CBN seeks institutional reforms to stem smuggling, migration of terrorists
November 27, 2019901 views0 comments
The Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) yesterday rose from its last meeting for the year with a call on the federal government to launch institutional reforms through policies that would automate day-to-day processes of key revenue generating and security agencies as a way of stemming smuggling, kidnapping and the migration of terrorists into the country.
It also urged the federal government to reconsider the proposed $57 per barrel benchmark price for oil in the 2020 budget and focus on building fiscal buffers.
In addition, it supported the sustained closure of Nigeria’s land borders.
Godwin Emefiele, CBN governor, read the communiqué containing these resolutions to journalists at the end of the two-day MPC meeting in Abuja.
He said: “On the fiscal sector, the committee identified the need for institutional reforms through policies that would automate day-to-day processes of key revenue generating and security agencies such as the Nigerian Customs. This would provide additional advantage of stemming smuggling, kidnapping and the migration of terrorists into the country.”
The committee, he stated, noted the lull in the futures market, suggesting that prices would remain relatively weak into the foreseeable future.
“The committee, therefore, urged the federal government to reconsider its 2020 budget oil price benchmark of US$57 per barrel to build fiscal buffers,” he added.
Giving further insight into the committee’s decisions, Emefiele said it welcomed the improvements in output growth in the third quarters of 2019, noting that the current direction of the Purchasing Managers Index (PMI) suggests stronger growth in the fourth quarters.
It, however, re-emphasised the need for diversification to strengthen the productive base of the economy and reduce dependence on oil.
According to the committee, diversification has become necessary now that Nigeria has signed the African Continental Free Trade Agreement (AfCTA) and to achieve this, the federal government should continue to improve the investment climate and ease of doing business to attract Foreign Direct Investment.
“Particularly, government should, as a priority, improve conditions for global auto manufacturers, including for aviation and rail industries to invest in the country,” he said.
The committee also commended the expansion in manufacturing output, noting that it was a direct fallout of the policy on loan-to-deposit ratio (LDR), which Emefiele said had made phenomenal impact as banks’ lending to the real sector hits N1.1 trillion between June when it was introduced and October.
The committee called on the government to urge the Pensions Commission to improve the prudential requirements for pension funds to refocus their investment portfolio away from their traditional choice of government securities in favour of other viable long-term investments in real estate, manufacturing and agriculture; and indeed infrastructure.
“Moreover, the committee called for strong visibility of fiscal and structural policies to improve infrastructure and investment conditions in the economy. It expressed strong optimism that the current policies of the bank (CBN), in a regime of solid fiscal and structural policy support, would yield strong dividends in closing the current negative output gap in the medium to long term, and place the economy on a sustainable and self-sufficient path of output growth,” the MPC said.
As a key pillar of economic diversification, the MPC directed the attention of the fiscal authorities to the immense potential of the gas sub-sector and the urgency to encourage horizontal integration through private sector participation.
This, the committee said, would improve domestic power supply and export earnings.
On price developments, the committee considered the moderate uptick in headline inflation in October, attributing it partly to an expected temporary shortfall in food supply because of the recent land border closure and rise in demand as the festive season approaches. Although it noted that the price increase was not unexpected, the committee believed that the medium-to-long-term benefits far outweigh the short-term cost.
Consequently, it noted the need to drive down food prices through increased support for local production of staples foods, including rice, fish, poultry, palm oil, and tomatoes, among others.
It also urged the government to follow through with a sustainable policy on backward integration in the milk industry and other priority sectors of the economy.
On the impact of the recent closure of Nigerian land borders on domestic food prices, the committee said any upward price movement arising from the closure was reactionary and therefore temporary.
According to the MPC, significant investment has been made over the last three years to sustainably increase domestic food supply, citing some of the key initiatives in this direction to include: the Commodity Development Initiatives, designed to finance the agricultural value chain of 10 commodities, including cassava, cocoa, cotton, rice, tomato, poultry, livestock and dairy, fish, oil palm and maize, which received N171.66 billion in funding.
The committee noted the lull in the futures market, suggesting that oil prices would remain relatively weak into the foreseeable future, and therefore urged the federal government to reconsider its 2020 budget oil price benchmark of US$57 per barrel to build fiscal buffers.