The Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN) is set
to eliminate the foreign exchange black market in Africa’s biggest
economy, the Minister of Finance, Mrs. Kemi Adeosun, said tuesday.
The naira trades, sometimes 40 per cent
below the official rates, against the dollar. Commenting on the wide
gap, Adeosun said the CBN has been mandated to scrap the damaging
market, reported AFP.
The central bank “has been directed to
do this and CBN has promised to do something by putting a system in
place to eliminate the black market because it’s damaging the economy”,
Adeosun told a conference.
A CBN spokesman, Isaac Okorafor, said
the central bank was working towards “ensuring that the forex market
operates as effectively as we would envisage”.
He said the aim was to “ensure there is no black market” but did not give details of how this would be achieved.
A top CBN official also confirmed that
that the banking system regulator was working on ways to deemphasise the
black market, as it had been used over time for speculative attacks on
the Nigerian currency.
However, he did not give a precise time
when this would happen, but said that no unorthodox means will be used
to rid the country of the black market for foreign exchange.
He said: “Serious strategic thinking on how to lay less emphasis on the black market dealers is being fashioned out by the central bank rather than using unorthodox means.”
He said: “Serious strategic thinking on how to lay less emphasis on the black market dealers is being fashioned out by the central bank rather than using unorthodox means.”
Nigeria had pegged the naira to the
dollar at N197-N199 since March 2015 but the CBN scrapped the
16-month-old peg in June in favour of currency free float. But that has
done little to change naira’s fortune.
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