The news that Nigeria has signed a currency deal with China allowing the free flow of the Chinese Yuan among st Nigerian banks (https://www.thecable.ng/nigeria-china-sign-deal-on-free-flow-of-Yuan) is arguably one of the best (or worst?) policies so far of the Buhari Administration.
Banks
would now be able to settle payments directly from Naira to Yuan,
rather than from Naira to black market Dollar and then to Yuan. In fact,
an extension of this is that debit and credit cards can now be issued
and denominated in Yuan. A sizable portion of the local Dollar demand
is thus eliminated, reducing the pressure on our Dollar reserves.
To
boost our Yuan liquidity, the Chinese loans being negotiated by the
Federal Govt may be availed partly or wholly in Yuan. This will greatly
boost Nigeria’s Central Bank and commercial banks’ Yuan liquidity. In
fact, the Nigerian and Chinese Govt are reported to have entered into a
framework arrangement for currency swaps as a means of providing the
much needed liquidity.
At current rates of 30.74 Naira to the
Yuan, and 6.74RMB (Yuan) to the Dollar, Nigeria would be able to fund
its importation at the equivalent of the current official rate of
N199/$1.
PROS
This policy will lead to a reduced
demand for Dollars and easing off of pressure on our Dollar reserves, as
a large portion of Nigeria’s import needs are served by China (China is
Nigeria’s largest trading partner – http://www.premiumtimesng.com/business/business-interviews/188666-china-tops-u-s-as-nigerias-biggest-trade-partner.html). Deals such as Dangote’s purchase of 3400 trucks (http://venturesafrica.com/dangote-group-signs-deal-for-3400-trucks-supply/)
will henceforth be settled in Yuan rather than scarce Dollar reserves,
which would then be sufficient to service other legitimate investor
demands such as portfolio investments, capital repatriation, etc.
This
policy also implies cheaper imports from China as importers from China
would import at the equivalent of the current official rate of N199/$1
as against the current parallel market rate of N320/$1.
CONS
This
policy may keep Nigeria as an importation-dependent economy. Due to its
deliberate policies towards boosting its economics of scale, China
produces most goods at a comparative advantage. While we have decried
the importation of toothpicks and the likes from China, we must bear in
mind that we import toothpicks not because we do not have bamboo and
other raw materials in Nigeria, but because China is able to bring these
goods to the Nigerian market at a much cheaper price than the one
produced right here in Nigeria. The reasons are not far-fetched; the
availability of infrastructure, cheap labour and use of manufacturing
clusters. This policy would therefore sound a death-knell to the
resurgent local production of importation substitutes.
Again,
this policy would only bear the projected fruits if and only if the
Nigerian factor doesn’t come into play. As demand for Yuan surges, a
parallel market for Yuan may soon be created, bringing us back to this
same point many years after.
WHITHER NIGERIA?
This
policy should not be viewed as a solution to Nigeria’s Dollar dependency
as we may otherwise inadvertently create a Yuan dependency. At the very
best, this policy should be a stop-gap, a short-term measure devised to
keep things in place while we sort out our infrastructural and policy
challenges. The future prosperity of Nigeria lies in production for
local consumption and export, and not the consumption of foreign
imports.
Maxwell Asowata, Legal Practitioner and Business Consultant, writes from Lagos, Nigeria.
Source - http://ecstasyhouseng.com/index.php/2016/04/13/free-flow-of-yuan-in-nigerian-banks-what-you-need-to-know/
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