Buhari on track to leave more money in external reserves than he met in 2015

Buhari on track to leave more money in external reserves than he met in 2015

SAMUEL OYEKANMI FROM NAIRAMETRICS

Nigeria’s president Muhammadu Buhari is on track to leave an external reserve of about $36 billion going to Nairametrics projections.

The president met an external reserve of $29.4 billion when he became president on May 29th, 2015. At the time, the country faced a foreign exchange crisis with reserves having depleted by a whopping $4.8 billion year to date.

The government of Goodluck Jonathan faced a different set of challenges at the time driven mainly by plummeting global oil prices and a forex policy of defending the naira with reserves.

External reserves under Buhari: However, as soon as Buhari took office the external reserve will plummet by $525 million by the end of that year. Things got worse in 2016 as the country faced a recession due to exacerbating crude oil crisis. The government also held the exchange rate fixed at N197/$1 for almost two years sending reserves down to as low as $23.9 billion in late 2016.

The dire implication of operating at very low external reserve levels forced the government to adopt a new forex policy direction through the introduction of the Investor and Exporter Window operated by the FMDQOTC via NAFEX.

The central bank also introduced an incentivized interest rate policy that offered high-interest rates in exchange for importing dollars into the country.

This policy helped swell the external reserves to as high as $47 billion in 2019, the highest level since 2013. But the policy was too expensive to continue, especially as it did not focus on stimulating local production or lead to any major export earnings.

Thus, the unwinding that started in 2019 coincided with the plummeting of the external reserves from then on. The covid-19 pandemic also made things worse as foreign investment dried up. By the first quarter of 2020, external reserves had lost about $3 billion falling to $35 billion.

A slew of IMF, World Bank and Eurobond loans have helped shore up external reserves since 2020 with crude oil theft and foreign investment apathy drying up time-tested sources of forex inflow.

What will the next president inherit? The next president is likely to inherit around $36 billion going by the net cash flows recorded for external reserves since 2022.

The central bank under Godwin Emefiele has been stingy with doling out forex to defend the naira except in extreme circumstances when it did so towards the end of 2022.

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Buhari on track to leave more money in external reserves than he met in 2015

 

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