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Friday, June 6, 2014

CBN Governor Godwin Emefiele Presents 10-Point Agenda

The new Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Godwin Emefiele, has on Thursday presented his 10-point agenda.
New CBN Governor Godwin Emefiele Presents 10-Point Agenda
Godwin Emefiele (M) formally assumes office as governor, Central Bank of Nigeria on Tuesday, June 3, 2014 at the Bank's Headquarters in Abuja. Credit: CBN
 
Emefiele said he was committed to create "a central bank that is professional, a central bank that is apolitical, and people-focused. A Central Bank that spends its energies on building a resilient financial system that can serve the growth and development needs of out beloved country, Nigeria."
Before introducing his agenda, Emefiele praised the work that the previous governor did to achieve financial system stability, low inflation, an effective payment system, and exchange rate stability.
Monetary policy

Emefiele said the CBN would pursue a gradual reduction in interest rates, an apparent shift away from his predecessor’s hawkish monetary policy that was credited with bringing inflation down to single digits. Interest rates have been stuck at 12 percent since late 2011, and several measures have been made to tighten liquidity, which has been brought inflation down but made businesses complain that lending rates are too punitive.
"Such high rates create preserved incentives for commercial banks to simply buy virtually risk-free government bonds rather than lend to real sector," Emefiele said.
He said that while reduction in deposit rates would encourage investment attitude in savers, a reduction in lending rates would make credit cheaper for potential investors.
Emefiele also said that the apex bank would begin to include unemployment rates "as one of the key variables considered for its monetary policy decisions". He added that the CBN would design its monetary policy taking into account the potential fiscal expansion in the run-up to the 2015 elections.
Exchange rate policy

The CBN chief said the bank would continue to maintain exchange rate stability in view of the high import dependent nature of the economy. Emefiele cautioned that a systematic depreciation of the naira may translate to considerable inflationary pressure with negative effect on macro-economic stability.
"Therefore, under my leadership, the bank will continue to focus on maintaining exchange rate stability and preserve the value of the domestic currency."
"We will sustain the managed float regime in the management of the exchange rate as this will allow the bank to intervene when necessary to offset pressure on the exchange rate."
Economic development and employment
Emefiele said that the Central Bank would no longer focus solely on monetary and price stability. Citing  the experience of Japan, the US and France, the governor said that the CBN would start supporting selected economic sectors using "direct methods" of intervention to support the overall performance of the economy as well as boost employment.
"With an annual additional 1.8 million Nigerians to the labour pool, the Central Bank cannot afford to sit idly by and concentrate on price and monetary stability.
"Additional measures would be required towards identifying productive sectors of the economy and channeling credit towards these sectors, while imposing proper monitoring and performance measures in order to ensure that the goals of increased employment and poverty reduction are attained."
Stability of financial system
Under the leadership of Emefiele, the CBN will continue to sustain the effective management of the potential threats and avoid systemic crisis.
"The core of my vision is to effectively manage potential threats to financial stability and create a strong governance regime that is conducive for financial intermediation, innovative finance and inclusiveness."
To achieve the goal, the bank would work with stakeholders to aggressively shore up the reserve, and would engage both the fiscal and political authorities, the governor said.
Agenda in brief 
  1. Pursue a gradual reduction in key interests rates, and include the unemployment rate in monetary decisions;
  2. Maintain exchange rate stability and bolster foreign exchange reserves;
  3. Strengthen risk-bases supervision mechanism of Nigerian banks to ensure banking system stability;
  4. Build sector-specific expertise in banking supervision to reflect loan concentration of the banking industry;
  5. In a view of inadequate trigger thresholds from a macro-prudential perspectives, consider and announce measures to effectively address this anomaly;
  6. Abolish fees associated with limits on deposits;
  7. Introduce a variety of financial instruments to boost specific enterprise areas in agriculture, manufacturing, health, and oil and gas;
  8. Establish Secured Transaction an National Collateral Registry as well as establish a National Credit Scoring System that will improve access to information on borrowers and assist lenders to make good credit decisions;
  9. Build resilient financial infrastructure that serves the needs of the lower end of the market;
  10. Renew advocacy for the creation of commercial courts for quick adjudications on loan and related offenses.
You can read the full address of the new governor here.
It will also be recalled that President Goodluck Jonathan suspended previous governor of the CBN, Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, over 'financial recklessness', a claim Sanusi denies. The ex-governor insisted that he was removed for highlighting alleged widespread corruption in the oil sector and appealed his suspension in court.
READ MORE:  http://news.naij.com/67684.html

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