We’re Not Responsible For Nigeria’s Economic Woes – Cardoso

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OLAYEMI Cardoso, the Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), claims that he and his team are not to blame for the country’s current economic troubles.

He made this statement on Tuesday in Abuja during the apex bank’s first Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) meeting since taking office in September 2023.

The governor of the apex bank, on the other hand, stated that the CBN is taking essential steps to restore the country’s fiscal and monetary health.

Nigeria is facing rising inflation, food inflation, a forex crisis, economic hardship, and a high cost of living as a result of the elimination of petrol subsidies, which has sparked protests across the country.

But Cardoso said the MPC identified non-monetary factors driving inflation such as the persisting insecurity and infrastructure deficit and noted the role of fiscal policy in addressing the shortfall.

Cardoso was responding to a question that the CBN was responsible for the current economic challenges faced by Nigerians.

“I laugh at that question but it’s not a laughing matter,” Cardoso retorted. “And I think it is very important for Nigerians to understand that the Central Bank Governor – I and my team – are not responsible for the woes that we have today; we are part of the solution.

“We are determined to ensure that we work hard to get out of the mess that Nigeria is in. We assumed responsibility in a time of crisis of confidence; there was a crisis of confidence and you may all want to go to bed and wish that crisis of confidence was not there but it was, and we can’t turn back the clock.

“All we can do is do the difficult things to make a bad situation better and I do believe that the efforts that we are making are beginning to bring back confidence because, to be frank, without confidence in your business, you are not going to get far.”

The MPC also raised the Monetary Policy Rate (MPR), which benchmarks interest rates, by four hundred basis points from 18.75 percent to 22.75 percent.

With inflation at 29.90 percent, he said the new MPR is part of moves to tackle the country’s inflation.

He said the major factors driving inflationary pressure remained exchange rate pass-through, rising cost of energy, high fiscal deficit, and lingering security challenges in major food-producing areas.

He said projections revealed that inflation will remain on an upward trajectory before making a descent.

“The next meeting of the MPC will be held on the 25th and 26th of March, 2024,” he said.

Cardoso, a former Commissioner for Economic Planning and Budget in Lagos State, took over the leadership of the apex bank about three months after the suspension of Godwin Emefiele by President Bola Tinubu.

 

Eighteen-Eleven Media 

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