Weaker dollar would not hurt Nigeria, vice president says
January 25, 20181.5K views0 comments
Yemi Osinbajo, Nigeria’s vice president Thursday said a weaker U.S. dollar would not necessarily hurt his oil-producing nation, according to a Reuters report.
Osinbajo made the comment after Steven Mnuchin, U.S. treasury secretary welcomed a weaker dollar, saying it benefited U.S. trade balances in the short term.
“A weaker dollar doesn’t necessarily hurt Nigeria,” said Osinbajo, while speaking at the World Economic Forum in Davos.
“We are concerned most about ensuring that we are able to make our own exports cheaper and we working on all of that. Our major concern is how to make ourselves more competitive,” he added.
Read Also:
- Botched and bungled exercise that’s Nigeria’s 2025 budget
- Nigeria at 64, where individual comfort trumps national greatness (2)
- Inflation storm rages on in Nigeria as October rate hits 33.88%
- Nnaji, to establish Robotics, Artificial Intelligence Institute in Nigeria
- Nigeria’s inflation, cost of living crisis vs. minimum wage
OPEC member Nigeria is Africa’s largest oil producer with crude oil sales making up two-thirds of its revenues and most of its foreign exchange earnings.
The welcoming of a weakened dollar, seen by markets as a departure from the usual U.S. currency policy, has been seen as an indication that President Donald Trump is stepping up his attack on China and other big trading partners as part of his America First agenda.
Trump arrived in Davos Thursday. Earlier this month the president was accused of using vulgar language against Haiti and African countries, though he denied using the specific language.
Read also: Africa needs better trade policies with Europe to create jobs, says Nigeria’s Osinbajo
“We need each other: Africa needs America. America also needs Africa in several important ways, so for me, the most important thing is that we continue to maintain those relationships,” Osinbajo said when asked about the alleged remarks.
“I‘m also told that Trump has said that he did not, in fact, make those statements and we should be able to accept that,” he said.
The vice president also discussed security in Africa’s most populous nation, which is contending with Islamist militant Boko Haram insurgents in the northeast and working to maintain a fragile peace in the restive southern Niger Delta oil-producing region.
“We are recruiting more policemen and we are recruiting more people in the army. Security is dynamic and you have to keep working at it,” Osinbajo said. He did not provide details of the number of new recruits.
Attacks on energy facilities in the Niger Delta region pushed Africa’s biggest economy into recession in 2016, its first in 25 years.
Niger Delta Avengers, the group, which claimed responsibility for most of the attacks, last week said it would resume attacks within days.
“We are in constant consultation with all groups in the Niger Delta,” said Osinbajo, when asked about the government’s response to the latest threat.
The country’s recovery has largely been driven by crude oil sales since emerging from recession in the second quarter of 2017.