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Showing posts with label Economy. Show all posts

Nationwide Strike: FG Woos Workers With Increment To N45k As Minimum Wage

Nationwide Strike: FG Woos Workers With Increment To N45k As Minimum Wage

Fresh report according to HeralNG suggests that the Federal Government of Nigeria will propose a minimum wage of N45,000 to labour leaders in a meeting scheduled to hold today.


This new development by the Federal Government is believed to be an initiative towards to persuade the organised labouur to shun its plans to embark on a nationwide strike set to commence on Wednesday.

The President of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), Ayuba Wabba confirmed the scheduled meeting saying he got a text message inviting him and other labour leaders to the meeting, The Guardian reports.

The meeting, which is scheduled to hold at the Federal Ministry of Labour and Employment at 3.PM, will see the proposed increase by the Federal Government come with some provisos including reduction in the number of civil servants and merging ministries and agencies.

It was also revealed that ministers had been told to lead the initiative on the downsizing.

Also, the Efficiency Unit in the Federal Ministry of Finance, which responsible for coming up with cost reduction strategies is working on the template for the reduction.

The Federal Government would also be relying on the report of the Steve Oronsaiye’s panel on the rationalisation of the civil service in the streamlining process, TheHeraldNg Reports

Fresh report according to HeralNG suggests that the Federal Government of Nigeria will propose a minimum wage of N45,000 to labour leaders in a meeting scheduled to hold today.


This new development by the Federal Government is believed to be an initiative towards to persuade the organised labouur to shun its plans to embark on a nationwide strike set to commence on Wednesday.

The President of the Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC), Ayuba Wabba confirmed the scheduled meeting saying he got a text message inviting him and other labour leaders to the meeting, The Guardian reports.

The meeting, which is scheduled to hold at the Federal Ministry of Labour and Employment at 3.PM, will see the proposed increase by the Federal Government come with some provisos including reduction in the number of civil servants and merging ministries and agencies.

It was also revealed that ministers had been told to lead the initiative on the downsizing.

Also, the Efficiency Unit in the Federal Ministry of Finance, which responsible for coming up with cost reduction strategies is working on the template for the reduction.

The Federal Government would also be relying on the report of the Steve Oronsaiye’s panel on the rationalisation of the civil service in the streamlining process, TheHeraldNg Reports

Exclusive: FG SECRETLY Sacks Over 30,000 Workers

Exclusive: FG SECRETLY Sacks Over 30,000 Workers

Nigerian Pilot - Between September 2015 and last month, the Federal Government is alleged to have secretly sacked more than 30,000 staff of ministries and agencies.

According to sources, those sacked were purportedly labelled ‘ghost workers’, even as the government declared that it has saved as much as $15 billion after removing these ‘ghost workers’.

Investigation carried out by Nigerian Pilot Saturday revealed that majority of those sacked were staff recruited between mid 2013 and April 2015.
Nigerian Pilot Saturday learnt that the federal government saved about $3 billion monthly from the exercise as was confirmed by the Minister of Finance, Mrs. Kemi Adeosun, last December when she disclosed that as much as, “N2.29 billion was saved by the government after removing some ghost workers from the federal government’s payroll.”

From information gathered, then federal government had in December last year, audited its staff using biometric data and a bank verification number, BVN to identify the holders of bank accounts into which state salaries were being paid.

Following the exercise, the government later disclosed that almost 24,000 ghost workers were discovered and expunged from the staff payroll, a development the government said resulted in the saving of N2.3 billion, according to statistics released by the ministry of finance.

To establish the number of ghost workers, the panel found many receiving salaries neither have data nor had been captured by the IPPIS, but were able to collect monthly salary with the connivance of some senior civil servants at the Office of the Accountant General of the Federation, Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN and some banks.

The panel, we learnt established that the number of civil servants receiving salary did not correspond to the names on the accounts and that some were receiving salaries from several sources.

However, Nigerian Pilot Saturday investigation revealed that majority of those sacked as ghost workers were actually authentic staff of the ministries and agencies where they were purportedly found to be collecting salaries illegally.

Our findings established that the sacked staff were those employed in some of the replacement exercises for lower and medium level staff that may not have required going through the Federal Character Commission.

It was equally suspected that some of those laid off were those recruited by political appointees and directors by way of favour and political patronage.

For instance, we learnt that in the Office of the Accountant General and the Federal Ministry of Commerce, some retired directors were told to bring in ‘substitutes’who could either be their children or relatives.

They were ‘legitimately’ recruited, but because of a misunderstanding between officials, the matter was leaked and some of the favoured persons were labelled ghost workers and laid off.

It was also alleged that staff brought in as a fovour could remain in the employ of the federal government depending on the political affiliation of the director or political appointee that nominated or brought them in, as the present administration may choose to turn a blind eye.

In another case, last October the salaries of some staff of the Ministry of Internal Affairs were stopped because they were alleged to be ghost workers. However, investigation revealed that these workers had issues with their BVN, which was also not entirely their fault.

In one of such cases, a staff took up the panel and it was realised that the staff in question had filled a comprehensive data including his correct BVN details, but somehow these details were wrongly entered and submitted to the Office of the Accountant General, which labelled him a ‘ghost worker’.

It would be recalled that Festus Akanbi, special adviser to Nigeria’s Finance Minister, Kemi Adeosun, stated that 23,846 alleged nonexistent workers were removed from the government’s payroll.

Akanbi said that 312,000 civil servants had as at last December been checked and that the ministry would now carry out “periodic checks and utilise computer-assisted audit techniques” in a bid to crack down on corruption in the public sector.

The periodic check may led to yet another ‘discovery of ghost workers’ as confirmed by the acting Chairman of Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, Ibrahim Magu.

Speaking recently during the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC Anti-corruption Sensitisation Programme organised for the Federal Ministry of Power, Works and Housing, Magu, who stopped short of questioning veracity of the claimed ghost workers, urged civil servants to familiarise themselves with basic rules of engagement to avoid being unduly embarrassed.

He equally said, “Currently, EFCC working in close collaboration with the Federal Ministry of Finance and the Office of the Account General of the Federation has uncovered 37,395 ghost workers in the Federal civil service and has cost the Federal Government close to N1 billion.
“Our investigations have so far revealed that the Federal Government has lost close to N1 billion to these ghost workers. The figure will definitely increase as we unravel more ghost workers buried deep in Federal Civil Service payrolls.’’

We also recall that the Minister of Information and National Orientation, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, had alerted the nation that the IPPIS had been compromised and suggested that the federal government was considering ways to beef up the IPPIS to guarantee its effectiveness.

The government, which is facing serious cash crunch, says wages and other personnel costs represent 40 per cent of its total expenditure,
Nigeria’s economy is currently struggling, largely due to a global slump in oil prices; oil constitutes more 80 per cent of the value of Nigerian exports. The country’s deficit is expected to double to N2.2 trillion ($11 billion) in 2016 and the country is seeking loans to finance its biggest ever budget yet.
Nigerian Pilot - Between September 2015 and last month, the Federal Government is alleged to have secretly sacked more than 30,000 staff of ministries and agencies.

According to sources, those sacked were purportedly labelled ‘ghost workers’, even as the government declared that it has saved as much as $15 billion after removing these ‘ghost workers’.

Investigation carried out by Nigerian Pilot Saturday revealed that majority of those sacked were staff recruited between mid 2013 and April 2015.
Nigerian Pilot Saturday learnt that the federal government saved about $3 billion monthly from the exercise as was confirmed by the Minister of Finance, Mrs. Kemi Adeosun, last December when she disclosed that as much as, “N2.29 billion was saved by the government after removing some ghost workers from the federal government’s payroll.”

From information gathered, then federal government had in December last year, audited its staff using biometric data and a bank verification number, BVN to identify the holders of bank accounts into which state salaries were being paid.

Following the exercise, the government later disclosed that almost 24,000 ghost workers were discovered and expunged from the staff payroll, a development the government said resulted in the saving of N2.3 billion, according to statistics released by the ministry of finance.

To establish the number of ghost workers, the panel found many receiving salaries neither have data nor had been captured by the IPPIS, but were able to collect monthly salary with the connivance of some senior civil servants at the Office of the Accountant General of the Federation, Central Bank of Nigeria, CBN and some banks.

The panel, we learnt established that the number of civil servants receiving salary did not correspond to the names on the accounts and that some were receiving salaries from several sources.

However, Nigerian Pilot Saturday investigation revealed that majority of those sacked as ghost workers were actually authentic staff of the ministries and agencies where they were purportedly found to be collecting salaries illegally.

Our findings established that the sacked staff were those employed in some of the replacement exercises for lower and medium level staff that may not have required going through the Federal Character Commission.

It was equally suspected that some of those laid off were those recruited by political appointees and directors by way of favour and political patronage.

For instance, we learnt that in the Office of the Accountant General and the Federal Ministry of Commerce, some retired directors were told to bring in ‘substitutes’who could either be their children or relatives.

They were ‘legitimately’ recruited, but because of a misunderstanding between officials, the matter was leaked and some of the favoured persons were labelled ghost workers and laid off.

It was also alleged that staff brought in as a fovour could remain in the employ of the federal government depending on the political affiliation of the director or political appointee that nominated or brought them in, as the present administration may choose to turn a blind eye.

In another case, last October the salaries of some staff of the Ministry of Internal Affairs were stopped because they were alleged to be ghost workers. However, investigation revealed that these workers had issues with their BVN, which was also not entirely their fault.

In one of such cases, a staff took up the panel and it was realised that the staff in question had filled a comprehensive data including his correct BVN details, but somehow these details were wrongly entered and submitted to the Office of the Accountant General, which labelled him a ‘ghost worker’.

It would be recalled that Festus Akanbi, special adviser to Nigeria’s Finance Minister, Kemi Adeosun, stated that 23,846 alleged nonexistent workers were removed from the government’s payroll.

Akanbi said that 312,000 civil servants had as at last December been checked and that the ministry would now carry out “periodic checks and utilise computer-assisted audit techniques” in a bid to crack down on corruption in the public sector.

The periodic check may led to yet another ‘discovery of ghost workers’ as confirmed by the acting Chairman of Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC, Ibrahim Magu.

Speaking recently during the Economic and Financial Crimes Commission, EFCC Anti-corruption Sensitisation Programme organised for the Federal Ministry of Power, Works and Housing, Magu, who stopped short of questioning veracity of the claimed ghost workers, urged civil servants to familiarise themselves with basic rules of engagement to avoid being unduly embarrassed.

He equally said, “Currently, EFCC working in close collaboration with the Federal Ministry of Finance and the Office of the Account General of the Federation has uncovered 37,395 ghost workers in the Federal civil service and has cost the Federal Government close to N1 billion.
“Our investigations have so far revealed that the Federal Government has lost close to N1 billion to these ghost workers. The figure will definitely increase as we unravel more ghost workers buried deep in Federal Civil Service payrolls.’’

We also recall that the Minister of Information and National Orientation, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, had alerted the nation that the IPPIS had been compromised and suggested that the federal government was considering ways to beef up the IPPIS to guarantee its effectiveness.

The government, which is facing serious cash crunch, says wages and other personnel costs represent 40 per cent of its total expenditure,
Nigeria’s economy is currently struggling, largely due to a global slump in oil prices; oil constitutes more 80 per cent of the value of Nigerian exports. The country’s deficit is expected to double to N2.2 trillion ($11 billion) in 2016 and the country is seeking loans to finance its biggest ever budget yet.

Why I Won't DEVALUE The Naira - Buhari Reiterates; IMF, World Bank did same in 1985 but...

Why I Won't DEVALUE The Naira - Buhari Reiterates; IMF, World Bank did same in 1985 but...

In a bid to expressed his resolved to be adamant despite calls  and pressure from foreign powers to further devalue the local currency, President Muhammadu Buhari on Friday said that his reason for insisting on no further devaluation of Naira was that the recent ones never paid Nigeria any good. 

The president who spoke while meeting with members of the Council of Retired Federal Permanent Secretaries, led by Otunba Christopher Tugbobo at the presidential villa, Abuja stated that he was yet to be convinced by anyone on doing the contrary. 

“When I was military Head of State, the IMF and the World Bank wanted us devalue the Naira and remove petrol subsidy but I stood my grounds for the good of Nigeria. 

“The Naira remained strong against the Dollar and other foreign currencies until I was removed from office in August, 1985 and it was devalued. 

“But how many factories were built and how many jobs were created by the devaluation? 

“That is why I’m still asking to be convinced today on the benefits of devaluation,” he said. 

President Buhari also accepted the Council’s pledge of support for the successful implementation of his administration’s change agenda, especially in the priority areas of improving security, curbing corruption and revitalizing the national economy.

In a bid to expressed his resolved to be adamant despite calls  and pressure from foreign powers to further devalue the local currency, President Muhammadu Buhari on Friday said that his reason for insisting on no further devaluation of Naira was that the recent ones never paid Nigeria any good. 

The president who spoke while meeting with members of the Council of Retired Federal Permanent Secretaries, led by Otunba Christopher Tugbobo at the presidential villa, Abuja stated that he was yet to be convinced by anyone on doing the contrary. 

“When I was military Head of State, the IMF and the World Bank wanted us devalue the Naira and remove petrol subsidy but I stood my grounds for the good of Nigeria. 

“The Naira remained strong against the Dollar and other foreign currencies until I was removed from office in August, 1985 and it was devalued. 

“But how many factories were built and how many jobs were created by the devaluation? 

“That is why I’m still asking to be convinced today on the benefits of devaluation,” he said. 

President Buhari also accepted the Council’s pledge of support for the successful implementation of his administration’s change agenda, especially in the priority areas of improving security, curbing corruption and revitalizing the national economy.

What Buhari's Currency Deal Will Actually Do To The Naira - CBN Gov. Emefiele Opens Up

What Buhari's Currency Deal Will Actually Do To The Naira - CBN Gov. Emefiele Opens Up

ThisDay - Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Governor, Mr. Godwin Ifeanyi Emefiele, has expressed optimism that the agreement reached between Nigeria and China last week on a currency swap will strengthen the naira and help reduce the strong demand for the US dollar in the country.

President Muhammadu Buhari last week travelled with a high-level government delegation to China where he signed a $6 billion deal to fund joint infrastructure projects.

During Buhari’s visit to Beijing, the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China Ltd (ICBC), the world’s biggest lender, and Nigeria’s central bank signed a deal on yuan transactions.

“It means that the renminbi (yuan) is free to flow among different banks in Nigeria, and the renminbi has been included in the foreign exchange reserves of Nigeria,” Lin Songtian, Director General of the African Affairs Department of China’s foreign ministry, told reporters.

The agreement was reached following a meeting between Buhari and Chinese President Xi Jinping.

The move came after Finance Minister, Mrs. Kemi Adeosun, said recently that Nigeria was looking at Chinese panda bonds – yuan-denominated bonds sold by overseas entities on the mainland – adding that they would be cheaper than Eurobonds.

Nigeria’s central bank has said it plans to diversify its foreign exchange reserves away from the dollar by switching a stockpile into yuan. It converted up to a tenth of its reserves into yuan five years ago.

Lin said a framework on currency swaps had been agreed with Nigeria, making it easier to settle trade deals in yuan.

Throwing more light on the currency swap, Emefiele said in a phone interview with THISDAY yesterday that Nigeria was not the only country that had agreed to a currency swap with China, as several other countries – developed and emerging markets – with growing trade volumes with China had entered into similar currency swaps with the Asian country.

He said as the second largest economy in the world, more and more countries are turning to China for business, as the country seeks to make its currency a convertible global currency like the US dollar, the euro, the Japanese yen and British pound sterling.

To buttress Emefiele’s point, information provided by the Peoples Bank of China (PBOC; China’s central bank) showed that China had bilateral currency swap agreements with 31 central banks for varying sums at the end of 2015.

The countries are the United Kingdom, Belarus, Malaysia, South Africa, Australia, Armenia, Surinam, Hong Kong, Pakistan, Thailand, Kazakhstan, South Korea, Canada, Qatar, Russia, the European Union, Sri Lanka, Mongolia, New Zealand, Argentina, Switzerland, Iceland, Albania, Hungary, Brazil, Singapore, Turkey, Ukraine, Indonesia, Uzbekistan, and the United Arab Emirates, totalling RMB3.137 trillion.

China has a trade volume of RMB10.747 trillion with the 31 countries with which it has currency swaps.

Emefiele said: “The agreement on the currency swap with China will definitely benefit Nigeria because the essence of the mandate is to ensure that Nigeria is designated as the trading hub with China in the West African sub-region for people who want the renminbi as a currency denomination.

“Also for us, we believe that using the renminbi will improve trade with China, as this will encourage importers to open L/Cs in the Chinese currency for the importation of raw materials, equipment and machinery from China, rather than other trading regions, so the agreement will encourage trade between both countries.”

But when reminded that trade between Nigeria and China was skewed heavily in the favour of China, he said: “On the reverse, we are working to encourage the export of raw materials to China in order to reduce the trade imbalance.

“And we aim to become competitive by improving on infrastructure especially in the area of electricity and ensuring that credit is made available to manufacturers at concessionary rates.”

Emefiele, however, declined to reveal how much Nigeria had proposed under the currency swap with China, saying that talks were still ongoing with the PBOC and would be concluded in the next few weeks.

But a source in the presidency conversant with talks revealed that the CBN had proposed a swap of RMB50 billion, about N1.98 trillion ($10 billion).

“The Peoples Bank of China, however, is unlikely to agree to what was proposed, so we are looking at a swap somewhere in the region of RMB20 billon which is about N792 billion to N990 billion ($4 billion to $5 billion),” the source revealed.

On the volume of trade between Nigeria and China, investigations by THISDAY showed that Nigeria’s trade with the Asian giant has grown in leaps and bounds compared with nine other major trading partners.

For instance, in 2014, while Nigeria’s estimated trade volume with China alone was $11.76 billion, the country’s (Nigeria) trade volume with United States, Britain, France, Germany, Turkey, India, Japan, Italy and South Africa combined was $66.8 billion (see table for breakdown on page 1).

This showed that relative to the nine countries, Nigeria’s trade volume alone with China accounted for 15 per cent of the total trade with Nigeria’s major trading partners.

In 2015, Nigeria’s trade volume with China rose to $14.94 billion, representing 22.2 per cent of $78.56 billion of Nigeria’s total trade with eight of its major trading partners. Data on trade with South Africa in 2015 was not available.

But from the latest available figures, the trade imbalance between Nigeria and China is significant, as Nigeria is a major export market for China, absorbing $16.9 billion worth of Chinese goods in 2014. China does also buy some Nigerian crude, but it’s a lot less – $2.4 billion in 2014 (and probably half that today).

Commenting on the currency swap, the chief executive of Financial Derivatives Company (FDC) Limited, Mr. Bismarck Rewane, cautioned that what the deal has done is “to concentrate your trade in the hands of one country”.

“With the deal, Nigeria will be using the yuan to import from China, while they (China) will use the naira to buy crude oil from Nigeria. And then they (China) will take the oil to sell in the market to get dollars.

“So Nigeria’s dollar income will reduce and its imports from the rest of the world would also reduce. So Nigeria will be more dependent on China. That is all,” Rewane said.

Rewane also disagreed with the CBN governor on the impact of the swap on the naira, stressing that the effect would be neutral.

“It doesn’t change anything. The man who is going to import from the US, or the man who is going to import a car from Germany, will he need yuan to buy it. We are only playing with mirrors. It does not increase the actual flow of dollars to Nigeria. It only means that our trade is more concentrated in Chinese goods and the Chinese with the naira they get from Nigeria when they buy oil,” the FDC boss added.

But another economic analyst who did not want to be named, welcomed the currency swap, noting that in seeking foreign aid for the country, Nigeria’s policy makers over the years had allowed themselves “to be led into a blind alley by Nigeria’s Western masters and mentors”.

He was of the opinion that by widening the scope of the country’s international friendship and in particular by the establishment of diplomatic, cultural, trade and other mutually beneficial relations with China, Nigeria had taken the right step.

“The foreign policy of Nigeria should be independent and should be guided by the following principles: the promotion of economic relations with all nations of the world; co-operation with all nations of the world in so far as they respect the ideals for which we stand; respect for the sovereignty of nations and non-interference in their domestic affairs; and attraction of foreign assistance (capital, technical skills and training opportunities for Nigerians) on the most advantageous terms,” he said.

Meanwhile, the CBN last week slashed the amount of dollars allocated to commercial and merchant banks to $177,876,814, compared with the $189,489,057 it allocated in the preceding week, as the country’s external reserves declined.

The country’s forex reserves which stood at $27.858 billion on April 1 depreciated by $408 million to $27.450 billion last Thursday.

The decline in forex allocation to the banks by the CBN was attributed to the deal struck by the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) and international oil companies (IOCs) on direct dollar sales to oil marketing firms aimed at addressing the fuel shortage in the country.

Of the $177.9 million sold to 15 commercial and two merchant banks, Standard Chartered Bank Nigeria with a total of $18,652,838 received the highest allocation of forex from the central bank.

The bank sold the greenback to 227 customers comprising those importing industrial raw materials and others who paid for school fees overseas, among others.

Standard Chartered was closely followed by Zenith Bank, which was allotted $16,691,793. Zenith Bank had a total of 372 corporate and individual customers on its list.

Also, Stanbic IBTC with an allotment of $15,908,026 came in third. Just like the previous weeks, 51 customers that featured on Stanbic IBTC’s list purchased dollars from the bank to exit Nigeria’s bond and equities markets.

Guaranty Trust Bank Plc (GTB) with $14,808,285 held the fourth slot, FirstBank Nigeria with $14,163,477 occupied the fifth position, while Diamond Bank with returns of $13,819,849 followed in sixth place.

First City Monument Bank Limited held the seventh position with returns of $13,358,243 reported last week, while Ecobank Nigeria occupied the eighth position with returns of $13,252,922.

An assessment of its forex sales to customers during the week showed that Diamond Bank had a total of 310 corporate and individual customers. Some of its major customers that bought large chunks of forex included Dangote Cement ($2.552 million), Bua Sugar Refinery Limited ($1 million) and Dozzy Oil and Gas ($3.167 million).

NIGERIA’S TRADE VOLUME WITH MAJOR TRADING PARTNERS


 RETURNS ON FOREX UTILISATION FOR APRIL 11-15


ThisDay - Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) Governor, Mr. Godwin Ifeanyi Emefiele, has expressed optimism that the agreement reached between Nigeria and China last week on a currency swap will strengthen the naira and help reduce the strong demand for the US dollar in the country.

President Muhammadu Buhari last week travelled with a high-level government delegation to China where he signed a $6 billion deal to fund joint infrastructure projects.

During Buhari’s visit to Beijing, the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China Ltd (ICBC), the world’s biggest lender, and Nigeria’s central bank signed a deal on yuan transactions.

“It means that the renminbi (yuan) is free to flow among different banks in Nigeria, and the renminbi has been included in the foreign exchange reserves of Nigeria,” Lin Songtian, Director General of the African Affairs Department of China’s foreign ministry, told reporters.

The agreement was reached following a meeting between Buhari and Chinese President Xi Jinping.

The move came after Finance Minister, Mrs. Kemi Adeosun, said recently that Nigeria was looking at Chinese panda bonds – yuan-denominated bonds sold by overseas entities on the mainland – adding that they would be cheaper than Eurobonds.

Nigeria’s central bank has said it plans to diversify its foreign exchange reserves away from the dollar by switching a stockpile into yuan. It converted up to a tenth of its reserves into yuan five years ago.

Lin said a framework on currency swaps had been agreed with Nigeria, making it easier to settle trade deals in yuan.

Throwing more light on the currency swap, Emefiele said in a phone interview with THISDAY yesterday that Nigeria was not the only country that had agreed to a currency swap with China, as several other countries – developed and emerging markets – with growing trade volumes with China had entered into similar currency swaps with the Asian country.

He said as the second largest economy in the world, more and more countries are turning to China for business, as the country seeks to make its currency a convertible global currency like the US dollar, the euro, the Japanese yen and British pound sterling.

To buttress Emefiele’s point, information provided by the Peoples Bank of China (PBOC; China’s central bank) showed that China had bilateral currency swap agreements with 31 central banks for varying sums at the end of 2015.

The countries are the United Kingdom, Belarus, Malaysia, South Africa, Australia, Armenia, Surinam, Hong Kong, Pakistan, Thailand, Kazakhstan, South Korea, Canada, Qatar, Russia, the European Union, Sri Lanka, Mongolia, New Zealand, Argentina, Switzerland, Iceland, Albania, Hungary, Brazil, Singapore, Turkey, Ukraine, Indonesia, Uzbekistan, and the United Arab Emirates, totalling RMB3.137 trillion.

China has a trade volume of RMB10.747 trillion with the 31 countries with which it has currency swaps.

Emefiele said: “The agreement on the currency swap with China will definitely benefit Nigeria because the essence of the mandate is to ensure that Nigeria is designated as the trading hub with China in the West African sub-region for people who want the renminbi as a currency denomination.

“Also for us, we believe that using the renminbi will improve trade with China, as this will encourage importers to open L/Cs in the Chinese currency for the importation of raw materials, equipment and machinery from China, rather than other trading regions, so the agreement will encourage trade between both countries.”

But when reminded that trade between Nigeria and China was skewed heavily in the favour of China, he said: “On the reverse, we are working to encourage the export of raw materials to China in order to reduce the trade imbalance.

“And we aim to become competitive by improving on infrastructure especially in the area of electricity and ensuring that credit is made available to manufacturers at concessionary rates.”

Emefiele, however, declined to reveal how much Nigeria had proposed under the currency swap with China, saying that talks were still ongoing with the PBOC and would be concluded in the next few weeks.

But a source in the presidency conversant with talks revealed that the CBN had proposed a swap of RMB50 billion, about N1.98 trillion ($10 billion).

“The Peoples Bank of China, however, is unlikely to agree to what was proposed, so we are looking at a swap somewhere in the region of RMB20 billon which is about N792 billion to N990 billion ($4 billion to $5 billion),” the source revealed.

On the volume of trade between Nigeria and China, investigations by THISDAY showed that Nigeria’s trade with the Asian giant has grown in leaps and bounds compared with nine other major trading partners.

For instance, in 2014, while Nigeria’s estimated trade volume with China alone was $11.76 billion, the country’s (Nigeria) trade volume with United States, Britain, France, Germany, Turkey, India, Japan, Italy and South Africa combined was $66.8 billion (see table for breakdown on page 1).

This showed that relative to the nine countries, Nigeria’s trade volume alone with China accounted for 15 per cent of the total trade with Nigeria’s major trading partners.

In 2015, Nigeria’s trade volume with China rose to $14.94 billion, representing 22.2 per cent of $78.56 billion of Nigeria’s total trade with eight of its major trading partners. Data on trade with South Africa in 2015 was not available.

But from the latest available figures, the trade imbalance between Nigeria and China is significant, as Nigeria is a major export market for China, absorbing $16.9 billion worth of Chinese goods in 2014. China does also buy some Nigerian crude, but it’s a lot less – $2.4 billion in 2014 (and probably half that today).

Commenting on the currency swap, the chief executive of Financial Derivatives Company (FDC) Limited, Mr. Bismarck Rewane, cautioned that what the deal has done is “to concentrate your trade in the hands of one country”.

“With the deal, Nigeria will be using the yuan to import from China, while they (China) will use the naira to buy crude oil from Nigeria. And then they (China) will take the oil to sell in the market to get dollars.

“So Nigeria’s dollar income will reduce and its imports from the rest of the world would also reduce. So Nigeria will be more dependent on China. That is all,” Rewane said.

Rewane also disagreed with the CBN governor on the impact of the swap on the naira, stressing that the effect would be neutral.

“It doesn’t change anything. The man who is going to import from the US, or the man who is going to import a car from Germany, will he need yuan to buy it. We are only playing with mirrors. It does not increase the actual flow of dollars to Nigeria. It only means that our trade is more concentrated in Chinese goods and the Chinese with the naira they get from Nigeria when they buy oil,” the FDC boss added.

But another economic analyst who did not want to be named, welcomed the currency swap, noting that in seeking foreign aid for the country, Nigeria’s policy makers over the years had allowed themselves “to be led into a blind alley by Nigeria’s Western masters and mentors”.

He was of the opinion that by widening the scope of the country’s international friendship and in particular by the establishment of diplomatic, cultural, trade and other mutually beneficial relations with China, Nigeria had taken the right step.

“The foreign policy of Nigeria should be independent and should be guided by the following principles: the promotion of economic relations with all nations of the world; co-operation with all nations of the world in so far as they respect the ideals for which we stand; respect for the sovereignty of nations and non-interference in their domestic affairs; and attraction of foreign assistance (capital, technical skills and training opportunities for Nigerians) on the most advantageous terms,” he said.

Meanwhile, the CBN last week slashed the amount of dollars allocated to commercial and merchant banks to $177,876,814, compared with the $189,489,057 it allocated in the preceding week, as the country’s external reserves declined.

The country’s forex reserves which stood at $27.858 billion on April 1 depreciated by $408 million to $27.450 billion last Thursday.

The decline in forex allocation to the banks by the CBN was attributed to the deal struck by the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) and international oil companies (IOCs) on direct dollar sales to oil marketing firms aimed at addressing the fuel shortage in the country.

Of the $177.9 million sold to 15 commercial and two merchant banks, Standard Chartered Bank Nigeria with a total of $18,652,838 received the highest allocation of forex from the central bank.

The bank sold the greenback to 227 customers comprising those importing industrial raw materials and others who paid for school fees overseas, among others.

Standard Chartered was closely followed by Zenith Bank, which was allotted $16,691,793. Zenith Bank had a total of 372 corporate and individual customers on its list.

Also, Stanbic IBTC with an allotment of $15,908,026 came in third. Just like the previous weeks, 51 customers that featured on Stanbic IBTC’s list purchased dollars from the bank to exit Nigeria’s bond and equities markets.

Guaranty Trust Bank Plc (GTB) with $14,808,285 held the fourth slot, FirstBank Nigeria with $14,163,477 occupied the fifth position, while Diamond Bank with returns of $13,819,849 followed in sixth place.

First City Monument Bank Limited held the seventh position with returns of $13,358,243 reported last week, while Ecobank Nigeria occupied the eighth position with returns of $13,252,922.

An assessment of its forex sales to customers during the week showed that Diamond Bank had a total of 310 corporate and individual customers. Some of its major customers that bought large chunks of forex included Dangote Cement ($2.552 million), Bua Sugar Refinery Limited ($1 million) and Dozzy Oil and Gas ($3.167 million).

NIGERIA’S TRADE VOLUME WITH MAJOR TRADING PARTNERS


 RETURNS ON FOREX UTILISATION FOR APRIL 11-15


APC, Buhari Not RESPONSIBLE For Current Economic Hardship - PDP's Senator Akpabio

APC, Buhari Not RESPONSIBLE For Current Economic Hardship - PDP's Senator Akpabio

akpabio
Daily Post - The Senate Minority Leader and member of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, Senator Godswill Akpabio has appealed to Nigerians not to blame the current economy woes on the All Progressives Congress, APC, led government by President Muhammadu Buhari

Addressing journalists in Arochukwu, Abia State, Akpabio said the country’s current economic challenge was a global phenomenon orchestrated by the steady fall in oil prices.

Akpabio who advocated for diversification of the economy said the global economic meltdown is being felt more by Nigerians because the country runs a mono-economy built around oil.

He enjoined the Federal Government to pay attention to other sectors of the economy like mining, agricultural and entrepreneurship ventures and as well as foreign direct investment to boost the country’s revenue base.

Akpabio said, “So, what has happened here is that with the massive failure, what we call oil glut in the market, the oil price has reduced below what we expected in the last 20 years. That automatically has affected our economy.

“It has nothing to do with which administration is in power. It has something to do with resources to be able to deliver the dividend of democracy.”

The former Governor while admitting the effect of the harsh economy on the citizenry sued for patience from Nigerians and solicited support for the present administration in the interest of the country.

“The country belongs to all of us and if the country collapses on our heads, it means that we bequeath nothing to our children,” he said.
akpabio
Daily Post - The Senate Minority Leader and member of the Peoples Democratic Party, PDP, Senator Godswill Akpabio has appealed to Nigerians not to blame the current economy woes on the All Progressives Congress, APC, led government by President Muhammadu Buhari

Addressing journalists in Arochukwu, Abia State, Akpabio said the country’s current economic challenge was a global phenomenon orchestrated by the steady fall in oil prices.

Akpabio who advocated for diversification of the economy said the global economic meltdown is being felt more by Nigerians because the country runs a mono-economy built around oil.

He enjoined the Federal Government to pay attention to other sectors of the economy like mining, agricultural and entrepreneurship ventures and as well as foreign direct investment to boost the country’s revenue base.

Akpabio said, “So, what has happened here is that with the massive failure, what we call oil glut in the market, the oil price has reduced below what we expected in the last 20 years. That automatically has affected our economy.

“It has nothing to do with which administration is in power. It has something to do with resources to be able to deliver the dividend of democracy.”

The former Governor while admitting the effect of the harsh economy on the citizenry sued for patience from Nigerians and solicited support for the present administration in the interest of the country.

“The country belongs to all of us and if the country collapses on our heads, it means that we bequeath nothing to our children,” he said.

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