DAILY TRUST
Industries in the country are battling for survival owing to the continued slide of the naira against the dollar, Daily Trust can report.
The naira Thursday traded at between N1,150 and N1,155/dollar at the unregulated markets in Lagos and Abuja.
At the official Investors & Exporters (I&E Window), it had earlier traded at N986 before closing at N782.68.
The organised private sector and other stakeholders said as the naira weakened further, manufacturers and business owners were faced with severe challenges of increased import costs, high inflationary pressure, reduced profit margins and limited access to foreign markets.
The Director-General, Nigeria Employers’ Consultative Association (NECA), Adewale-Smatt Oyerinde, told Daily Trust that the naira’s slide had hindered industry and business capacity utilisation, production, employment, sales and profits.
He stated, “The implication of the trend is grave for the economy and private businesses. The major impacts are that the working capital of private sector businesses and the real income of Nigerians have both shrunk due to high inflation, a precarious situation for the private sector businesses.”
He advised government to return exchange rate management to a guided float regime where the government could support the naira with complementary policy to maintain stability against the imminent collapse of the currency and its negative impact on the private sector.
“The journey to a capitalistic state is audacious and gradual. More so, no economy is totally capitalistic. In the context of exchange rate management, the government should maintain a healthy balance between control and floating to circumvent the looming monetary collapse. Fortunately, the IMF or World Bank do not compel countries to totally float their exchange rate. It’s discretionary.
“In the context of the unification policy, as the CBN increases its intervention in the official window, the government may need to take an audit of registered BDCs, distribute them among the commercial banks and place their forex allocations with the host commercial banks. The BDCs then get forex allocations and submit reports of disbursement to the commercial banks. In this way, it’s easy to narrow the official market rate and the BDC rate.
“To complement the measure, non-registered BDCs or black market operators would need to be subjected to punitive actions,” he said.
The Director-General, Nigerian Textile Manufacturers Association, Hamma Kwajaffa, in a chat with Daily Trust, said many companies were forced to fold up while others were reducing their workforce to stay afloat.
He said the naira’s depreciation had made the business environment hostile to many manufacturers and business owners who were forced to source forex at the black market.
“It’s a fact that many companies are folding up. Government claims to be relying on the private sector to create jobs, but companies are retrenching because every employer must learn how to at least break even and then, with some profits. Local manufacturers can’t produce and export at this rate.
“Companies are leaving Nigeria, moving to Ghana. We’re not encouraging local production, but we’re going about begging investors who won’t come because the environment is not good.
“Without the right infrastructure, Nigeria will become a dumping ground with the implementation of the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) if we’re unable to be competitive,” he warned.
He also said the reversal of the FX ban on 43 items by the Central Bank of Nigeria came at the wrong time.
“Government needs to look at the manufacturers. We’re making it easier for people to import into the country. We need to work on exports; how to process our raw materials. Look at tomatoes, they’re being wasted because we don’t have enough storage facilities in the country. It is the same for other raw materials,” he said.
The President, Nigerian Association of Chambers of Commerce, Industry, Mines and Agriculture (NACCIMA), Dele Oye, said though the government was implementing policies, such as foreign exchange management, securing foreign loans to mitigate the current negative gap in foreign currency for Nigerians, export promotion initiatives, support for local industries, and infrastructure development, it should do more by “capitalising the current gains from the reduced subsidy on petroleum, investing part of the income in development banks and issuing an executive order to promote availability of single-digit medium and long-term loans to ease access to capital.”
READ THE FULL STORY IN DAILY TRUST