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Nigerian central bank is acting like a 'piggy bank' for government spending

Lagos - Nigeria’s central bank is acting like a “piggy bank” with its funding of the government, according to a member of the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) who said he struggles to understand the regulator’s economic rationale.

Monetary data showed a “sharp rise” in the Central Bank of Nigeria’s financing of the government deficit this year, Doyin Salami said after the MPC’s July 24 to July 25 meeting, according to a central bank statement published on Tuesday.

The regulator’s claims on the government had risen “twenty-fold” to 814 billion naira ($2.26bn) from the end of 2016, while its purchases of government T-bills increased 30% to 454 billion naira, he said.

“It is clear that the CBN has provided piggy-bank services to the federal government,” Salami said. “Whilst I still wonder what the underlying economics is, I sincerely hope it works.”

Nigeria, Africa’s biggest oil producer, is struggling to raise enough revenue amid the worst economic slump in about 25 years.

Gross domestic product expanded 0.6% from a year earlier in the three months through June after contracting for the previous five quarters. The MPC has kept its key rate at a record-high 14% since July 2016 and is scheduled to make its next policy decision on September 26. All four analysts surveyed by Bloomberg expect it will keep the rate unchanged.

Revenue in the first three months of the year was 36% less than what the government budgeted and was 49% short in May, according to the central bank.

Salami, who is an academic at Lagos Business School and retires from the MPC this year, has previously criticised the policies of Governor Godwin Emefiele. In January he said the central bank was “pretending” to tighten monetary policy while boosting money supply at the same time.

Cash injections

In his latest comments, he said the “massive injections of cash” to the government don’t show up in higher inflation data and currency weakness because the regulator used “special auctions” that effectively raised banks’ cash-reserve requirements beyond the stipulated 22.5% consumer-price growth eased to 16% in July, the statistics bureau said on September 15.

“We thus find ourselves at a point where government borrowing from the CBN is neutralised by raising the CRR of banks, thereby limiting private-sector access to credit,” Salami said. “In other words, the private sector is deliberately crowded out.”

Isaac Okorafor, a central bank spokesperson, didn’t answer calls to his mobile or respond to a text message seeking comment.

Salami and another MPC member voted to cut the policy rate at the July meeting, while the other six who were present, including Emefiele, wanted to hold.

“Monetary policy management is presently about funding the federal government,” Salami said. “Policy consistency and credibility demand that the monetary policy rate be significantly reduced to reflect the underlying preferences of policy managers.”

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