Saturday, 25 March 2017 03:01

Nigeria’s economic reform plan not good enough – IMF

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International Monetary Fund, IMF, is not satisfied with the Nigerian government’s economic reform efforts, a new report has shown.

Reuters news agency reports that the development could delay talks over $1.4 billion in international loans.

According to a 68-page IMF report obtained by Reuters, the Washington-based fund will urge Nigeria, a major oil producer, to introduce immediate changes to its exchange rate policy.

It would also say its recent reform plan is not enough to drag Africa’s biggest economy out of recession.

“Much more needs to be done", IMF said in the document, written after a final meeting between its representatives and top officials in Abuja, Nigeria’s capital.

“Further actions are urgently needed", it said.

IMF, the report said, would later issue its verdict on Nigeria’s economy on March 29.

The report, from IMF’s acting secretary, which is addressed to members of its executive board, is set to form part of IMF’s verdict, although Nigeria can request alterations.

World Bank has been in talks with Nigeria for a loan of at least $1 billion for more than a year and African Development Bank, AfDB, has $400 million on offer, but discussions have stalled over economic reforms.

Nigeria is seeking the funding for infrastructure investment and to help plug an expected record deficit in this year’s budget as it boosts spending to try to end a recession.

Muhammadu Buhari, Nigeria’s president, has rejected further devaluation of the currency.

Nigeria has at least three exchange rates, including the official one; one for school and medical fees abroad; and a retail rate set by licensed exchange bureaus.

IMF said that if Nigeria did not remove foreign exchange restrictions and unify the exchange rates, it risked “further deterioration in (forex) reserves” and “a disorderly exchange rate depreciation”.

The report said Nigeria should also tackle its over-dependence on oil, low government revenues, a large infrastructure deficit, a rising debt service and double-digit inflation.

Nigeria has, however, not asked IMF for fiscal support.

Earlier, Nigeria released an Economic Recovery and Growth Plan (ERGP) for 2017 to 2020 calling for a market-determined exchange rate.

But IMF, in its report, says ERGP “is more optimistic on growth than (IMF) staff… does not explicitly call for tighter monetary and fiscal policy in the near term, and assumes no immediate change in exchange rate policy – all of which are essential to reduce vulnerabilities and increase investors’ interest.”

Delays in adopting these policies increase vulnerabilities and risk reforms being politicised ahead of the 2019 elections, IMF said.

Nigeria’s woes go beyond its economy, said the report, adding that the northeast is in the throes of a humanitarian crisis caused by the Boko Haram insurgency, which is threatening millions with starvation.

Adoption of a fully flexible exchange rate would likely see the naira, which is propped up by the central bank but trades around 30 percent weaker on the parallel market, plummet in value. Recent injection of hundreds of millions of dollars by Central Bank of Nigeria has, however, seen an increased convergence between the official and black market rates.

Sources said even without the IMF’s proposed reforms, World Bank and AfDB were likely to offer the loans to Nigeria.

The report said Nigeria should articulate a sustainable fiscal policy and adopt structural reforms to diversify the economy away from its dependence on oil and promote competitiveness.

“The outlook is challenging, with growth expected to remain flat and macroeconomic imbalances to persist", it said.

 

PT 


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