Analysts evaluate Nigeria-China currency swap

Some financial conomists have expressed great concerns on the minor influence that the Nigeria-China currency swap had on the country’s economy, three years after.

The experts said in Lagos on Friday  that the volume of currency import so far traded, had not been significant, though a few swaps took place.

The pact which marked three years of implementation in April, was signed on April 27, 2018, to ease demand pressure on the country’s supply of foreign exchange.

The Chief Executive Officer of Arvo Finance, Mr Ayotunde Bally, said that the pact had not been fully utilised due to a decrease in the drawdown of the money input of the Chinese Yuan to the Central Bank of Nigeria.

“This pact which was aimed at creating a harmonious relationship between the two countries has not been utilised as it ought to be.

“Statistics has it that Nigeria- China bilateral trade which was around two billion dollars in 2002 is within the space of about 14 billion dollars in contemporary years.

“And yet, we cannot boast of about three billion dollars Yuan being utilised in such market transaction,’’ he said.

According to Bally, that has clearly displayed the negligence of the pact by most business importers.

He said the poor state of the pact was due to ignorance  and the  benefits of the pact to those who utilise it.

“Also, the deliberate avoidance of the pact by those who believe transactions are easier with dollars or some other methods like Bureau De Change among others.

“Even those who know about the pact but avoid it, indicating that it is not lucid and that the regulations and procedures are rigid to them,” he said.

He advocated massive sensitisation on  the usefulness of the pact to both the business individuals and the country at large.

Founder of Cowry Asset Management Limited, Mr Johnson Chukwu  also said that the pact recorded minimal benefit to the economy.

“If you look at our demand for foreign exchange particularly for imports, you will observe that we still have pressures coming from import demand.

“China is our biggest trading partner and our largest import market.

“We bought more products from China than any other country in the world. So, if the currency swap has been very significant, then the pressures we are witnessing on the balance of trade would have been abated.

“So, I do not think the volume of currency import has been significant.

“Certainly, there must have been a few swap that has taken place since then but it is clearly not significant because if it was, it would have reflected in our balance of trade,” Chukwu said.

According to him, China accounts for more than 25 per cent of our import; so we should not have a currency swap that delays immediate payments of our foreign reserves.

Also, Director, Centre for Economic Policy Analysis and Research (CEPAR), University of Lagos, Prof. Ndubisi Nwokoma said that the swap deal had positive impact on the naira exchange rate with major currencies.

“The Nigeria-China currency swap deal, according to reports, has some positive impact on the stability of the naira exchange rate with major currencies.

“But, its effect is limited by the volume of trade between Nigeria and China.

“With decline in global productivity occasioned by the COVID-19 pandemic and other factors, the effect appears not to have achieved the originally intended objectives.

“Nigeria has been bedeviled by other economic challenges. The current sorry state of the country’s exchange rate is quite instructive in this regard,” Nwokoma said.

 

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