Posted on May 16, 2024
By Aboubakr Kaira Barry, Founder and Managing Director at Results Associates, Bethesda, MD, USA.
During the World Bank and IMF Spring gathering, I attended a meeting with the new Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria (CBN), Mr. Olayemi Cardoso. He radiated confidence in the future growth of Nigeria’s economy and committed to upholding conventional monetary policies to ensure price stability and attract investment.
Reports from Bloomberg News indicated that the CBN had raised the minimum cash reserve requirement for banks in February from 32% to 43% and increased the benchmark rate by 600 basis points to 24.75% between February and March.
These steps effectively amount to the withdrawal of surplus Naira from the market to reduce the currency’s supply, which had been overinflated due to excessive money printing by previous administrations. The measures appear to be working for now, as the Nigerian Naira has increased in value by 32% since mid-March, bouncing back from a 43% devaluation in January, according to Bloomberg News.
Yet significant challenges lie on the horizon.
As the late Nobel laureate Milton Friedman said, “Inflation is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon in the sense that it is and can be produced only by a more rapid increase in the quantity of money than in output.”
Thus, management of the risk of inflation and currency devaluation is improved by constraining the present and future government’s ability to print money to pay for expenses in lieu of raising taxes or borrowing from the capital markets.
Analyzing the World Development Indicator report produced by the World Bank, in the period 2011-2022, we note the following:
i. Broad money (a measure of the total supply of money in the economy, consisting of currency in circulation, deposits, time deposits, and savings accounts) representing cash available to pay for goods and services grew at an annual average rate of 14 percent.
ii. The real gross domestic product, representing the actual goods and services produced, grew at an annual average rate of 1 percent.
iii. Money growing 14 times faster than production led to too much money chasing too few goods, followed by high inflation, loss of purchasing power, and massive poverty.
iv. As a result of all the above, Real GDP per capita (i.e., economic output per Nigerian excluding inflation, a proxy for purchasing power – left scale in the chart) barely moved in 10 years, falling from ₦347,574.88 in 2011 to ₦346,703.24 in 2022, even though prices in this period rose by 153.20% – right scale in the chart.
Because the cure for high inflation is always painful, involving the loss of jobs, currency depreciation, and economic contraction, it’s better to reduce the risk by enshrining in the constitution fiscal rules, constraining federal government expenditures within available means and a prudent level of debt. As the saying goes, an ounce of prevention is better than a cure. This leads us to a lesson in fiscal management from Switzerland, offering an example of how Nigeria can develop a homegrown solution, fit for purpose.
In 2001, Switzerland passed a constitutional amendment for a balanced budget, a debt brake rule, approved by 85% of voters after a crisis. It limits federal government spending over the medium term to available revenue. Implementing it, the Government:
a) Sets an annual ceiling for spending, guided by the expected income for the budgeted year and the state of the economy.
b) Calculates, after the end of the fiscal year, the difference between actual spending and revenue.
c) Records the difference into a hypothetical compensation account (as a debit if spending is more than revenue, and as a credit if revenue is more than spending).
d) Reduces spending when the balance in the compensation account exceeds 6% of revenue in any given year to this threshold or lower in a maximum period of three years.
e) Approves exceptional spending by a simple majority vote and records it in an amortization account earmarked for recording extraordinary expenses and revenue. Normally, the net balance of this account is payable in six years.
An exception was made in 2019 when the COVID-19 pandemic led to CHF 30 billion in emergency expenses, and the government passed a special law extending the repayment of this exceptional borrowing to 2035.
The Swiss debt brake is the gold standard in the OECD, as revealed by its debt-to-GDP ratio relative to peer countries in developed nations.
While Nigeria has previously adopted fiscal rules, these were not consistently implemented nor embedded in the constitution. The Swiss example teaches us that these rules work best when they are supported by political will, embodied in the constitution, include sanctions, and allow for exceptions.
As necessity is the mother of invention, the pain being caused by inflation now, combined with a newly elected president, creates the opportune moment for the authorities to push for constitutionally based fiscal rules. Insurmountable obstacles in normal times, like amending the constitution, are achievable with deft leadership in challenging times. Big changes only happen in crisis.
While the CBN is independent, the reality is that it’s part of the Federal Government. When the government fails to raise taxes or cut spending and is unable to borrow from the capital markets to fund its deficit, CBN will be obliged to print money, restarting the cycle of unconventional monetary policies Governor Cardoso vowed to end. “We want to go back to using an orthodox monetary method, and it will take us to where we want to go,” he told the Financial Times in the article “Nigeria Returns to ‘Orthodox Policy”, published on May 13, 2024.
So, it’s better to adopt constitutionally based fiscal rules with escape clauses to manage unforeseen emergencies, reinforced by a mechanism for repaying exceptional debt incurred for this purpose. This makes noncompliance difficult, since violating the constitution is an impeachable offense, which could be further enhanced by adopting the British practice of an Office of Budget Responsibility (OBR) established in 2010. The OBR scrutinizes the budget and provides independent assessment to the government and the public.
The implementation of these recommendations will promote transparency, enhance investor confidence in the government’s credibility, which will lead to a lower risk premium, reduced borrowing costs, and increased investments.
Nigeria has all the elements necessary for prosperity: abundant natural resources, highly skilled technocrats, a youthful population, and a vast market. I am confident that with political will, a homegrown pragmatic vision that is executed, underpinned by solid financial management anchored by a constitutional fiscal rule, Nigeria can take its rightful place as a superpower in Africa and a major player in the global economy.
Yes, it can.