LAGOS — Fund, IMF, ye The International
Monetary Fund yesterday, said the naira is overvalued by 10 to 20 per cent.
Head of IMF Mission in Nigeria, Gene Leon, stated this during a telephone media
briefing on the IMF staff report on 2017 Article IV Consultation with Nigeria.
That naira overvaluation is “somewhere to the tune of 10 to 20 per cent,” Gene
Leon, IMF mission chief for Nigeria, said. The IMF in the staff report called
for urgent macroeconomic reforms, removal of foreign exchange restrictions, and
elimination of multiple exchange rates. CBN & Exchange rate: Naira &
Dollar The IMF report stated: “Executive Directors recognized that the Nigerian
economy has been negatively impacted by low oil prices and production.
Directors commended the efforts already made by the authorities to reduce
vulnerabilities and enhance resilience, including by increasing fuel prices,
raising the monetary policy rate, and allowing the exchange rate to depreciate.
“However, in light of the persisting internal and external challenges, they
emphasized that stronger macroeconomic policies are urgently needed to rebuild
confidence and foster economic recovery. Economic Recovery and Growth Plan
“Directors welcomed the authorities’ Economic Recovery and Growth Plan, ERGP,
which focuses on economic diversification driven by the private sector, and
government initiatives to strengthen infrastructure—including the recently
adopted power sector recovery plan. However, they underlined that without
stronger policies these objectives may not be achieved. “Directors generally
emphasized the need for a front-loaded, revenue-based fiscal consolidation
starting in 2017, to reduce the Federal Government interest payments-to-revenue
ratio to sustainable levels. “They underscored that priority should be given to
increasing non-oil revenue, including through raising VAT and excise rates,
strengthening compliance, and closing loopholes and exemptions. “Administering
an independent fuel price-setting mechanism to eliminate fuel subsidies,
strengthening public financial management, and developing a well-targeted
social safety net would also support the adjustment. Directors stressed the
need to contain the fiscal deficit of state and local governments, including
through improved transparency and monitoring. External adjustment is necessary
to protect foreign currency buffers “Directors underscored that external
adjustment is necessary to protect foreign currency buffers and reduce
vulnerabilities. They commended the recent easing of some exchange restrictions
and urged the authorities to remove the remaining restrictions and multiple
currency practices, thus unifying the foreign exchange market and helping
regain investor confidence. “Directors emphasized that these policies should be
supported by tighter monetary policy and fiscal consolidation to anchor
inflation expectations and to limit the risk of exchange rate overshooting, as
well as structural reforms to improve competitiveness. “Directors welcomed the
steps to strengthen banking sector resilience through stronger prudential
requirements. With asset quality declining, they recommended further
intensifying bank monitoring, enhancing contingency planning, and strengthening
resolution frameworks. Directors encouraged quickly increasing the capital of
under-capitalized banks and putting a time limit on regulatory forbearance.”Source: Vanguard

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