The Manufacturers Association of Nigeria, MAN, has charged the Central
Bank of Nigeria, CBN, to stop funding the Bureau de change market.
In a statement , the President of MAN, Chief Frank Jacobs, said: Ït
is difficult to understand why, in the first instance, these outfits
should depend on official allocation of forex by the CBN for their survival.
“The Bureau De Change market should provide alternative funding
window to the economy, in which case they source their forex
independently from other sources and supply to the forex market. It is
difficult to understand their real functions with the kind of
arrangement Nigeria has.
Distributive conduit pipes
They act as mere distributive conduit pipes by simply getting forex
allocation from CBN and selling to very few Nigerians out of the
multitude that need forex; thereby making their profit without much
value addition”
“Foreign exchange allocated to the Bureau De Change as well as from
other sources should be channelled to the productive sectors of the
economy, especially manufacturing for the importation of essential
inputs and machinery that are not locally available as well as the
social welfare segment of the society like hospitals, schools, etc” he
said.
He noted that MAN advocates the use of guided deregulation in such a
way that Naira would be left to flow freely within a bracket which the
CBN would determine, adding that, this is important because at their
stage of development, they cannot afford to allow the Naira to flow
freely without any check.
“MAN believes that this arrangement will allow the exchange rate to be determined by the market
but with some moderation and also leave room for investors to be
attracted to invest in the country. This will also assist in checking
the ugly situation that took place during the SAP era where, as a result
of devaluation, over 60 per cent of small and medium scale industries
closed down because of their inability to sustain their operations.
Restriction on dollar inflow should be lifted but this should not
preclude CBN’s duty of investigating sources of such incomes” he stated.
According to him, a major source of forex wastage in Nigeria is
through the on-going subsidy on importation of petroleum products.
“In the real sense, Nigeria should not have relied on fuel
importation to meet the fuel requirement of the nation, given the number
of refineries we have in this country which are currently lying waste.
Instead, we turned around to import fuel and pay huge subsidies to fuel
importers thereby wasting huge scarce foreign exchange as subsidy. MAN
believes that the downstream petroleum sector should be privatized in
order to save the country from wasting the huge forex paid as subsidy”
he said.
Some years back, he noted, many refining companies applied for
licenses and we do not know what happened to those applications or why
those companies that were granted licenses did not start operation?
“Why does the Government have to subsidise fuel imports when such
subsidies, some of which are even ambiguous, would have been channelled
to streamlining the refining capacities of existing refineries or even
establishing new ones? The solution appears to tilt towards the
privatization of the sector so that Government would hands off subsidy
payment.
To avoid perceived abuse of foreign exchange allocation and save the Naira, the management of forex
which is vested on a Committee chaired by the Governor of the CBN
should monitor utilisation of forex by recipients by remitting funds
directly to the beneficiary company overseas,” he said.
By Naomi Uzor
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