.
“He (Buhari) has put an end to the [crude]swap regime which is also one
side of rent-seeking and corruption . . . he has made the NNPC start
producing accounts, so there is greater transparency,” Sanusi told
Financial Times. “These measures are good for the economy and display
strong political will to change the system. But getting monetary and
fiscal policies right will be crucial for broader progress in structural
reform.” FT quoted the emir as saying the president’s anti-corruption
stance was “totally inconsistent” with the foreign exchange regime he
supported, adding that it “encourages corruption and rent-seeking
similar to the fuel subsidy regime”. The emir, who was CBN governor from
2009 to 2014, expressed his displeasure with the monetary policy regime
which he said has “very obvious drawbacks that far outweigh its dubious
benefits”. “Unfortunately, because the exchange rate is right out there
in front now, monetary policy is being seen as the barometer for
broader economic thinking,” he said. “It is sad that on this one policy
you get it so wrong that you risk taking away attention from everything
else you are doing.” Sanusi who resisted devaluation during his own
tenure as CBN governor said he did so because he “had reserves of over
$40bn and an oil price at over $110,” admitting that there are no easy
ways out of the current situation and “devaluation is a bitter pill”.
The country’s economic woes were now being exacerbated, with the
currency peg and restrictions in the foreign exchange market creating “a
lot of speculative and precautionary demand,” Sanusi argued. Exporters
and investors “are holding on to foreign currency, as no one would sell
at the rate the government is setting”, while “the government does not
have the reserves to keep the exchange rate at its official level in the
market”. “These policies have been tried in different parts of the
world and in this country before and they have just never worked. No
matter what the stated intention behind them, they are wrong,” he said.
The gap between the black market rate and the “artificial” official
exchange rate would keep widening until the bank adopted a more
realistic policy or the price of oil climbed and dramatically increased
reserves, he further said. He said a more flexible exchange rate policy
at this point would be the “least bad option”. “We are hopeful that
given all the other positive things done so far, policy will head
broadly in the right direction and flexibility will come in down the
line.” Buhari and the CBN have continually insisted that devaluation of
the naira is not the way out, with the president insisting that he would
not want to “murder” (devalue) the naira. The parallel market sells at
N306, which is 50% higher than the official rate of N198.
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