Nigerians’ spending on foreign education,
healthcare and personal travels gulped over $98bn in 10 years, according to the
Central Bank of Nigeria data.
The CBN Governor, Olayemi Cardoso, who made the
disclosure while addressing the House of Representatives on Tuesday, was
responding to an inquiry by the lawmakers on the factors behind the rapid
depreciation of the naira in the last few weeks.
He spoke against the backdrop of the central
bank’s battle to stabilize the exchange rate amid dollar shortage.
The lawmakers had invited Cardoso and other
economic managers following last week’s plunge of the naira from about
900/dollar to over 1,400/dollar at the official market. Members of the organized
private sector and Nigerians have raised concerns over development, saying it
would lead to more hardships and job losses.
However, speaking with the lawmakers, Cardoso
argued that the foreign exchange market was facing increased demand pressures,
causing a continuous decline in the value of the naira.
According to him, factors contributing to this
situation include speculative forex demand, inadequate forex due to low
remittance of crude oil earnings to the CBN, increased capital outflows, and
excess liquidity from fiscal activities.
To address exchange rate volatility, he said a
comprehensive strategy had been initiated to enhance liquidity in the FX
markets.
This includes unifying FX market segments,
clearing outstanding FX obligations, introducing new operational mechanisms for
Bureau De Change operators, enforcing the Net Open Position limit for
commercial banks, and adjusting the remunerable Standing Deposit Facility cap.
Cardoso revealed that between 201O and 2020,
foreign education expenses amounted to a substantial $28.65bn, as per the CBN’S
publicly available Balance of Payments Statistics.
Similarly, medical treatment abroad incurred
around $11.01bn in costs during the same period. Within the same period,
Personal Travel Allowances accounted for a total of $58.7bn.
Cumulatively, Nigerians spent about $98bn on foreign
trips, medical tourism and overseas education, a figure the CBN governor said
was more than the total foreign exchange reserves of the central bank.
Further compounding the situation, according to
Cardoso has been the consistent decline in Nigeria’s export earnings against
the backdrop of increasing imports.
In contextualizing the problem, Cardoso pointed
out that Nigeria’s annual imports, which require dollars for payment, amounted
to $16.65bn in 1980.
Comments:
Leave a Reply