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Abstract:Nigerians and investors have been reassured by President Bola Tinubu that efforts are underway to increase the nation's foreign exchange liquidity.
Nigerians and investors have been reassured by President Bola Tinubu that efforts are underway to increase the nation's foreign exchange liquidity.
This came as Wale Edun, the Coordinating Minister of the Economy and Minister of Finance, stated that the nation anticipated receiving $10 billion in inflows in the near future, which would aid in clearing the FX shortage and stabilizing the value of the naira.
Speaking on Monday at the 29th Nigerian Economic Summit in Abuja, business community was having in the financial markets and gave them the assurance of more foreign exchange liquidity to regain market confidence.
The commitment of his government to bolstering governance through the development of a public and civil service culture performance- and result-oriented.
The President listed the eight top priorities of his government, which are: eradicating poverty; ensuring food security; fostering economic growth and job creation; facilitating access to finance; ensuring inclusivity; security; and combating corruption.
He listed many steps his government has taken to revive the economy, including the N5 billion support for small enterprises and the agriculture sector.
PRIVATE INDUSTRY ASSISTANCE
In order to create a future filled with new optimism, Tinubu invited the private sector to contribute their ideas, leadership, resources, and combined will on them to support his vision for a stronger Nigeria.
He highlighted the value of cooperation between the public and private sectors, pointing to how public-private partnerships had transformed Lagos State.
The President invited the corporate sector to partner with him in this quest.
“All FX future contracts will be honored by this government,” the president declared after clearing the FX backlog that had undermined investor confidence.
In his speech, Mr. Niyi Yusuf, the chairman of the National Economic Summit Group, stated that if a period of low growth and low investment continues, there may be more dangers of stagnation and misery because there are over 133 million multidimensionally poor Nigerians.
Additionally, he stated that the variety of taxes, high inventory costs, import input costs, limited access to FX, and rising costs of FX all contribute to the erosion of firm balance sheets, which in turn causes a decline in employment and production.
He said that the nation is at a turning moment in its history and that the problems facing the people call for quick, coordinated action. He also mentioned that everyone concerned must act quickly and with a common sense of urgency.
In order to stop all types of organized and syndicated crime centered around crude oil and solid minerals, as well as a made-in-Nigeria agenda, the country needs a macroeconomic stabilization program backed by an aggressively scaled national security effort.
A national plan for job development that promotes the creation of a large number of high-quality jobs is also necessary, along with immediate investment.
He declared, The summit this year has been burning platform to address the topic of transformation pillars that would lead us to the future that the government envisions.
Entrepreneurs and businesses face an existential threat to their survival: the requirement for swift strategy changes that affect the speed and cost of conducting business.
The conference will feature a discussion on how “low access to and rising costs of foreign exchange, high costs associated with inventory, imported inputs, and operations, along with the diversity of taxes, continue to erode business balance sheets, with a consequent contraction in production and employment.”
Large companies are fighting low-capacity utilization, Yusuf continued, while medium-sized, tiny, and microenterprises are combating multifaceted challenges. He stated that the deteriorating social conditions brought on by these dismal economic outcomes cannot be taken for granted.
FG PLANS TO SPEND $10 BILLION.
According to Mr. Wale Edun, Minister of Finance and Economic Coordination, some $10 billion in foreign exchange inflows are anticipated in the coming weeks rather than months.
During the present Nigeria Economic Summit, Edun made this claim.
“There is a line of sight of $10 billion worth of FX in the relatively near future in weeks rather than months,” he added. “In addition, from NNPC, increased production, reduced expenditure, from transactions sales, from our discussions with sovereign wealth funds, that are ready for investment.”
The Minister also revealed that two executive directives that were intended to guarantee currency market liquidity have been signed by the President.
He stated, We all know that the currency market is quite troublesome right now, and Mr. President announced that he has taken steps to ease its illiquidity.
“There are several factors for the lacks that makes market illiquid and hinders its normal functioning. An executive order that effectively allows the domestic economy to lawfully enter the formal in a period of forbearance is the President's suggested cure. Furthermore, directive allows foreign currency instruments to be issued domestically, which encourages them to provide foreign currencies .”
According to Edun, all transactions in the FX market—from official to money changers, would be strictly monitored, and those who transgress will be found out and dealt with appropriately.
Illiquidity is the reason Nigeria's FX market isn't operating efficiently, but the government is willing to take all necessary steps to alter the current situation.
The market will be streamlined and restructured so that all rightful and proper transactions will be covered by the government and take place. Anything beyond that will be punished, considered a criminal offense, and illegal, according to Edun.
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